The transition from p. 257 to 258 is corrupted. At the top of p. 258, a passage from mid-paragraph on p. 257 (‘these acts ... coolness to spring up between them.’) is repeated. This has been removed. The final phrase on p. 257 (‘Here, too, he was....’) is not taken up on the following page, which is indicated here with a bracketed ellipsis.
Corrections made to the text appear underlined. The original text can be viewed using a mouseover, as corrected text.
Corrections made to the text appear as links to the table below, or, for punctuation corrections, as a thin underline, e.g. corrected.
Substantive changes are summarized below. It is a lengthy list, so punctuation errors, such as missing full stops or comma/full stop errors, have been corrected with no further notice, except for the underlining just mentioned. The page numbers serve as links back to the correction.
| p. [iii] | than[g] in German. | Removed. |
| p. [v] | by the Tu-man River. [b/B]etween | Replaced. |
| p. [1] | He governed through his three vice-[ger/reg]ents | Transposed. |
| p. [4] | P’ang-o[-/ ]is erected there. | Removed hyphen. |
| p. [4] | and his whole e[n]vironment>. | Added. |
| p. [5] | traditon, is as follows. | Added. |
| p. [5] | the royal dupe, she said[./,] | Replaced. |
| p. [7] | ready communication be[t]ween> its parts. | Added. |
| p. [12] | In 403 the king of Y[u/ŭ]n sent | Replaced. |
| p. [15] | establishes his kin[dg/gd]om | Transposed. |
| p. [20] | the aged men of Pu-y[ü/ŭ] used to say | Replaced. |
| p. [25] | P[y’/’y]ŭng-an and the western part | Transposed. |
| p. [25] | (known also as the Mul-gil[)] | Added. |
| p. [27] | im[m]igration>.... customs | Added. |
| p. [28] | we can easly imagine | Added. |
| p. [30] | making certain kinds of[ of] vow or promises. | Removed. |
| p. [30] | occupying approxima[t]ely the territory | Added. |
| p. [33] | the great northern kingdom of Ko-gu[r-y/-ry]ŭ | Transposed. |
| p. [33] | The founding of Sil[-/ ]la, Ko-gu[r-y/-ry]u | Replaced. Transposed. |
| p. [33] | vicissitudes.... Ko-gu[r-y]/-ry]u.... four Pu-yus | Transposed |
| p. [33] | Chu-mong founds Ko-gu[r-y]/-ry]u.... growth | Transposed. |
| p. [33] | the capital moved.... siiuation si[i/t]uation of | Replaced. |
| p. [34] | great council at Yun-[e/c]hŭn-yang> | Replaced. |
| p. [35] | so the[ ]records | Added. |
| p. [35] | It would also indicate tha[e/t] | Replaced. |
| p. [35] | the little kingdo[n/m] of Sil-la | Replaced. |
| p. [36] | As this was the year, 37 B.C., w[e/h]ich marks | Replaced. |
| p. [36] | in the kingdom of Pu[-]yŭ, it will be | Added. |
| p. [36] | for us to examine b[a/r]iefly | Replaced. |
| p. [37] | Thus was his prayer answered[.]> | Added. |
| p. [39] | probabl[e/y] refers to certain family clans | Replaced. |
| p. [40] | the deceased was exhaus[t]ed in the funeral ceremony. | Added. |
| p. [41] | went sadly home and a | Added. |
| p. [43] | where it remained for two hun[d]red | Added. |
| p. [44] | In the third y[r/e]ar of his reign | Replaced. |
| p. [48] | of compelling a speedy s[e/u]rrender. | Replaced. |
| p. [50] | Ham-ch’ang[,] Sŭng-ju, Ko-ryŭng a[h/n]d Ham-an. | Added. Replaced. |
| p. [51] | One of the[m] was Keum[-/ ]Su-ro | Added. Replaced. |
