I saw the turtle ship and thought: could this be Admiral Yi? I had only seen it in a cartoon series on Admiral Yi: extra History, but it looked very good
People are amazed by the technology of "turtle ships" until they realize that they were a product of the 1600s+. During this same period elsewhere in the globe there were already "ships of the line" that had unique hull designs that were practically impervious to the caliber of canon used by Koreans (mating thick and dissimilar woods to make them shatterproof), were capable of traversing blue waters safely (turtle ships were for calm waters near land only), and were firing three decks of guns, the lower of which were massively greater range and poundage (up to 48 pounders) than the turtle ships, and would have been able to sink them from great range. In fact, their naval technology was so much more advanced that when these ships reached Asia, only a handful were able to both open Japan to trade (the black ship) and cause the fall of a Chinese dynasty and create the "century of humiliation". When it comes to ships, Europeans are where its at, everyone else was practically in canoes.
@@BoopSnootYour way of subtly justifying imperialism by comparing technologies of entirely different cultures makes me ill. Korea was a pacifist nation that was largely focused on academia and art during the Joseon dynasty period. They never invaded other countries and rarely participated in international trades. There was no need to be equipped with fleets of impenetrable naval ships. The Imjin war was the first major war in several centuries in Korean history. Considering the fact that the “turtle ships” were invented during wartime with little to no governmental support, and was greatly effective in small numbers against the war-hardened Japanese, I’d say their skills in military technology was simply extraordinary. Technological differences due to difference in necessity and culture do not equate to the actual difference in capability.
Bruh, 2-years, and these were produced more or less from then on. Point is, as far as maritime technology, give props where it is due, to the Portuguese, French, English, etc. they ruled the oceans! These were still more or less modified ancient Greek penteconter technology wise. @@mck7067
Молодцы ребята. Так и надо этим японским пиратам. Никогда не понимал современное восхищение этими людьми в моей стране. На мой взгляд китайцы и корейцы на много более интересные и человечные нации, чем потомки самураев.
한산에 고증을 따지면 안되는이유 조선수군이 말도안될정도로 완벽하게 이겨서 고증대로 하면 긴장감이고 뭐고 없을정도 누가봐도 싸우기도전 이미 이긴전투라 이걸 좀 없애려고 일본군을 버프시켜줌 충무공을 좀더 띄우기위해 와키자카를 띄워줌 만약 이순신장군이 아직까지 살아계셔서 저 영화 보시면 ‘난 저런 상황 만들어가며 안싸운다!’ 라고 사자후 날리실정도로 극적전개를 위해 이것저것 각색함
This my friends is what in western naval terminology is called "Crossing the T" where on force is aligned so as to appy maximum firepower against the attacking fleet, only a few of whose guns are available facing forward. It is how Nelson defeated the French Fleet at Trafalgar.
Actually Vice Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson was sailing his fleet of two columns of sail of the line directly at the full line of the Franco-Spanish fleet. Meaning he was the one under fire and could only reply with his few forward guns until he was able to deliver a devastating treble-shotted raking broadside into the bow and stern of the ships of the line he had just broken through. He was only able to brake though the line by the shear bravery of the men under his command to endure such devastating firepower.
Scena pelna dobrej akcji. W dodstku zainteresowało mnie z jakim wydarzeniem historycznym jest zwiazana. Chcialbym tu w Polsce widziec takie filmy o Waszej historii. Poznac to z czego Wybjestescie dumni, lub z deugiej strony jakie kleski ponosily azjatyckie narody.
The movie you mentioned, "The Admiral : Roaring Currents," is actually the first of the Yi Sun-sin Trilogy. It depicted the Battle of Myeongnyang in 1597. The movie here is the second installment (from the same director) and is called "Hansan : Rising Dragon." It depicted the Battle of Hansan in 1592, so it is actually a prequel to "The Admiral : Roaring Currents." And the last movie of the Trilogy is called "Noryang : Sea of Death" and will come out this December. It depicts the Battle of Noryang in 1598 and is the final battle of Yi Sun-sin, when he gets mortally wounded by a stray bullet but famously tells his troops to "keep beating the drums" to rally them into fighting on without him and eventually winning the war.
@@Submission_Fighter wow I loved that movie so much I’ve probably watched it like 10 times but I never knew there was more!?!? Thanks for letting me know bro now I gotta find a way to watch them!
@@버두고 섬멀티 가난한 자원으로 시작해서 마린메딕이 아니라 탱크(판옥선) 벌쳐(거북선) 메카닉(함대전 세계최초 집단함포전 T자형 전술 ㄷㄷㄷ)으로 밀고 가서 임요한? 학익진 힘대힘으로 전사상자 없이 깔끔하게 밀어버리고 의주로 건물 띄워서 도망간 본진 커맨드 까지 다시 불러오시고 그것도 모자라 전쟁 와중에 본진 십시일반 scv 지원나가고 세금내고 쌀내주고 상대편 저그는 6멀티 앞마당(한산도) 한타에도 밀려 이순신 장군님 메카닉 순회공연으로 미네랄 멀티 다 따여 육상로 드랍은 다 막혀 결국 5본진 해처리 처박혀서 방어만 하다 말라죽어버렸는데 가끔 보면 이게 사람인다 싶은게 이순신 장군님임 지리정보와 휴민트 정보전 중요성 기본으로 밀고 왜구들 실시간 정보 받아보고 맵핵키고 자리잡고 이겨놓고 싸운건데 현대인 장교가 과거로 회귀한거 아닌가 의심스러울 정도ㄷㄷㄷ
솔직히 저때 일본군이랑 조선군이랑 차이 심함. 일본전국통일하면서 장수와 병사들이 실전경험 쌓고 후끈후끈한 상태였고 훈련상황 일본은 7년이나 준비했고 스파이를 통해서 사전에 조선을 정찰까지 당함. 우리나라도 대비한다고 했지만 일본 전력이 엄청 강했음. 그 당시 이순신 김시민 권율등등 엄청 잘 싸운거임.
east asian ships were basically galleons, so most of the maneuvers were done by rowing. The Korean vessels in this movie, "Panoakseon"s had flat bottoms as well, which gave them great turning speed
Il s'agit d'un exemple typique de la doctrine navale consistant à barré le T. Cas d'école aussi bien en Occident, qu'en Orient. Les Japonais en on fait l'exemple le plus récent contre la marine Russe.
@@JamixGaming Awesome! Definitely just checked it out and will rent. Yeah it is about Admiral Yi Sun-Shin. Research his name. He is on par with Alexander/Caesar/Kubeli against a way superior Japanese samurai enemy invasion. His exploits are extremely entertaining to learn about. Amazing historical figure most people never even heard of.