2. Korean Medicine Merchants (漢藥種商) under the Medical Policies of Japanese Government-General of Korea
The Government-General imposed stringent restrictions on the issuance of Uisaeng licenses, expiration dates, and places of practice through the Regulation of Uisaeng (醫生規則) issued in 1913 and subsequent amendments [
5]. In contrast, it adopted a relatively lenient management policy vis-à-vis the merchants—this policy’s basic principle was separating dispensation from prescription [
6]. In 1912, the Government-General followed the Japanese law (1887) to enact and issue the “Pharmaceuticals and Pharmaceutical Business Ban (藥品及藥 品營業管理令) [
7].” Under the decree, relevant pharmaceutical practitioners were classified into four categories: pharmacists (dispensing medicines according to doctors’ prescription, 藥劑師), drug sellers (selling drugs, 藥種商), drug manufacturers (making and selling drugs, 製藥者), and patent medicine sellers (making, importing, or selling patent medicines, 賣藥業者) (
Shiroishi Hosei, 1918: 102–110). Simultaneously, the colonial authorities issued “Regulations for Pharmaceutical Inspection (藥品巡視 規則)” in July 1913, enforcing the management of the medicine market [
8]. However, given that the aforementioned decrees were based on western medical standards, they could not be applied to the Korean herbal medicine field, irrespective of the division of related practitioners or the objects of drug management.
Consequently, from June 1912 to July 1916, the Government-General passed a series of administrative orders to regulate the merchants [
9], under which, they were referred to as those who sell Korean herbal medicines in a specific province only after receiving a permit from provincial governors. Following this, traditional Korean medicine practitioners were clearly differentiated as Uisaengs and merchants. Furthermore, the colonial authorities also implemented the functional division of medicine dispensation rights between doctors and pharmacists, and specified that the Uisaengs could only dispense herbal medicine to his/her own patients, while the merchants were allowed to dispense by prescription (
Haenimseowon compilation, 1938: 2) [
10]. However, as far as a specific herbal medicine being sold was concerned, such sale enjoyed complete freedom, because, barring a few highly toxic drugs, the herbal medicines were different from their western counterparts and lacked the regulation of pharmacopoeia [
11].
Since the merchants were different from the Uisaengs and not regarded as medical professionals, it was easier to acquire the permit for selling medicinal herbs than the Uisaeng license. Initially, the merchants could obtain the permit through applications, but later, an exam system was enacted in 1923 [
12]. However, despite its implementation, until the 1930s, test scores were not the key criteria for issuing the permit, and questions were based on traditional herbal knowledge. Thus, the qualification test for the merchants was easier than that for the Uisaengs or Western medicine apothecaries (洋藥種商). Moreover, unlike the Uisaeng license, the permit was valid for life. In addition, from the perspective of nationality, both Japanese and Koreans were involved in Western medicine apothecaries, while the occupation of medicine merchant was practiced only by Koreans. Hence, compared with other industries, Koreans were much more dominant in the Korean herbal medicine industry. This made the medicine merchant more accessible and appealing to the Korean society at that time.
Unlike the continuous decline in the number of Uisaengs, from 5,800 in 1914 to 3,300 in 1944, the merchants’ number did not decrease (
Huang, 2018: 85–86)—it increased from over 7,000 in 1914 to more than 10,000 in the early 1920s. Although the number showed a tendency to decrease gradually subsequently, it remained at over 7,000 until the final phase of the colonial period
.
As we can see from the horizontal line, the merchants made up the largest group among practitioners in the entire medical industry. During the colonial period, Western medicine practitioners, including pharmacists and apothecaries, also increased gradually, but by 1942, their number leveled at 2,000, which was less than one-third of the merchants. Even the number of all Uisaengs and Uisas (醫師, Western medicine doctors) combined was lower than that of the merchants. Simultaneously, unlike Western medicine doctors, pharmacists, and Western medicine apothecaries concentrated in Kyungsung (京城) and other cities, the merchants had an extensive presence in each gun (郡) (
Gyeonggi-do wisaenggwa ed., 1937: 203). Moreover, barring a small number of Chinese, all other merchants were Koreans, so they naturally had a greater affinity toward the Korean society. In some rural areas in particular, there were very few doctors; hence, the merchants’ role was even more significant, as indicated by, for example, a survey of 61 rural families in Chungcheongnam-do (忠清南道), Dangjin-gun (唐津郡), Songak-myeon (松嶽面), and Ogogli (梧谷里) in 1939.
