Easterners (Korean political faction)
38°19′N 127°14′E / 38.317°N 127.233°E
Easterners 동인, 東人 | |
|---|---|
| 1570s leader | Kim Hyowon |
| 1580s leaders | Yi Bal, Choe Yeonggyeong, Yu Sŏngnyong |
| 1590s leaders | Yi Sanhae, Yu Sŏngnyong |
| Founder | Kim Hyowon |
| Founded | 1575 |
| Dissolved | 1591 |
| Split from | Sarim |
| Preceded by | Sarim |
| Succeeded by | Northerners, Southerners |
| Ideology | Philosophy of Yi Hwang and Jo Sik |
| Religion | Neo-Confucianism |
| |
The Easterners (Korean: 동인; Hanja: 東人; RR: Dongin; lit. East people) were a political faction of the Joseon dynasty. This faction appeared during the reign of Seonjo of Joseon in sixteenth-century Korea, in 1575. Originating from friends of Gim Hyowon, they soon encompassed most of the disciples of Jo Sik and Yi Hwang, conflicting with Yi I and his followers, who formed the core of the Westerners. Though emerging as the dominant faction in the 1580s, it nearly collapsed at the suicide of Jeong Yeo-rip and the succeeding bloodshed in 1589. After Westerner Jeong Cheol was exiled for attempting to make Prince Gwanghae the Crown Prince, the Easterners divided into Northerners and Southerners.