| p. [51] | became king of Ko-gu-r[y]u | Added. |
| p. [51] | noble lady of Sil-la i[a/s] sent to Japan. | Replaced. |
| p. [51] | traditions of[ of] Ko-gu-ryŭ this ruler professed | Removed. |
| p. [51] | on the one hand and s[ie/ei/zed all the Chinese territory | Transposed. |
| p. [52] | a hopeless struggle [s/a]gainst Păk-je. | Replaced. |
| p. [52] | avarice or [pusilanimity] | sic |
| p. [52] | e[n/m]bellish the legendary lore | Replaced. |
| p. [54] | one of his first acts was to[ a] arrest and put to death | Removed. |
| p. [54] | by opening roads [thro] to the north | sic |
| p. [58] | A courter>, Yu-ryu, offered to go | Added. |
| p. [59] | the weapon and p[l]unged> it into the enemy’s breast. | Added. |
| p. [59] | Two years lat[t]er [b/h]e made a treaty | Added. Replaced. |
| p. [59] | I[t/n] the third year of King Ch’ŭm-hă of Sil-la, 249 A.D. | Replaced. |
| p. [60] | be[ing/gin] at once. | Transposed. |
| p. [63] | Yong-whang, who had succeeded Mo [W/Y]ong-we, | Replaced. |
| p. [63] | Two years lat[t]er the capital was moved northward | Removed. |
| p. [63] | few years lat[t]er by sending his son | Removed. |
| p. [63] | In 344 new complications grew up be[t]ween> Sil-la | Added. |
| p. [64] | th[a/e]n at Nam-han. | Replaced. |
| p. [64] | arrow, but the assault failed | Removed. |
| p. [65] | Three years before this, [I/i]n 372, the Chinese had gained | Replaced. |
| p. [66] | the tenets of this cult through [emissaries] | sic |
| p. [68] | people, with a fine sense of justice, drove [Ch’ăm-nye] | sic |
| p. [69] | so skillful a di[lp/pl]omat that he soon brought | Transposed. |
| p. [69] | Then they tortur[t]ed their remaining victim | Removed. |
| p. [69] | b[e/y] torture. They burned him alive | Replaced. |
| p. [70] | investiture from the Emperor, no[w/r] that the latter | Replaced. |
| p. [71] | When [Pă-gy[ /ŭ]ng] | Replaced. |
| p. [72] | We will remember that Ko-[k/g]u-ryŭ had cultivated friendly | Replace. Removed. |
| p. [73] | asked openly that the Wei Emperor send a[t/n] army | Replaced. |
| p. [73] | cha[rg/gr]in | Transposed. |
| p. [75] | a calf, a colt, a dog[,] a pig and a woman | Added. |
| p. [75] | One of the visitors was Ko-hu[,] one was one was Ko-ch’ŭng[,] but the[ the] | Added. Removed. |
| p. [76] | bearing upon the wel[l]fare of the | Removed. |
| p. [79] | lavend[a/e]r. | Replaced. |
| p. [79] | This came to a climax when she stopp[p/e]d | Replaced. |
| p. [84] | this faithful minister, Hu-jik, [plead] in | sic |
| p. [84] | on one occasi[a/o]n the king impatiently exclaimed | Replaced. |
| p. [84] | the king who had forg[e/o]tten all about his threat | Replaced. |
| p. [84] | her arm and drove [the] away from the palace. | sic her? the girl? |
| p. [87] | the har[d]ihood of the Ko-gu-ryŭ soldiery | Added. |
| p. [88] | Only two courses were ther[e]fore open to an[d] invading army; | Added. Removed. |
| p. [90] | He entered upon a [geurilla] warfare | sic |
| p. [90] | very humble letter [sueing]> for mercy. | sic |
| p. [91] | Chinese covered four hund[er/re]d and fifty li | Transposed. |
| p. [91] | like the [paltroon] that she was | sic |
| p. [92] | u[y/p] as high as the wall of the town | Replaced. |
