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Yi Sun-sin: The Undefeated Admiral His Own King Tried to Destroy

Episode 7435 Published 13 hours ago
Description

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life of Admiral Yi Sun-sin, the 16th-century Korean naval commander whose undefeated record helped save Joseon Korea during the Imjin War. The episode begins with the contradiction that defines his life: Yi fought in at least twenty-three naval battles, often badly outnumbered, and won them all, yet his reward was betrayal, arrest, torture, and demotion by the very government he protected. Born in 1545 in Hansong, present-day Seoul, Yi came from a noble but politically disgraced family, which left him without the patronage most elites needed to survive court politics. From childhood, he was strict, intense, and almost painfully committed to fairness, a trait that made him both a brilliant commander and a dangerous man in a corrupt system.

The episode also follows Yi’s rise from late-blooming officer to national savior. After passing the military exam at thirty-two, serving on the northern frontier, and surviving an early betrayal by jealous superiors, Yi was appointed commander of the Left Jeolla Naval District just before Toyotomi Hideyoshi launched Japan’s invasion of Korea in 1592. While Japanese armies captured Seoul in only nineteen days, Yi attacked the invasion’s supply lines at sea. The discussion covers the turtle ship, a perfect counter to Japanese boarding tactics; the Battle of Hansan Island and the crane wing formation; the paranoia of King Seonjo; the Japanese intelligence trap that led to Yi’s arrest and torture; Won Kyun’s disastrous destruction of the Joseon fleet; and Yi’s impossible comeback at Myeongnyang, where he used only thirteen ships, violent tides, and a narrow strait to stop a Japanese fleet of hundreds. The episode closes with the Battle of Noryang, where Yi was fatally shot while beating the war drum and ordered that his death not be announced until victory was secured. His story remains one of tactical genius, moral endurance, and the brutal reality that sometimes the people who save a country are punished hardest by it.

Key topics covered:

• Yi’s disgraced family background, strict childhood, military exam, and early frontier service

• Court corruption, false accusations, torture, demotion, and political betrayal

• Hideyoshi’s invasion, Busan, Seoul, supply lines, and the Imjin War

• Turtle ships, Japanese boarding tactics, Hansan Island, crane wing formation, and naval genius

• Won Kyun, Myeongnyang, Noryang, Yi’s final words, and his enduring legacy in Korea

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting Korean military, historical, and biographical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

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