Siege of Kuju explained

Conflict:Siege of Kuju
Partof:Mongol invasions of Korea
Date:September 1231 – January 1232
Place:Kusong, Goryeo
Result:Goryeo victory
Combatant1:Mongol Empire
Combatant2:Goryeo
Commander1:Saritai
Commander2:Pak Seo
Strength1:10,000
Strength2:5,000
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:Unknown

The siege of Kuju which occurred in 1231 was a decisive Goryeo victory against the Mongol Empire. After the Mongol army crossed the Yalu river, it quickly captured almost all of Goryeo's border defenses. The Mongol army, however, ran into stiff resistance both at Anju and the city of Kuju (modern-day Kusong), commanded by General Park Seo.

To take Kuju, Saritai used a full array of siege weapons to bring down the city's defenses. Lines of catapults launched both boulders and molten metals at the city's walls. The Mongols deployed special assault teams who manned siege towers and scaling ladders. Other tactics used were pushing flaming carts against the city's wooden gates and tunneling under the walls. The most grisly weapon used during the siege were fire-bombs which contained boiled down, liquefied human fat.

According to an old Mongol general who, toward the end of the siege said:

"...I have never seen [a city] undergo an attack like this which did not, in the end, submit."[1]

Despite the fact the Goryeo army was heavily outnumbered and after over thirty days of brutal siege warfare, Goryeo soldiers still refused to surrender and with mounting Mongol casualties, the Mongol army could not take the city and had to withdraw.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Expanding the Realm . 2015-02-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150317023041/http://www.koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C06/E0602.htm . 2015-03-17 .