| p. [95] | specious promises so far mol[l]ified the dislike | Added. |
| p. [95] | [s/t]o secure a rabbit | Replaced. |
| p. [96] | to restore the territory to you.[”] | Added. |
| p. [97] | At the same time a Sil-la [emmissary] | sic |
| p. [97] | had neither the power of the one no[w/r] the peaceful disposition | Replaced. |
| p. [98] | that [was this/this was] an ancient feud with | Words transposed. |
| p. [98] | The Emperor listened to and [profitted] by this advice | sic |
| p. [99] | rest of Ko-gur[-]yŭ | Added. |
| p. [102] | p[er/re]ference of China for her | Transposed. |
| p. [104] | for rebuking him of[ of] his excesses. | Removed. |
| p. [105] | on whose back were writ[t]en> the words | Added. |
| p. [105] | Somewhat mol[l]ified> by this | Added. |
| p. [105] | must be attacked f[l/i]rst; other | Replaced. Added. |
| p. [106] | as they had agree[d] | Added. |
| p. [106] | the whole period of Păk-je rule covered a lapse of[ of] 678 years; | Removed. |
| p. [106] | making the whole dyna[a/s]ty 689 years. | Replaced. |
| p. [106] | dis[a]ffection showed itself on every side | Added. |
| p. [107] | She immed[ia]tately threw | Added. |
| p. [107] | but a remnant of his forces [e/i]ntrenched | Replaced for consistency. |
| p. [110] | who had been left in charge of th[e] Chinese | Added. |
| p. [110] | either money o[f/r] rice. | Replaced. |
| p. [111] | Sin-sŭng was therefore besieged and the st[r]uggle began. | Added. |
| p. [111] | but [t]his men thought otherwise | Removed. |
| p. [113] | disorder.... examinations.... Bud[d]hism | Added. |
| p. [114] | his kingdom would ex[t]end> to the Yalu River | Added. |
| p. [116] | The unfortun[a]te> Kim In-mun | Added. |
| p. [117] | to unite with the Mal[-]gal and Kŭ-ran forces | Added. |
| p. [118] | (1) Ung-ch‘ŭn-ju in the[ the] north, | Removed. |
| p. [119] | It was done in this way[;/:] There is a Chinese character | Replaced. |
| p. [121] | 'manag[a/e]ment [i/o]f Kŭl-gŭl Chung-sŭng. | Replace x 2. |
| p. [121] | the sea turned to b[i/l]ood> | Replaced. |
| p. [122] | as far north as the banks o[t/f] the Ta-dong River | Replaced. |
| p. [123] | of Han-ya[ ]ng (Seoul) | Space removed. |
| p. [124] | The outlying provinces practi[c]ally governed themselves. | Added. |
| p. [124] | of literar[ar]y attainment, | Removed. |
| p. [124] | the exp[id/edi]tion back to the capital | Replaced. |
| p. [127] | prophecy.... Wang-gön doe[t/s] | Replaced. |
| p. [132] | near to the prostrate f[ro/or]m of Wang-gön. | Transposed. |
| p. [132] | When the mock Buddha raised h[a/i]s head and repeated | Replaced. |
| p. [133] | must fall (Kung-ye).[”] | Added. |
| p. [134] | custom of granting a monop[o]ly | Added. |
| p. [137] | Mountain and made a rush down[ down] upon the unsuspecting | Removed. |
| p. [138] | the ravages of Ky[u/ŭ]n-whŭn. | Replaced. |
| p. [143] | ancient city of P‘yŭng-yang be remember[e]d>. | Added. |
| p. [144] | The latter’s posthumous [l/t]itle is Hye-jong. | Replaced. |
| p. [145] | th[o]roughly in the hands of the sac[a/e]rdotal power. | Added. Replaced. |
| p. [146] | The king manumitted ma[n]y of these | Added. |
| p. [156] | was put to Gen. Yi Hyŭn-un he replied[./:] | Replaced. |
