GREATER KOREAN REPUBLIC SOON. FIRST SOUTH KOREA. THEN JAPAN

GREATER KOREAN REPUBLIC SOON. FIRST SOUTH KOREA. THEN JAPAN

Attached: GREATER KOREAN PROSPERITY SPHERE.jpg (800x593, 55K)

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=CwuAcnK5k-g
youtube.com/watch?v=GUeCujIjuoQ
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hōryū-ji
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voluntary_Agency_Network_of_Korea
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

please do not use prosperity sphere it is not nice

The protectorate is established!

Attached: 79780FA8-1DE1-4E79-9A66-FFD0FCFBA5FA.jpg (768x448, 46K)

>10cm taller

The virgin korean tributary
The chad Emperor

Day of victory, how far it was from us all,
Like in extinct campfire burns out the coal.
There were miles, burned, in dust and soot-
To bring this day as near, as we could.
youtube.com/watch?v=CwuAcnK5k-g

shorter = more powerful

I thought they aimed for the Moon.

youtube.com/watch?v=GUeCujIjuoQ

based.

Attached: 1511056488752.jpg (1200x2355, 1.22M)

funny how gooks always hypocritically criticize the greater east asian co-prosperity sphere and stuff thinking they have a moral high ground and yet they are dying for their own one deep down

Attached: 1521848709676.png (329x306, 81K)

t. Manlet

Attached: F07B2324-860D-4F07-A28C-EC24D4B57D52.png (2760x2000, 58K)

they don't criticize the idea, they criticized the method.

What the fuck does the jap creatura even mean by this?

Yeah I’m sure Chinese should be happy when Japan rapes and beheads millions of them.

Greater Asian “Co-Prosperity” Region - AKA Japanese Empire.

Jap is on watch. The Korean century is upon us.

Attached: ED71F9CE-3C90-40E6-882C-5468EE01BC64.png (1000x750, 906K)

>gooks
don't be racist to koreans

>hypocritically criticize the greater east asian co-prosperity sphere
japan doesn't deserve to rule east asia because japdogs don't have good judgement

in the name of "co-prosperity sphere" japan has killed millions of people

op literally said when lebensraum soon, not understanding that it was just a tool for nazi germany to brainwash their own people

Why is it always a Canadian? I used to think it was a meme...

He's forcing the meme

HA

let them try
Japan consistently dominates and humiliates Gooks and Chinks, it's not even funny.

Can't wait for Glorious Nippon to build Gundam Fighters and carpet bomb the ever living fuck out of that manlet Kim Kimchi Gook.

she's dating a white guy isn't she. just from the face i can tell

This is good news. I wonder what will happen next

Attached: 4837BBD9-0726-42C6-9FEA-7FC2C7A5C0C4.png (563x525, 573K)

It is necessary for Japan to become the North Korean suzerain again.

where did you find a pic of my girlfriend

Go back to ur country Chinada
Pls Canada
Ban Chinese and Koreans from ur beautiful white land

and japs

Scholars believe that the Nihon Shoki gives the invasion date of Silla and Baekje as the late 4th century. However, by this time, Japan was a confederation of local tribes without sophisticated iron weapons, while the Three Kingdoms of Korea were fully developed centralized powers with modern iron weapons and were already utilizing horses for warfare. It is very unlikely that a developing state such as Yamato had the capacity to cross the sea and engage in battles with Baekje and Silla

Attached: 1520901912954.png (570x533, 8K)

What's the point of saying this?
It's literally irrelevant, no one denies any of what you said, HOWEVER, once Japan was brought up to times by foreign influence, they completed outclassed and dominated their neighbors.

pictured:
Peach, Mario, Luigi, Daisy.

Attached: DZVYvxPUMAAX4AM.jpg (628x437, 69K)

>Asian conflict
>Canada intervenes
WHAT DID THEY MEAN BY THIS?

when did china's leader trade in his commie garb for a business suit. lenin must be rolling in his grave

lmao, too bad, every extant documentary record in asia shows yamato's domination over silla and baekje. you can't reject it if multiple sources from multiple countries suggest exactly the same fact, especially when any record that shows the contrary has never been found.