As
Table 1 shows, there was one Western medicine doctor and Uisaeng each in Songak-myeon. However, since the Western medicine doctor lived far from Ogokri village, and the treatment charge was high, the villagers found it unaffordable. Among the 66 treatments the Western medicine doctor offered, 63 were free; in contrast, traditional Korean medicine practitioners including the Uisaengs and merchants totaled 200. Among them, most villagers took treatment from the merchants (Bang San-yeol, Ibid., p. 44); specifically in the countryside, except folk therapy, patent medicine, and superstitious treatments, if people opted for medical institutions, the Korean herbal store was the most obvious choice
.
Effectively, the aforementioned survey referred to Uisaengs as “traditional Korean medicine practitioners with a license (免許漢方醫),” and designated part of the merchants who had excellent medical skills as “old traditional Korean medicine practitioners (老漢方醫)” or “traditional Korean medicine practitioners who sell Korean herbal medicine (藥 種商漢方醫).” This partially reflected that, at actual medical sites, the division between Uisaengs and merchants was not always apparent, primarily because of the difficulty in acquiring the Uisaeng license. Many who originally wanted to practice medicine ultimately chose to become merchants, or those who were merchants transitioned to become Uisaengs [
14]. Moreover, at that time, many of the merchants not only sold Korean herbal medicines but also checked the patient’s pulse and prescribed treatment, just like the Uisaengs did [
15]. Conversely, although many acquired the Uisaeng license, they managed Korean herbal stores and treated patients simultaneously [
16]. This indicated that, during the colonial period, Korean herbal stores were an important medium for the survival of the traditional Korean medicine lifeline, and were key to promoting the consumption of Korean herbal medicines.
During the colonial period, unlike the Uisaengs, the merchants faced fewer restrictions, and maintained a considerable presence. This, however, was not a result of the colonial authorities’ intended action—similar to the Uisaengs, the Government-General had permitted the merchants’ presence after taking into account Korean medical customs and the lack of personnel to administer Western medicines; the colonial authorities, who intended to wait for Western medicine’s popularization and the phasing out of traditional Korean medicine, believed that the merchants would be replaced as the number of pharmacists increased (
Gyeongmu chonggambu wisaenggwa 警務總監部衛生課, 1917: 302). Because the nature of work of the Uisaengs and merchants was intertwined, with the former providing prescription and the latter dispensing the medicine, as the number of Uisaengs decreased, so did the number of attached merchants [
17]. In other words, the colonial authorities imposing restrictions on the Uisaengs and maintaining a relatively tolerant attitude toward the merchants was not an indication of their preference for the latter, only a temporary understanding. The “loophole” in the policy left a wide gap for the merchants to survive, and made it possible for them to eke out a livelihood, or even a fortune, by relying on the huge demand for Korean herbal medicine.
3. Diversity and Commercialization of the Korean Herbal Medicine (漢藥) Industry
During the colonial period, the Korean herbal medicine industry did not decline, but grew steadily in the backdrop of the gradual popularization of Western medicine and restrictions imposed by the authorities on the development of traditional Korean medicine. Apart from the existing medical demand, the industry’s development can also be attributed to the merchants’ response to the situation—they played a significant role in the circulation and commercialization of Korean herbal medicine. The circulation structure can be seen in the following figure.
As
Figure 3 reveals, drugs circulated in the Korean market during that time were divided into imported drugs and Korean domestic drugs; all would either enter the market through the merchants, or be available at local Korean medical clinics or hospitals, acquired from the herbal medicine markets in Daegu (大邱), Jeonju (全州), Daejeon (大田), etc. Either way, the merchants were the main source of the distribution and trade of Korean herbal medicine, and the central link connecting the market and consumer. Thus, their activities largely determined the market’s direction in the colonial period.
Taking into consideration Korean medical traditions and society’s needs, some merchants continued to sell traditional decoctions and drugs, and simultaneously made and sold patent medicines after obtaining sales permit from the authorities. They adapted easily to the changing times. Thus, traditional Korean herbal medicine embraced its diversity and moved toward commercialization and marketization. According to the divergent emphasis on the main business, market objectives, the owner’s self-recognition, and public image, the Korean herbal medicine industry could be divided into three categories: traditional, mixed, and ginsengexclusive. The following section provides a general introduction on the characteristics and different types of Korean herbal stores.
