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Men who visited whores are killed in Korea

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Men who visited whores are killed in Korea

After staying at Jeju for some time, the shipwrecked crew was transported to the Korean mainland and brought to the king. The Dutch were not allowed to return to their home country, but rather were forced to remain in exile in Korea. During this time, the crew were sent to various parts of Korea, where they were given an allowance of food, but were strictly forbidden to attempt to leave the country. A small number of men, including Hendrik Hamel, managed to escape in a small boat in 1666 after staying in Korea for 13 years. Hamel’s journal of his time in Korea includes an elaborate description of the people, culture and habits of the Koreans. Part of his descriptions talk about the death penalties given to men who committed adultery by visiting whores. This image is supposed to depict this passage in his journal. As with other images in the journal, this was an image taken from the publisher’s stock. It had previously been used in a publication of Jacob van Neck’s second voyage in Asia. In that book it depicted the killing of men of Patani who visited whores.

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Sources and literature

Hoeting, Verhaal van het vergaan van het jacht de Sperwer en van het wedervaren der schipbreukelingen op het eiland Quelpaert en het vasteland van Korea (1653 - 1666). Met eene beschrijving van dat rijk, door Hendrik Hamel.

Roeper, Vibeke, De wereld van Hendrik Hamel: Nederland en Korea in de Zeventiende Eeuw (2003)