Attached: absolute state of baekje and shilla.jpg (2783x3259, 1.3M)

Well, it's not that easy
it won't change anything soon but there's no choice when avoiding a war is the first priority

the discovery (in Japan) that the "Inariyama sword, as well as some other swords discovered in Japan, utilized the Korean 'Idu' system of writing". The swords "originated in Paekche and that the kings named in their inscriptions represent Paekche kings rather than Japanese kings".[9] The techniques for making these swords were the apparently similar to styles from Korea, specifically from Baekje

"I, on my part, feel a certain kinship with Korea, given the fact that it is recorded in the Chronicles of Japan that the mother of Emperor Kammu was of the line of King Muryong of Paekche," - emperor hirohito

The modulation of continental styles of art in Korea has also been discerned in Japanese painting and architecture, ranging from the design of Buddhist temples to smaller objects such as statues, textiles and ceramics. Late in the sixteenth century, the Japanese invasions of Korea produced considerable cross-cultural contact. Korean craftsmen who came to Japan at this time were responsible for a revolution in Japanese pottery making.

During most of the Kofun period Japan relied on Korea as its sole source of iron swords, spears, armor, and helmets. Cuirasses and later Japan's first lamellar armor, as well as subsequent innovations in producing them, arrived in Japan from Korea, particularly from Silla and Gaya.[25] Japan's first crossbow was delivered by Goguryeo in 618.[26]

At a time in history when horses were a key military weapon, Baekje immigrants also established Japan's first horse-raising farms in what would become Japan's Kawachi Province. One historian, Koichi Mori, theorizes that Emperor Keitai's close friendships with Baekje horsemen played an important role in helping him to assume the throne.[27] Japan's first trappings, such as bits, stirrups, saddles, and bridles were also imported from the peninsula by the early fifth century.[28]

stoneware technologies such as the tunnel kiln and potter's wheel also made their way from Korea to Japan

Attached: edf6018d.jpg (640x640, 120K)

Dono Haruyuki, professor of Osaka University, recently suggested that the word "Japan", "Nippon" or "Nihon" (日本) was originally the name of a territory of Baekje dynasty based on a rubbed copy of Yegun's inscription (678), the oldest record of the word Japan (日本) in existence, discovered on July, 2011[1]

Modern Japanese are people who migrated from southern Korea in Yayoi period (400 BCE to 300 CE). People cultivating rice in southern Korea migrated to Japan. Mahan and Byeonhan people with rice cultivation moved to Japan during Yayoi period. Modern Japanese are direct descendents of Yayoi people. Migration of Koreans to Japan continued by people of Baekje up to 7th century. They mixed and pushed native people (Jomon, Ainus) away. Genetic analysis of ancient skulls found in Mahan area showed that they were closest to modern Japanese. Buyeo cavalry moved to Japan from Baekje and opened Azuka (late Yamato) period transferring Buddhism and Kanji. Japanese writing system Katagana was from Silla' Gugyeol writing system, and Hiragana was from Baekje's Manyogana. Genetic analysis of Japanese showed that Korean gene remained as majority. Comparative Linguistics explains that current Japanese language originated from ancient Korean language around 2000 years ago.

In any case, it is a fact that Japan was a suzerain in modern times.

my point still stands?
Not sure what you're trying to imply Kevin Park Yun

>Japan consistently dominates and humiliates Gooks and Chinks, it's not even funny
Learn history you fucking weeb monkey

japan is literally korean clay you low IQ huehue yanomami baboon

Humans were once primitive ape creatures as well. The past is the past and the present is now.

it's a historical fact though

some 1500 years ago japan was dominating gooks as every extant historical record shows some 500 years ago japan was slaughtering and raping gooks en masse
some 100 years ago japan was literally ruling the gooks

i don't know any period where an opposite case happened, except for modern gook fantasy and delusion like

you forgot to keep your proxy bro.