The traditional type refers to drugstores that exclusively or primarily sold Korean herbal medicines, including dried drugs, decoctions, traditional pills, ginseng, and velvet deer horn. Although an array of Western medicines had entered the Korean market by that time, the demand for herbal medicines did not drop sharply. In 1927, Kim Hak-chun (金學春), the owner of Gongan-dang (共安堂) Drug Store in the Gyeonggido (京畿道) market in Anseong (安城), said, “Koreans have taken herbal medicine since ancient times, and although a lot of Western medicines have entered Korea presently, the sale of herbal medicine continues to increase steadily [
19].” Thus, many Korean herbal stores continued their traditional business, and some even grew to become large.
For example, in Kyungsung, there was Hwanggeum-dang (黃金堂) that was operated by Yu Chi-ok (劉致玉), Yeongchang-dang (永昌堂) owned by Choe Seong-pil (崔聖弼), Gonghwa-dang (共和堂) run by Choe Heung-mo (崔興模), etc., and all these were concentrated around Donghyeon (銅峴), also called Hwanggeum-jung (黃金町) after 1914, now around Eulji-ro (乙支路) 1–7, which was called the “street of Korean herbal medicine.” In areas beyond Kyungsung, there was Kim Hong-jo Yak-Bang (金弘祖藥房) in Daegu, Beopgyo-guk (法橋局) owned by Kim Soo-cheol (金壽哲) in Pyeongyang (平壤), Namil-dang (南一堂) run by Park Jae-sin (朴在新) in Ganggyeong (江景), Gwangchang-dang (廣昌堂) owned by Kim Nak-hyeon (金洛鉉) in Gongju (公州), Namchang-dang (南 昌堂) belonging to Kim Bong-du (金奉斗), Kim Chun-bae Yak-Bang (金 春培藥房) in Daejeon (大田), and Dongchun-dang (東春堂) owned by Sin Hak-gyun (申學均) in Busan (釜山) [
20].
Among these stores, Hwang Geum-dang in Kyungsung even opened a branch in Longjing (龍井) in Northeast China, and the images of Yeongchang-dang and Gonghwa-dang below demonstrate their success [
21]. Though the stores continued their traditional business, following the Japanese Annexation of Korea, they adopted novel methods such as advertisements and cash on delivery (代金引換), largely improving the distribution network. Among the owners, Choe Seong-pil of Yeongchang-dang was the first to make the Market Price List of various Korean medicinal herbs on a regular basis and deliver it to customers across the country. He promoted the sale of medicinal herbs, and largely encouraged price competition in the Korean herbal medicine industry [
22].
The sizes of the herbal medicine stores beyond Kyungsung were also considerable. For example, Kim Hong-jo Yak-Bang in Daegu Market was a giant in the herbal medicine industry at that time. Kim Hong-jo (金弘祖) was born in Gaesong (開城) and arrived in Daegu in 1890. He took advantage of Gaesong’s traders to engage in the business of ginseng, and in 1915, became a Korean medicine merchant. He not only valued credibility but also paid great attention to the quality of Korean medicinal herbs. Hence, he bought land in the area where the herbs were cultivated, leased it to peasants, and asked them to continue the cultivation as a pastime and provide the herbs to his store. He was also adept at hoarding for profiteering. When he believed the market to be profitable, he would buy medicinal herbs in huge quantities from across Korea; when the quantity of some herb was in excess, he would destroy it to maintain the price. Some people criticized him as “arbitrary” and “capitalizing on the market,” but through his management skills, he made a giant leap, starting with 3,000–4,000 won to as much as over 100,000, becoming a tycoon in the 1930s (
Park G., 2011: 84–85).
Another case in point is Namil-dang at the Ha-market (下市場) of Kang Kyung-eup (江景邑) on Chungcheongnam-do (忠清南道) in the 1920s. At that time, it was widely known as the largest Korean herbal store outside Namdaemun (南大門) (
Institute of Urban Architecture, 2013: 26) [
23]. The honorable family of Myeongjae (明齋宗家, Yun Jeong 尹拯) of Papyeong Yun (坡平尹氏) in No Seong-myeon (魯城面) of Nonsan-gun (論山郡) was among its major customers. Though the family lived 20 km away from the store, they often bought a huge quantity of Korean herbal medicines from it (
Figure 6).