| p. [157] | This attempt failing, the conqu[o/e]rors decided | Replaced. |
| p. [160] | and all to no[t] avail, he com[m]anded | Removed. Added. |
| p. [163] | in keeping pace with Bud[d]hism. | Added. |
| p. [163] | two from a five hun[d]red-house | Added. |
| p. [165] | the son of the first son succe[de/ed]s. | Transposed. |
| p. [168] | only by sending a[t/n] abject letter | Replaced. |
| p. [170] | The monk [Tosun] | sic To-sŭn |
| p. [179] | A civil official, returning from China, learned of[ of] | Removed. |
| p. [184] | with the throes through [ ] the country was passing. | sic which? |
| p. [184] | at once how superstitio[n/u]s they were | Replaced. |
| p. [184] | This same reformer [Cho‘e/Ch’oe] Chung-heun, | Replaced. |
| p. [186] | by far the most even[t]ful reign | Added. |
| p. [188] | The s[ei/ie]ge of Kang-dong | Transposed. |
| p. [190] | The envoy who brought this extra[d]ordinary letter | Removed. |
| p. [190] | be[t]ween 1200 and 1400. | Added. |
| p. [194] | of the first Mongol m[a/e]ssenger | Replaced. |
| p. [194] | But Pak Sö the prefect of Ku[-]Ju was an obstinate man | Added. |
| p. [198] | o[n/f] Kang-wha meanwhile | Replaced. |
| p. [199] | who kept to comparatively n[o/a]rrow lines of march. | Replaced. |
| p. [200] | charge of affairs during an[d] interval of four | Removed. |
| p. [201] | sent with instructions [the/to] settle | Replaced. |
| p. [202] | the redoubtable general app[r]oached> the | Added. |
| p. [202] | The commandant laugh[-/ed ]at | Replaced. |
| p. [202] | a portion of the w[e/a]ll, set fire to the buildings | Replaced. |
| p. [202] | I will give him just six day | Added. |
| p. [202] | Mongol forces turned ea[r]stward | Removed. |
| p. [209] | was away on a c[o/a]mpaign against the Sung Empire | Replaced. |
| p. [209] | It was decided to form a regency to[ to] | Removed. |
| p. [226] | entered a Ko[yr/ry]ŭ harbor. | Transposed. |
| p. [229] | the example of his for[e]bears | Added. |
| p. [230] | his daughter-in[-]law | Added. |
| p. [232] | He soon returned to[ to] China | Removed. |
| p. [232] | came to realise that it was Buddhism [w/t]hat had proved | Replaced |
| p. [232] | by priestcraft that [was it/it was] much pleasanter | Words transposed. |
| p. [234] | Meanw[h]ile the king was build[-/ing] | Added. Added. |
| p. [235] | Prince was [exhonerated] and sent back | sic |
| p. [236] | drunk[e]nness, he entered the harem | Added. |
| p. [236] | [humane] pastime. | sic |
| p. [236] | a thing of daily [occurence]. | sic |
| p. [236] | kick that sent him spraw[l]ing on the ground. | Added. |
| p. [246] | desp[a/e]rate stand on a hill | Replaced. |
| p. [252] | This man fought [aways] in front | sic |
| p. [254] | frequent [occurence]. | sic |
| p. [254] | and to co[n]voy the revenue junks, | Added. |
| p. [257] | Here, too, he was [...] | Missing text. |
| p. [258] | Sin[-]don with respect. | Added. |
| p. [258] | he ascribed to his having taken Sin[-]don | Added. |
| p. [261] | which read as follow | Added. |
| p. [263] | the emperor’s gfts and commands | Added. |
| p. [263] | of their Manchu conquer[e/o]rs. | Replaced. |
| p. [263] | more Chinese tha[t/n] the Chinese themselves. | Replaced. |
| p. [268] | to add to the dfficulties of the situation | Added. |