Attached: design_img_b_1453080_s[1].png (480x480, 180K)

South Korea under North Korean rule

The user you responded to was a fellow American. East Asian flags on Sup Forums aren't Asians posting. They literally have their own internet realm they stay in and Sup Forums was created as a watered down English version of part of that sphere.

>Dono Haruyuki
Who is that? Every thing is wrong with your post.

>Learn history
Korean Fantasy

South Korea is awful now so this would be a pretty good thing

Mao even went as far as to personally contact the white house to request starting talks about getting American advice for opening up their markets and the Americans ignored the correspondence outright and claimed the Chinese government was a growing threat to capitalism.
Now the Chinese market is less corrupted by corporate influnce and one of the richest in the world. Keep vomitting cancerous cold war era tier propaganda, though. I'm sure that will comfort you the next time your banking system steals hundreds of billions from the people and crashed the economy for the nth time.

why can't you zipperhead insects ever take a joke

"earlier views regarding Yamato's influence over kingdoms on the southern tip of Korea, even entitling Yamato to tribute, are now questioned. Little or no valid support can be found for the claim that Yamato was then obtaining tribute from Mimana (K: Kaya), Ueda reminds us that the Kojiki contains no references to Mimana, that the most specific Nihon shoki items are for a later time in the Yamato period; Yamao Yukihisa rejects the view that Yamato forces advanced into central Korea - Nihon kokke no keisei(Tokyo: Iwanami shinsho, 1977)"

"Only after [Japan] had learned how to grow rice in flooded fields and to use iron tools and weapons did they move rapidly toward civilization"

"The variety of rice grown in Japan - also suggests that rice came to Japan from the Korean peninsula; The hypothesis that rice came to Japan by way of Korea is also supported by other evidence of early contact between the two people, such as similar mound-building techniques."

"Metal culture, like the growing of rice, was introduced to Japan from Korea. Archaeological findings indicate that by the third century B.C., the Koreans had created an advanced metal culture." - inoue mitsusada, the cambridge history of japan, volume 1

>southern tip of Korea
That's not same to nowadays south Korea.
>how to grow rice in flooded fields and to use iron tools and weapons
That' s originally from China. Why are you so holding on Korea?

can't you read
>"The variety of rice grown in Japan - also suggests that rice came to Japan from the Korean peninsula"

also,

"One type of tool, a grooved axe with a square shaft, is peculiar to Korea. On the other hand, archaeologists have found no exclusively Chinese tools at northern Kyushu sites dating from the end of the Jomon period. Thus it seem unlikely that rice cultivation was introduced directly from China."

"only japonica is grown in Korea and Japan. Therefore, if rice had been introduced directly from the Yangtze to Japan, some indica grains might well have been found at Japanese sites" - the cambridge history of japan, volume 1

face it you fucking jap, you're living on korean soil

Where is the evidence? No one has exactly records of 2000 years before. All of your suggestions are just hypothesis.

>we wuz yamato and shieet
it's really funny and pity at the same time to see you gooks are dying to be part of yamato master race, however:

first of all, "koreans" didn't exist in the period of migration; what we know as korean people today is a han, fuyu, mongol, manchu, yamato rapebaby, as the history shows.

secondly, what you are bringing up are literal pseudo history stuff. the site from which you cited for example uses Fuji Miyashita record (富士宮下文書) as a reference which is a notorious apocryphal history book which belongs to literally the realm of tinfoil hat. the book goes so war as to say that japan had had a super ancient heavenly dynastic civilization around mt. fuji before the yamato dynasty was founded. so if you really take it seriously then you gotta accept this tinfoil hat thing too. those books were in vogue in edo to meiji period where commoners came to be interested in ancient history combined with nationalism, and you are citing from such a site when we are talking about real history, top kek. this is why gook history is said to be fantasy.
>Miyasita record(富士宮下 文書) explains that Gaya people governed Japan for a thousand years before Yamato era. People of Gaya built U Gaya kingdom in Japan, and it was destroyed by Yamato. This history was dropped in Japanese history[10] [11] .