Compared with the traditional stores that continued their business in traditional herbal medicine, the mixed type ones not only sold general Korean herbal medicines but also actively jumped into manufacturing and selling patent medicines. With the arrival of Western medicine and Japanese drug sellers after the opening of the port, the traditional medicine market began to change. Some merchants enthusiastically reacted to the changing situation and looked for new avenues, including entering the patent medicine market (
Yang, 2012: 237). In addition to traditional Korean pills, plasters, and powders, they borrowed western pharmaceutical skills to make patent medicines (
Yang, 2012: 238). Compared with traditional decoctions, the intake of patent medicines was definitely easier for people. It also aided the commercialization of herbal medicine and boosted the profits of herbal stores.
Meanwhile, Lee Hui-seon (李熙善), the owner of Changsang-dang (蒼生 堂) in Gyeonggi-do (京畿道), Anseong-si (安城市), replicated the liquid preparation of Western medicine to produce the so-called Jeonggi Su (精氣水) that is based on the well-known Korean Six-Ingredient Decoction (六味湯), Eight-Ingredient Decoction (八味湯), and Perfect Major Supplementation Decoction (十全大補湯). He also advertised that compared with traditional drugs, Jeonggi Su is “portable, easy to digest, and fast-acting [
25].” These patent medicines were different from traditional ones in appearance, but the ingredients were essentially similar. Thus, they can be regarded as Korean herbal medicines in a broad sense [
26]. During the colonial period, the western pharmaceutical industry in Korea was still underdeveloped until the 1930s, and before the 1920s, the import and sale of Western medicines were almost solely controlled by Japanese pharmacies (
Hong, 1972: 65). Hence, one important characteristic of the Korean herbal medicine industry was using Korean medicinal herbs as the main raw materials to manufacture and sell patent medicines [
27].
From the end of the Great Han Empire to the early colonial period, many traditional Korean herbal stores entered the patent medicine market, including major ones such as Cheon-il Yak-Bang (天一藥房, 1913) of Jo In-seop (趙寅燮), Hwapyeong-dang (和平堂, 1894) of Lee Eung-seon (李應善), Donghwa Yak-Bang (同和藥房, 1897) of Min Byeong-ho (閔並浩), and Chosun Maeyak Corporation (朝鮮賣藥株式會社, 1913) of Lee Seok-mo (李碩謨). They began making and selling patent medicines and even brought out their flagship ones, such as Jo Go-yak (趙膏藥, a drug to heal sores) and Cheon-il Ryeongsin-hwan (天一靈神丸, a digestive) of Cheon-il Yak-Bang, Palbo-dan (八寶丹, a digestive), Taeyang jogyeong-hwan (胎養調經丸, a gynecological drug), and Ja Yang-hwan (滋陽丸, an invigorator) of Hwapyeong-dang, and hwal Myeong-su (活命水, a drug to relieve indigestion) of Donghwa Yak-Bang. These were popular throughout Korea.
The manufacture and sale of patent medicines using Korean medicinal herbs as raw materials became the most important opportunity for the commercialization of Korean herbal stores, and aided their transition from traditional to modern pharmacies, and even pharmaceutical companies. Facing fierce competition in the patent medicine market, major Korean herbal stores actively took to modern marketing and management methods of trademark registration, advertising, promotion, remittance settlement, and the establishment of branches and agents, which advanced the transformation of the traditional Korean herbal medicine industry tremendously (
Yang, 2006: 198, 203–205;
Suh, 2017: 114–126).