| p. [269] | were carrying fire and sword thr[o]ugh the south | Added. |
| p. [271] | were slaughtered almost to [a] man. | Added. |
| p. [273] | complacency upon the dis | Added. |
| p. [275] | at last tired of the er[r]atic | Added. |
| p. [277] | Gen. Yi [t/T]‘ă-jo was having a lively time | Replaced. |
| p. [280] | rode forth [preceeded] by a host of harlots and concubines | sic |
| p. [283] | Some of these the king s[ie/ei]zed and | Transposed. |
| p. [283] | But Gen. Yi remain[e]d impassive. | Added. |
| p. [283] | r[si/is]ing flood. | Transposed. |
| p. [284] | and so had come thus f[o/a]r north. | Replaced. |
| p. [284] | the march of the rebellous> | Added. |
| p. [284] | encounter our count[r]ymen many will fall. | Added. |
| p. [285] | food and the[m/n] leisurely arose, | Added. |
| p. [287] | He [plead] to be | sic |
| p. [287] | off the stage of histo[r]y>. | Added. |
| p. [291] | Chong Mong-ju real[l]y believed | Added. |
| p. [296] | made it easy for king T‘ă-jo to [smoothe] over the | sic |
| p. [297] | an official more imag[a/i]native than discreet | Replaced. |
| p. [298] | into 3 semi-independent district | Added. |
| p. [299] | should become the[ri/ir] | Transposed. |
| p. [303] | Under his supervision a [clypsehydra] | sic clepshedra |
| p. [307] | govern[n]ment to fifty | Removed. |
| p. [309] | refo[r]ms>.... official history of the land | Added. |
| p. [315] | T[‘]ă-jo> to observe carefully the precept | Added. |
| p. [315] | at one ti[n/m]e he distributed large | Replaced. |
| p. [315] | the soldiers on the northe[r]n border | Added. |
| p. [315] | In his fifth yea[a]r he codified the laws | Removed. |
| p. [318] | d[i/e]finitely adopted and written out | Replaced. |
| p. [318] | nominated to the throne Prince[-]Cha-san | Removed. |
| p. [318] | H[e/is] posthumous title is Sŭng-jong | Replaced. |
| p. [319] | allegiance to [Cho-săn]. | sic |
| p. [319] | were driven from Seoul and [and] forbidden to enter it | Removed. |
| p. [319] | “Five Rules of Conduct[./,]” [H/h]e also built | Replaced. |
| p. [321] | tribe of Yŭ-jin was [harrassing] the people | sic |
| p. [327] | c[o/a]nnot put her away.” | Replaced. |
| p. [327] | Ch’e-p’o[,] Yum-p’o' and Pu-san-p’o. | Added. |
| p. [327] | attacked [Ch’è] Harbor | sic |
| p. [330] | whose arrow weighed a[ a] hundred and twenty pounds | Removed. |
| p. [331] | his posthum[o]us title | Added. |
| p. [333] | it was mere he[re/ar]say | Replaced. |
| p. [334] | felt in all the adjo[ur/i]ning prefectures. | Replaced. |
| p. [334] | It was in 1550 that an[d] astronomical inst[r]ument | Removed. Added. |
| p. [339] | “The Young Men’s P[a]rty>,” | Added. |
| p. [340] | army on the b[ro/or]der. | Transposed. |
| p. [343] | inability to hold the[ the] Japanese | Removed. |
| p. [344] | he could not do without finding a field[ a field] | Removed. |
| p. [344] | It is well known that the govern[n/m]ent of Japan | Replaced. |
| p. [344] | and from this po[u/i]nt of vantage killed | Replaced. |
| p. [344] | send an[d] envoy to Japan. The only no[r/t]ice taken | Removed. Replaced. |
| p. [344] | W[h]en> Yasuhiro placed this missive | Added. |
| p. [344] | from outbreaks of the far norther[n] border | Added. |
