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Extra Training |
Ge-Baek tul
(44 Moves)
In his encyclopaedia General Choi told us:
Ge-Baek is
named after Ge-Baek, a great general in the BaekJe (also Paekche) Dynasty (660 A.D.). The diagram
(I) represents his severe and strict military discipline.
What
I’ve Discovered
General Ge-Baek is remembered for his determination to do battle despite
insurmountable odds.
The king of BaekJe; Uija-wang indulged in such revelries that he ignored
the approaching forces of Tang and Silla and did not mobilise his army to
defend his country.
General Ge-Baek rounded up his
own troops and although heavily outnumbered by ten to one with his army of 5000
men, he is reported to have fought valiantly; it was purely the large numbers
of enemy forces that led to his defeat.
It is recorded that as he knew he
would ultimately be beaten; to focus his mind on the battle and to prevent the
possible capture or torture of his family, General Ge-Baek had his family put
to death before he set out for war.
Remembered for his bravery and loyalty, Ge-Baek gave his life to defend
his country reputedly saying, ‘I would rather die than be a slave of the
enemy’.
After engaging General Kim Yu-Sin on the plains of Hwangsan Field,
Ge-Baek ordered his men to ‘hold or die’.
In his book, ‘The History of TaeKwonDo Patterns’ (see Bibliography)
Richard Mitchell, describes Ge-Baek’s shock on capturing a young Hwa-Rang, Kwan
Chang; aged just 16, the son of Kim Yoo-Sin’s assistant General Kim Pumil
Kwan Chang had charged headlong into the BaekJe camp, his youthfulness
is said to have reminded Ge-Baek of his own son and instead of killing him,
Ge-Baek let him return to his own lines, only to have him captured once again
the following day.
Kwan Chang escaped his guards, ‘killing them with his hands and feet,
and then attacked the Paekche general’s second in command. With a flying
reverse turning kick to the head of the commander, who sat eight feet high atop
his horse, Kwan Chang killed him.’ (Ibid.)
Ge-Baek then had Kwan Chang put to death and his body returned to the
enemy lines, where his proud father still fought on.
Ge-Baek engaged the enemy and drove them back four times, but on the
fifth attack, General Ge-Baek was killed and Ge-Baek’s forces were then utterly
defeated, heralding the end of the BaekJe Dynasty.
(See also Yoo-Sin)
For sources of this information please see the bibliography section of
the site.
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