After the establishment of the agriculturalist state of Joseon, the
Joseon government took the lead in protecting agricultural land and
farmers. Farmers turned the habitat of wild animals, especially wild
animals, into agricultural land by cultivating forests with slash-and-burn
fiel...
After the establishment of the agriculturalist state of Joseon, the
Joseon government took the lead in protecting agricultural land and
farmers. Farmers turned the habitat of wild animals, especially wild
animals, into agricultural land by cultivating forests with slash-and-burn
fields. As a result, tigers and other beasts attacked the farmers, but this
led to protection activities, and despite this, the farmers continued to
expand their agricultural land, and logging was constantly carried out to
heat and create residences. Wild animals living in the ecosystem of the
Korean Peninsula were losing their homes.
Since 1876, Joseon has been recognized as a country of tigers, and
Westerners and Japanese catchers have poured in to catch tigers and
leopards. Meanwhile, Japan disbanded the Korean Empire army in 1907
and took all guns from Koreans. Catchers were also not allowed to
carry guns. At that time, wolves living in one side of the Korean
Peninsula ecosystem expanded their power horribly, and damage by
tigers and leopards continued. Accordingly, the Japanese colonial rule
enacted the hunting rules in 1911 and allowed Korean catchers to carry
guns again by starting a seawater relief project in 1913. A large number
of Japanese catchers were also brought in.
The catchers were eager to hunt tigers in the name of catching
seawater. They did not pay attention to wolves that accounted for most
of the damage to residents. Japanese imperialism begins to find a way
only after a series of damages, such as the wolf inherits the child who
slept in his mother's arms, the child who slept in the yard disappears,
and numerous livestock are damaged. In response, since the mid-1910s,
Japanese imperialism has tried to reduce wolf damage by cracking down
on homelessness, fostering wolf catchers, and mobilizing residents to
capture large-scale wolves, but did not achieve much. Subsequently,
various efforts were made, such as giving rewards to those who
captured wolves or attempting poison that wolves could eat, but the
damage to residents caused by wolves remained. From this point of
view, it can be seen that the seawater relief business did not achieve its
original goal properly.
However, it is known that this seawater relief project is a means for
the eradication of the Japanese national spirit, centered on media
companies, or a means to try to subdue Koreans by showing the
modern power of the Japanese. However, it is far from the reality of the
seawater relief business.
In this paper, we looked at the Japanese colonial era seawater relief
project again and focused on wolf damage and Japanese response, which
are the core. And I would like to examine how such a project works for
the Korean people.
After the establishment of the agriculturalist state of Joseon, the
Joseon government took the lead in protecting agricultural land and
farmers. Farmers turned the habitat of wild animals, especially wild
animals, into agricultural land by cultivating forests with slash-and-burn
fields. As a result, tigers and other beasts attacked the farmers, but this
led to protection activities, and despite this, the farmers continued to
expand their agricultural land, and logging was constantly carried out to
heat and create residences. Wild animals living in the ecosystem of the
Korean Peninsula were losing their homes.
Since 1876, Joseon has been recognized as a country of tigers, and
Westerners and Japanese catchers have poured in to catch tigers and
leopards. Meanwhile, Japan disbanded the Korean Empire army in 1907
and took all guns from Koreans. Catchers were also not allowed to
carry guns. At that time, wolves living in one side of the Korean
Peninsula ecosystem expanded their power horribly, and damage by
tigers and leopards continued. Accordingly, the Japanese colonial rule
enacted the hunting rules in 1911 and allowed Korean catchers to carry
guns again by starting a seawater relief project in 1913. A large number
of Japanese catchers were also brought in.
The catchers were eager to hunt tigers in the name of catching
seawater. They did not pay attention to wolves that accounted for most
of the damage to residents. Japanese imperialism begins to find a way
only after a series of damages, such as the wolf inherits the child who
slept in his mother's arms, the child who slept in the yard disappears,
and numerous livestock are damaged. In response, since the mid-1910s,
Japanese imperialism has tried to reduce wolf damage by cracking down
on homelessness, fostering wolf catchers, and mobilizing residents to
capture large-scale wolves, but did not achieve much. Subsequently,
various efforts were made, such as giving rewards to those who
captured wolves or attempting poison that wolves could eat, but the
damage to residents caused by wolves remained. From this point of
view, it can be seen that the seawater relief business did not achieve its
original goal properly.
However, it is known that this seawater relief project is a means for
the eradication of the Japanese national spirit, centered on media
companies, or a means to try to subdue Koreans by showing the
modern power of the Japanese. However, it is far from the reality of the
seawater relief business.
In this paper, we looked at the Japanese colonial era seawater relief
project again and focused on wolf damage and Japanese response, which
are the core. And I would like to examine how such a project works for
the Korean people.
Keyword
#Capturing harmful animals Japapnese colonial era Hunting wild animals Korean Tiger Wolf Animal extinction Restoration of animals
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