| p. [344] | Being successful in this h[ə/e] | Replaced. |
| p. [344] | simultaneosly and attacked the Si-jun tribe | Added. |
| p. [346] | he was a good scholar and an ex[a/e]mplary man. | Replaced. |
| p. [346] | The king the[m/n] threw upon the floor | Replaced. |
| p. [347] | Whang Yun[n]-gil was chief of the Korean embassy, | Removed. |
| p. [347] | realizing how[ how] such action would bring Korea | Removed. |
| p. [348] | You dou[tlb/btl]ess will be angry | Transposed. |
| p. [349] | and ap[p]ointed> Gen. Sil Yip | Added. |
| p. [350] | regular army consi | Added. |
| p. [351] | having been baptized by the [Portugese] | sic |
| p. [352] | and the beleagu[e]red town of Tong-nă, | Added. |
| p. [352] | An instant lat[t]er the prefect | Removed. |
| p. [353] | Tradition, which delights to embel[l]ish such accounts, | Added. |
| p. [353] | his fort[r]ess and defied the invaders. | Added. |
| p. [355] | came the news of [t]he fall of Fusan, | Added. |
| p. [355] | rolls were look[e]d up | Added. |
| p. [355] | men wold> follow him. | Added. |
| p. [356] | as it does for his patrotism. | Added. |
| p. [357] | That very night the Japan[ese] | Added. |
| p. [358] | One of [t]his captains told him | Removed. |
| p. [360] | hundred hands were stre[t]ched> out | Added. |
| p. [360] | “Where shall [b/w]e go?” | Replaced. |
| p. [360] | b[o/e]come customary for the gover[n]ment | Replaced. Added. |
| p. [364] | their kne[s/e]s in mud and were well[-]nigh | Replaced. Added. |
| p. [364] | they had been forgott[o/e]n they began to | Replaced. |
| p. [366] | d[i/e]sirous of getting to Seoul | Replaced. |
| p. [366] | This great trip[p]le army | Removed. |
| p. [367] | that the city could not [h/b]e held | Replaced. |
| p. [367] | bef[e/o]re those of Kato hastened | Replaced. |
| p. [368] | I[n/t] is said so many perished | Replaced. |
| p. [370] | the northern bo[th/rd] guard, | Replaced. |
| p. [370] | and the generals were mutu[r]ally suspicious | Removed. |
| p. [370] | at the gates of Na[n]king | Added. |
| p. [373] | governors of C[h]‘ung-ch‘ŭng and Kyŭng-sang Provinces | Added. |
| p. [374] | headl[i/o]ng up the slope | Replaced. |
| p. [378] | his praises were on[e / e]very lip. | Moved space. |
| p. [380] | And so the conference was[ was] broken up. | Removed. |
| p. [384] | but another said, “P[‘]yŭng-yang is a natural | Added. |
| p. [384] | Yi Hang-bok insisted upon the nec[c]essity of going north | Removed. |
| p. [389] | f[a/o]rces in Ham-gyŭng Province. | Replaced. |
| p. [391] | he walled town o[n/f] Yŭn-an | Replaced. |
| p. [391] | we are in je[apo/opa]rdy of our lives. | Replaced. |
| p. [391] | boiling water thrown [wond/down]. | Replaced. |
| p. [391] | pon them. The fight lasted three days and finally the | Added. Removed. |
| p. [392] | a [geurilla] campaign. | sic |
| p. [393] | [harrassed] and worried | sic |
| p. [396] | of course a [geurilla] warfare | sic |
| p. [396] | but the utter [pusilanimity] of the Koreans, | sic |
| p. [405] | this retreat and[ and] it was a sample of what must occur | Removed. |
| p. [406] | For this purpo[r]se it was necessary | Removed. |
| p. [409] | and kept up a [geurilla] warfare, | sic |