lastly, all what "koreans introduced to japan" were chinese stuff, nothing originated in korea. and the introduction of chinese stuff was not even korean-led activities, but it was mostly done through yamato's domination over silla and baekje as i said above. kings of silla and baekje bent over backward for yamato for protection, paying tributes that contained those chinese stuff, and indeed yamato, as Nihon shoki says, saw silla and baekje as tributaries, as well as a lot of prisoners and refugees yamato took through invasion, some of which came to work in japan.

the evidence is that every historian and archaeologist agrees with the view that korea established the foundation for and civilized japan. you can deny all you want. the japanese barely had writing at the time so there is basically no documents other than the nihon shoki to reference from and every historian agrees that much of the nihon shoki is fabricated myths, including the myth that yamato took hostages from baekje. considering the fact that baekje was lightyears ahead in terms of technology compared to yamato japan, it's utter nonsense to believe that yamato influenced korea when yamato was little more than small tribes that could barely navigate the ocean and didn't even have iron-working or cavalry. none of your claims are validated while all the claims of korea migrating to japan in ancient eras and civilizing it in later eras have been validated even by third-party historians and archaeologists who actually studied the matter. even japanese historians agree with the view

Radioactive dating of the 59 burnt grains of rice found in central South Korea has pushed back the date for the earliest known cultivation of the plant to somewhere between 14,000 and 15,000 years ago. Carbonized rice grains, which were found near the Yellow River and Yangtze River in China and were considered to be the world’s oldest rice, were dated between 10,500 and 11,000 years ago

you're just being a stubborn japdog. face it you japdog, japan belongs to korea. if you don't stop being a dirty jap then you will be evicted soon

>the evidence is that every historian and archaeologist agrees
*every korean historian and archaeologist

>the japanese barely had writing at the time so there is basically no documents other than the nihon shoki to reference from
lmao, while kojiki and nihon shoki were composed in the 7-8th century, korea's oldest extant history record, samguk sagi, was composed in the 12th century, and
>including the myth that yamato took hostages from baekje.
this is even recorded in korean samguk sagi itself, as well as backing up the situation it suggests
>六年 夏五月 王與倭國結好 以太子腆支爲質
>According to the Samguk Sagi ("Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms"), written in 1145, King Asin of Baekje sent his son, prince Jeonji as a hostage in 397.[21] And King Silseong of Silla sent his son in 402; both were attempts to secure military aid from Yamato Japan

>considering the fact that baekje was lightyears ahead in terms of technology compared to yamato japan, it's utter nonsense to believe that yamato influenced korea when yamato was little more than small tribes
not really. baekje and silla were also barbarians. and they were puny small nations as records say while japan's yamatai (perhaps yamato) for example is described in a chinese official record, the records of the three kingdoms, as quite a big entity with a considerable population (larger than that of samhan then) to such an extent that the emperor even conferred a golden royal seal which was only given to the highest ranking allies and a high title of 親魏倭王 -king (queen) of wa friendly to wei- upon it. of course korea was more sinicized due to its proximity to china, but that's not really a problem; you can see a lot of examples in history where supposed "barbarians" defeated "civilized" people.

so, unfortunately, unlike the gook wet dream, korea has been always japan's inferior. this disparity in power isn't really a thing confined to modern periods. that's what all the extant history records show.

SHUT THE FUCK UP YOU DUMB YELLOW MIDGETS

This is actually very important. China is reasserting its dominance over North Korea. Notice that the lesser king traveled to see the emperor, and not the other way around.

If China can help us make a deal with North Korea, that would be good for the entire world.

You don’t get chances like this very often.