In the 1880s, Jo Geun-chang (趙根昶) [
28], father of the founder Jo In-seop of Cheon-il Yak-Bang, was a Korean medical doctor and ran a small herbal store in the Yeji-dong (禮智洞) neighborhood of Kyungsung. With the sore healing drug handed down by his forefathers 150 years ago, he cured many patients who had undergone surgery. Jo In-seop (1891–?) graduated from a well-known private school called Whimoon School (徽文義塾) in 1910 and went to Japan for further studies. When he returned, he inherited the store, and formally established Cheon-il Yak-Bang in 1913. While Cheon-il Yak-Bang was conducting its business in traditional Korean herbal medicine, Jo In-seop used his forefathers’ drug to make the patent medicine “Jo Go-yak,” which became popular across the Korean Peninsula. Cheon-il Yak-Bang capitalized on the brand’s popularity to enter the patent medicine market [
29]. Relying on the effect of “Jo Go-yak” and Jo In-seop’s excellent management skills, Cheon-il Yak-Bang became a large-scale operator in the 1930s—until 1938, it had a registered capital of over 300,000 won, and annual sales reached about 1.3 million won. Jo In-seop also owned Cheon-il Pharmacy Corporation, whose registered capital was 500,000 won. Apart from the main shop in Yeji-jeong (禮智町) in Kyungsung, Cheon-il Yak-Bang branches were set up in Hwanggeum-jeong in Kyungsung, and in Daegu, Pyeongyang, Gwangju (光州), and Cheonan (天安). Additionally, there were dozens of agent shops, and more than 1,000 franchises. There were 210 staffers in the main shop, and 50 in branches. The annual net income was about 210,000 won. After deducting the operating costs, bank interest, etc., annual profit rose to about 60,000 won. The family’s personal property and real estate, on the other hand, was valued at more than 500,000 won [
30].
The manufacturing of patent medicines was not limited to large-scale herbal stores, but was common among the Uisaengs and merchants. Let us take the example of Jo In-seop’s cousin Choe Geon-hul (崔健熙). After the Liberation, he was the third president of the Korea Oriental Drug Association (大韓韓藥協會); his father was an Uisaeng in the colonial period and ran the Bochang Hospital (普彰醫院) at No. 119, Sueun-dong (授恩洞) in Kyungsung. Based on his empirical formulas, Choe Geon-hul’s father applied for permits for over 30 patent medicines, and established the Bochang Pharmacy (普彰製藥所) to make them (
Choe, 1991: 53, 56). As Choe Geon-hul recalled, manufacturing skills were primitive at that time, and it was difficult to produce medicines in large quantities. Nonetheless, each pharmacy’s medicines had their own unique characteristics, which meant that most medicine makers commercialized the “secret formulas” handed down by their forefathers (
Choe, 1991: 53, 56).
It is worth noting that although Korean herbal stores made and sold patent medicines, and some even Western medicines, generally speaking, sales of traditional Korean decoctions and medicinal herbs still dominated. For example, in the 1930s, Cheon-il Yak-Bang registered the largest sale of patent medicine among all drugstores. However, sales of patent medicine accounted for only 20–30% of the total, and those of Korean herbal medicine continued to be its primary business (
Hong, 1972: 110). Moreover, although Cheon-il Yak-Bang’s business scope gradually expanded from traditional Korean herbal medicine to patent medicine, and even Western medicine, it continued to regard itself as the king of the Korean herbal medicine industry [
31].
The third type of Korean herbal stores were exclusive ginseng shops. Unlike ordinary medicinal herbs, Korean ginseng’s effects were recognized worldwide early on, and it was famous in both East Asia and western countries such as the United States. Importantly, since ginseng was widely used as a supplementary medicine (補藥) in East Asia, demand for the drug was huge. Therefore, not only were common herbal stores selling it, but a group of chambers of commerce exclusively selling the herb also emerged. Of course, since the colonial authorities implemented a strict system of red ginseng monopoly, folk ginseng traders could only deal in white ginseng [
32].
Gaesong was the biggest beneficiary in terms of ginseng sales. The merchants there mainly sold white ginseng and its finished products, such as ginseng powder and extract. These were sold not only in Korea but also in Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, China, Southeast Asia, etc [
33]. Organizations such as Korean Ginseng Trading Co. (高麗蔘業 社), Gaesong Ginseng Chamber of Commerce (開城人蔘商會) [
34], and Korean Ginseng Chamber of Commerce (高麗白蔘商會) were the known ginseng chambers of commerce in Gaesong; among these, Korean Ginseng Trading Co. was the largest. Established in 1914, its members comprised ginseng planters, and the first president was a famous and wealthy businessman, Park Woo-hyeon (朴宇鉉) from Gaesong. In 1918, it turned into a joint venture, and shareholders included reputed names in Gaesong’s ginseng industry and business community. The head of the company was the “King of Ginseng” Son Bong-sang (孫鳳祥), who was also the dean of the Gaesong Ginseng Union (開城蔘業組合). In the early 1920s, Korean Ginseng Trading Co., with a registered capital of 200,000 won, was the leader in the Korean drug industry, and in the late 1920s, sales reached more than 400,000 won [
35].
