Recent comments in /f/history
[deleted] t1_itjspk9 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
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lo_fi_ho t1_itjrqaa wrote
Reply to comment by Girly_Shrieks in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
It's a piece of metal mate
[deleted] t1_itjrm0b wrote
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xtremzero t1_itjrfe7 wrote
Reply to comment by spinnybingle in Joseon, the predecessor of modern Korea(s) - Part 3: Japan and Qing Invasions (early 17th century) by spinnybingle
The so called tributes are actually trade in disguise. And a quite unfair one at that (for Ming)
All the tributaries LOVED coming to China, because not only is all the expenses covered, they also get way more gifts in return (you bring a few apples or oranges call it “specialty” but get gold in return)
The rules where Joseon tributes can only come once every 3 years was so that Ming doesn’t go bankrupt. But even then there are records of Joseon emissaries bringing tributes (and getting gold in return) every year. Ryukyu was supposed to come every 2 years but came multiple times a year.
So tributes sounds great but was actually like a charity event. Hence why even countries in Indonesia and Malaysia loved going to China to do “tributes”
CurlySuefromSweden t1_itjr4es wrote
Reply to comment by Girly_Shrieks in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
It belongs in a museum!
vbcbandr t1_itjqf0a wrote
Reply to comment by Girly_Shrieks in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
Indy always puts them in a museum though...
SaGlamBear t1_itjq0fs wrote
Reply to comment by withak30 in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
Maybe not shocking but quite interesting.
AramaicDesigns t1_itjq0ai wrote
A lot of these are dubious, and absolutely not ancient (unless ~200 years old is "ancient" somehow). Halloween is not derived from Samhain (unless the ancient Celts were somehow influencing Rome in the early 600s, which is when and where Halloween got its start) and guising is no older than the late 1700s.
[deleted] t1_itjpipf wrote
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spinnybingle OP t1_itjpgky wrote
Reply to comment by xtremzero in Joseon, the predecessor of modern Korea(s) - Part 3: Japan and Qing Invasions (early 17th century) by spinnybingle
Almost any Korean person knows that kings of Joseon were referred to as "king" while Chinese emperors were referred to as "emperors," and there was a strong symbolic hierarchy. Well Koreans can be quite nationalistic, but I don't think anyone will really deny that.
Imo Joseon-Ming tie was particularly strong because the Joseon ruling class followed very orthodox Confucianism, often following the social norms described in Chinese classical text to a letter. Many modern people are critical of that because it obviously weakened the nation (e.g. the suppression of commerce and trades). It was also the way the nobles distinguished themselves from commoners who weren't educated in classical Chinese
Almost any Korean person also knows that Hangeul was despised by noblemen in the Joseon era. So it's not a secret or taboo topic in Korea.
- Plus, despite ignored by male aristocrats, the Korean script was widely used by women and commoners, which led to the rise of vernacular literature. We know a lot more about the Joseon era thanks to the vast amount of scripts written in vernacular Korean
However, when one says Korea (or Vietnam or others) was "tributary state" or "vassal state" of China, while it's basically true, there can still be contentions about to which extent it was symbolic and to which extent it was substantial. Joseon Korea didn't have to pay a lot of "substantial" tributes to China.
- Joseon had to pay tributes to Ming just once every three years
- The contents were Just dozens of kilograms of ginseng and similar amount of hemp, mats, paper, ink, etc. It can almost be seen as an expensive gift, rather than tax
- There were very few exchanges of people/talents/human resources
- Some tributary states were even benefited by the tributary relationship because some Chinese emperors doled out gold
- The tributary states were sometimes asked to join military operations of China, but at least in the case of Joseon, it was very few and far between. Ming China only lasted for like 250 years anyways
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tributary_system_of_China
- (https://ijkh.khistory.org/journal/view.php?doi=10.22372/ijkh.2021.26.2.151) .
So there can be contentions about how "symbolic" or "substantial" the tributary relationships were.
I think it's a dispute that can only be resolved by collaboration of professional historians in different countries
DiploJ t1_itjpew1 wrote
Reply to comment by daemonshrike in Joseon, the predecessor of modern Korea(s) - Part 3: Japan and Qing Invasions (early 17th century) by spinnybingle
They had what it takes to become a military and political powerhouse but didn't apply themselves. They were vassals of others for so long.
[deleted] t1_itjp2h7 wrote
Reply to comment by Girly_Shrieks in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
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withak30 t1_itjor2u wrote
Norse artifacts found in Sweden! Shocking!
daemonshrike t1_itjome1 wrote
Reply to comment by DiploJ in Joseon, the predecessor of modern Korea(s) - Part 3: Japan and Qing Invasions (early 17th century) by spinnybingle
What kind of potential do you mean?
Imaginary_Alarm_7575 OP t1_itjobgn wrote
Reply to comment by Bashstash01 in This is what is known about the warrior customs of the Huetar people from Costa Rica. by Imaginary_Alarm_7575
Perharps, I'm currently researching it, I found some things, but I need time to organize and translate the information, from what I've read, the weapons and tactics, if not the ¿decorations? were more or less the same, at least in the area that is now Costa Rica (my area of expertise).
For what is worth though, the Huetar people were influenced by both, mesoamerican and intermediate area peoples, but due the area's poverty (of minerals) and isolation not many professional chroniclers came here, and a lot of the information about that time period that wasn't lost comes from goverment employees, friars, soldiers, etc.
And they were often kind of ignorant and biased about their ways, so we can only take their word for it, and even then, only with a grain of salt. The rest can only be guessed from things like archaeological remains, the oral tradition and comparisons with neighboring cultures since the Huetar culture was virtually obliterated.
Edit: neighboring cultures did practiced human trophy collecting and wore paint and gold in war, at least according to their oral tradition.
StrengthoftwoBears t1_itjn2w7 wrote
Reply to comment by Bashstash01 in Simple/Short/Silly History Questions Saturday! by AutoModerator
Haha I voraciously consumed those already which is what sparked the question in general!
Bashstash01 t1_itjmyjo wrote
Reply to comment by StrengthoftwoBears in Simple/Short/Silly History Questions Saturday! by AutoModerator
I don't have any book recommendations, but I noticed u/spinnybingle's comprehensive posts of Korean history have been gaining a lot of traction on this sub. I would try looking at them. Hope that helped!
SlothOfDoom t1_itjmryn wrote
> “one of its kind”
Although accurate, that's probably not the phrase they were looking for.
Bashstash01 t1_itjmia0 wrote
Reply to This is what is known about the warrior customs of the Huetar people from Costa Rica. by Imaginary_Alarm_7575
This is quite interesting; however, do we know if this was standard at this area during this time? I would like to see some other accounts from nearby peoples to compare and contrast.
tlk0153 t1_itjmhip wrote
Reply to comment by VeryOriginalName98 in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
They are definitely worthy
[deleted] t1_itjm1ll wrote
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[deleted] t1_itjm0he wrote
Reply to comment by VeryOriginalName98 in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
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VeryOriginalName98 t1_itjlnob wrote
I'm surprised they were able to pick it up for the photos. Archaeologists are good people.
[deleted] t1_itjljx2 wrote
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[deleted] t1_itjsyz1 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Thor’s hammer amulet discovered in Sweden - Arkeonews by GullyShotta
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