Attached: EB02209A-86EE-4C47-BA28-9558F944F60A.jpg (4000x2250, 1.72M)

厉害了

Attached: china great.jpg (980x608, 176K)

this is like the 20th time north korea says it'll commit to denuclearization underaged brainlet

>*every korean historian and archaeologist
learn to read. authors and scholars like the eamples of dono haruyuki, yamao yukihisa and inoue mitsusada aren't korean. stanford, cambridge, unesco, etc aren't korean

>while kojiki and nihon shoki were composed in the 7-8th century, korea's oldest extant history record, samguk sagi, was composed in the 12th century
the samguk sagi is a compilation of earlier documents you stupid idiot. korean literature is way older than jap literature. japan's hiragana itself was derived from baekje's manyogana. there's even evidence of korean idu script in japanese artifacts - pic related

>this is even recorded in korean samguk sagi itself
no it isn't you dumbass. yamato didn't even have iron-working or weapons

>King Asin of Baekje sent his son, prince Jeonji as a hostage in 397.[21] And King Silseong of Silla sent his son in 402
no. the hostage meme was debunked unanimously. there's no mention of them being hostages. the prince of baekje himself set up a bunch of schools in japan and integrated into japanese royalty. again, yamato had no means of threatening centralized kingdoms. yamato was merely barbarian tribes people at the time with no cavalry. yamato sent reinforcements to korea because they were in effect koreans themselves and they knew it. even the japanese king hirohito admitted he had baekje korean ancestors

Attached: inariyama.jpg (600x400, 34K)

more dictator in less volume => more powerful QED you stupid meztizo

Attached: 1521237121653.png (400x400, 13K)

According to Bjarke Frellesvig, "There is ample evidence, in the form of orthographic 'Koreanisms' in the early inscriptions in Japan, that the writing practices employed in Japan were modelled on continental examples.[50] The history of how the early Japanese modified the Chinese writing system to develop a native phonogram orthography is obscure, but scribal techniques developed in the Korean peninsular played an important role in the process of developing Man'yōgana

According to the historian Jonathan W. Best "virtually all of the numerous complete temples built in Japan between the last decade of the sixth and the middle of the seventh centuries" were designed off Korean models.[85] Among such early Japanese temples designed and built with Korean aid are Shitennō-ji Temple and Hōryū-ji Temple.[113]

>baekje and silla were also barbarians
"the Three Kingdoms of Korea were fully developed centralized powers with modern iron weapons and were already utilizing horses for warfare". learn to read

>conferred a golden royal seal which was only given to the highest ranking allies and a high title of 親魏倭王 -king (queen) of wa
the term "Wa" was derogatory, meaning "midget" or "dwarf," which was a reference to the perceived smaller stature of the average Japanese in ancient times

>you can see a lot of examples in history where supposed "barbarians" defeated "civilized" people.
stop trying to fool yourself you dumb jap. korea has always been superior. japan has always been inferior. japan is korean clay

>every historian and archaeologist
That's all Korean.
>the earliest known cultivation of the plant to somewhere between 14,000 and 15,000 years ago.
That's Korean discovering. Who does believe that? Did Chinese archaeologists admit it?

And Go back to your country, Kim. Canadian hates you.

>all of the numerous complete temples built in Japan between the last decade of the sixth and the middle of the seventh centuries" were designed off Korean models.
lol Do you know the oldest temple in Japan?

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hōryū-ji
>The Chinese influence comes via Baekje, since Baekje had permanent trading relation with China.

Dictator per cm^3 is off the fucking charts

I never heard '''Koreanisms''' in my life lol
Is he are VANK member who study in Canada as well?
His English is obviously better than that of Japanese high school students kek

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voluntary_Agency_Network_of_Korea

>WE
>WUZ
>JAPS

no, in this case japs were korean

more like
>I
>HAVE
>AUTISM

non socialist cunts are not welcome, including j*pan

t. JONG HO PARK

>socialist
Where is THE socialist in this thread???