These chambers of commerce gradually expanded their business to sale of common Korean herbal medicines. Korean Ginseng Trading Co. opened a branch in Hwanggeum-jung in Kyungsung in 1934, and simultaneously managed ginseng sales, patent manufacturing, and Korean herbal medicine trading. The Korean Ginseng Chamber of Commerce also opened a unit in Namdaemun-tong (南大門通) in Kyungsung and sold Korean herbal medicines, posting the signboard “Wholesale Medicinal Herb Store (乾材藥局)” (
Figure 7).
A significant feature of the commercialization of the traditional Korean herbal medicine industry was the drug market’s internationalization. The industry in the colonial period was operating in an international environment and expanded overseas. First, the import of Chinese medicinal herb (that is Tangjae [唐材], in contrast with Chojae [草材], the Korean medicinal herb) was active. While in the period after the Liberation, the Korean herbal medicine community used nationalist slogans of “non-dualism (身土不二)” to emphasize that native medicinal herbs were superior to Chinese ones, in the colonial period, the latter were indispensable within the community.
Wang Shunfu (王順福), an active Chinese medicine apothecary in Kyungsung, recalled that in the 1920s, the proportion of Chinese medicinal herbs in a decoction amounted to as much as a third [
37]. In the 1930s, the Daegu Market, the largest distribution center of Korean medicinal herbs, reported average annual sales of 4 million won, of which Tangjae sales accounted for 1.5 million won [
38]. Thus, Korea imported a large amount of medicinal herbs from China every year [
39], which bred a group of drug sellers or businessmen importing Tangjae.
Overseas Chinese merchants in Korea at one point dominated the import market of Tangjae. For example, the famous businessman Tan Jiesheng (譚傑生) from Guangdong (廣東), China, who was the owner of Tong Shun-tai (同順泰), had arrived in Korea after the Im-o Military Revolt (壬午軍亂, 1882), and in his initial days, accumulated a large amount of capital through the import of Tangjae. Apart from Tong Shun-tai, there were other stores, such as Guang Rong-tai (廣榮泰), De Sheng-heng (德生恒, the aforementioned outlets were in Supyo-dong [水標洞] in Kyungsung), Fu Yuan-dong (福源東, in Gwangsu-dong [觀水 洞]), Yong Feng-yu (永豊裕, in Nagwon-dong [樂園洞]), Yi Sheng-tang Pharmacy (益生堂藥房, in Jeongdong [貞洞]), etc. Among the merchants who personally traveled to China to import Tangjae were Park Gi-seung (朴基承) of Sunchang Yanghaeng (順昌洋行), the first president of the Korea Oriental Drug Association after the Liberation, and Choe Won-sik (崔元植) of Gwangnam Pharmacy (廣南藥局) [
40]. Cheon-il Yak-Bang hired Wang Qinsheng (王芹生) in 1931 from Shandong (山東) in China; he had once worked at the Chinese herbal store Fu Yuan-dong. He was appointed as the manager of the purchasing department and specialized in the import of Tangjae [
41].
Furthermore, Korean emigration had peaked during the colonial period. However, because they could not change their lifestyle and believed that it was inconvenient to visit a doctor in an alien country, overseas Koreans continued to largely depend on Korean herbal stores and doctors. Thus, the Korean herbal medicine industry expanded abroad (
Tonomura, 2004: 137;
Jung, 2014: 279). In Japan and Northeast China, Koreans operated a number of herbal stores, some of which functioned on a large scale.