Xi always has that smug look on his face and Kim looks like a fucking cube

>lastly, all what "koreans introduced to japan" were chinese stuff, nothing originated in korea.
no, the things that korea brought over to japan had been koreanized so they are no longer chinese. would you say kimono or ramen is chinese? no. because they have been japanified, you stupid jap monkey.

i wish i was Xi Jinping's undercover agent in Poland

>koreanized
there is no such thing, and korea was china's vassal anyway

Attached: 1507381572524.png (645x729, 70K)

>can’t argue back

no need for argument to begin with.
silla and baekje were china's vassal and yamato's tributaries as well.
yamato used them as a transit point to take in chinese stuff, which existed regardless of "koreanization".

very odd post

korea was more than just some “transit point”. it played a big role in bringing civilization to japan and even japanese museums acknowledge it.

that's too much of self-importance tbqh
you gotta know "korea", or samhan region back then to be exact, was seen part of 東夷, eastern barbarians, as well by china.

>the things that korea brought over to japan had been koreanized so they are no longer chinese.
lol Chinese may kill you Kim.

yeah for speaking the truth about how important korea is. you are all retards for denying this.

ironically, japan and china share view of history except for the 20th century. both completely agree that koreas were irrelevant puny vassals, and it's always koreans who are butthurt over this and try to fabricate history and peddle nonsense like how great korea was like what you are doing now. both japanese and chinese laugh at koreans.

you are fabricating history right now

china actually bestowed notable honors to korean kings and sent many gifts. korean-chinese diplomacy was mutually beneficial while they weren't at war. meanwhile, china insulted the japanese king outright during yamato. see. japan still sent envoys and tributes to china for centuries. that's why china thought japan wanted to become china's vassal and hideyoshi sperged out at the chinese diplomats

>china actually bestowed notable honors to korean kings and sent many gifts.
Korean are too optimistic kek

Within the official Chinese dynastic Twenty-Four Histories, Japan is mentioned among the so-called Dongyi 東夷 "Eastern Barbarians".

meanwhile china respected korea:
According to both historical and archeological sources, contact and trade between China and Baekje increased during Muryeong's reign. In 512, according to the Liang shu, Muryeong sent Baekje's first mission to the newly established court of the Chinese Liang Dynasty. A second mission was sent in 521, announcing various victories over Goguryeo. In reply, the Liang emperor bestowed various titles on him, including "Great General Tranquilizing the East (寧東大將軍)" and "King of Baekje". These titles were also found engraved on a tablet in King Muryeong's tomb.

>what is the goguryeo-sui war
korea maintained an equal relationship with china. go look up the goguryeo-sui war

lol delusional gook
it means nothing, as yamato's kings were getting higher titles which even included koreas within his jurisdiction while koreas never had jurisdiction over yamato
>Bu styled himself the title of 開府儀同三司 and petitioned the official appointment. Emperor Shun of Liu Song appointed Bu to the title of 使持節都督倭新羅任那加羅秦韓慕韓六国諸軍事安東太将軍倭王.

倭新羅任那加羅秦韓慕韓: wa, silla, mimana, gaya, jinhan, bohan
六国諸軍事安東太将軍: six countries, military, protector of the east, grand general
倭王: king of wa

>A second mission was sent in 521, announcing various victories over Goguryeo.
this mission should be the one in which silla's king began to pay tribute to liang china with the king of baekje, as the portrait say.
actually, it perfectly matches, and this was the situation silla and baekje was in.

modern gooks can't read kanji and thus can't read real ancient documentary source directly, this is why you are subject to tinfoil hat stuff.

Attached: hurr korea was relevant.png (1322x492, 739K)

no, jap. china never respected japs. china respected korea. go look up the goguryeo-sui war. you are a delusional jap

Attached: 1522112574192.jpg (1280x720, 123K)

The lesser king comes to kowtow to the chad emperor. Would you not be smug?

Based Xi

Attached: 73283894-FBD1-4A25-A6F2-54714D470765.jpg (725x1024, 113K)

reminder to all s*uth koreans and island cannibals

Attached: 1394526251246.png (1661x732, 104K)

Jap rapebabies*

more like china is begging kim not to nuke beijing

Summary;
South Koreans

Attached: images.jpg (223x226, 9K)