In Japan, the Daeseong Chamber of Commerce (大聖商會) in Osaka (大阪) was particularly famous. Its owner Park Seong-o (朴聖吾) was born in 1893 in Hwanggeum-jung in Kyungsung. He inherited his family’s Korean medicinal herb business when he was 17, and went to Osaka to establish the Daeseong Chamber of Commerce in 1932. After several years of work, the main store was set up in the Korean Market in Ikano-machi (豬飼野町) of Higashinari-ku (東城區), with a branch in Tenroku (天六) and a milling factory in Hiraoka (枚岡), establishing a large-scale operation for the enterprise [
42]. In 1940, Park Seong-o returned to Korea and set up the Daeseong Pharmaceutical Corporation (大聖藥 業株式會社) in Daejeon (大田) to cultivate, sell, and process medicinal herbs. He also established branches in Osaka, and offices in Kyungsung and Tianjin (天津), China, becoming a veritable multinational Korean medicine merchant [
43].
In addition to Park Seong-o’s Daeseong Chamber of Commerce, Kim Chang-hyeon’s (金昌鉉) Bosaeng-dang Herbal Medicine Store (普生堂漢 藥房) in Osaka also operated on a large scale. Kim Chang-hyeon, born in Gangjin-gun, Jeollanam-do (全羅南道康津郡), commenced his business in Korean herbal medicine at the end of the Great Han Empire, and was proficient in traditional Korean medicine. He went to Osaka in 1927 and established Bosaeng-dang (普生堂). By 1937, he set up its main unit at Number 1, Chudo Hondori Street (中道本通) of Higashinari-ku (東城區), a milling factory in Midoriya-machi (綠屋町), and a pharmaceutical factory in Hoshutsu-machi (放出町), with the marketing network covering Japan, Korea, Manchukuo, etc [
44]. (
Figure 8).
In a show of cooperation toward Koreans in Japan, many Korean herbal stores in Korea provided medicinal herbs to stores run by Koreans overseas. Taechang-dang (泰昌堂) in Namsung-jung (南城町), the central point of the Daegu Market, was an example. Shin Seong-gyun (申聖均) [
45], son of Shin Tae-moon (申泰文) who was the owner of Taechang-dang, recalled that his father often sold medicinal herbs by mail to herbal stores run by Koreans in Japan (
Park G., 2011: 179). The bonds of nationality and the national health industry prompted the Korean-run herbal stores in Japan and Korean herbal medicine industry in the Korean Peninsula to form an industrial chain.
In line with this, although the colonial period was a time when Western medicine gradually expanded, the Korean herbal medicine industry did not, as a result, witness any decline. The latter was closely connected to the daily routine of most Koreans; it was also one of the few “national industries” that Koreans could dominate. Thus, amid the policy of the colonial authorities, who vigorously supported Western medicine, the Korean herbal medicine industry maintained its strong sense of tradition and ability to actively adjust to the changes brought by the times.
4. The Consumption of Korean Herbal Medicine in the Background of Interaction between New and Old Perspectives
In modern Korea, although traditional Korean medicine and Western medicine co-exist, the general public, especially young Koreans, seem to believe that the use of the former is declining. This paper does not analyze the causes of this phenomenon, but it suggests that these developments may have prevented young scholars from making an objective judgment about the medical treatment during the colonial period. Some studies have indicated at the macroscopic level that the Korean society, especially in rural areas, was not covered by the western medical system in the colonial period. Instead, it was excluded from the “field” that was favored by modern Western medicine. During the colonial period, a crackdown by the colonial authorities affected traditional Korean medicine, but it was still one of the most important means for Koreans to maintain health (
Shin C., 1999: 66–67;
Lee, 2006: 235). Korean herbal medicines, the focus of traditional Korean medicine, were thus indispensable to the average Korean.
For the citizens, however, the only aim of choosing between different medical treatments was to seek a cure and prevent diseases. In a particular medical practice, people were making decisions on various treatments under specific circumstances rather than being faithful to a certain style of treatment. Such choice indicated their active response to disease and revealed the interweaving and exchange of old and new ideas in the medical field in the colonial period. It reflected the tension between tradition and modernity during that time.
First, we have to acknowledge that around the 1910s, Koreans’ attitude toward Western medicine gradually transformed from fear and hostility to acceptance and approval. For example, Won Deok-sang (元德常), who graduated from the Chiba Medical School (千葉醫學專門學校), had established the luxurious Deokje Hospital (德濟病院) in 1912 in Anguk-jeong (安國町), Kyungsung. He recalled that when the hospital was opened, people would come to see how the doctors used stethoscopes and thermometers as in a play, but not when they actually fell ill. They believed that taking Western medicines was equal to seeking death and that western doctors were agents of death [
46].
Within a few years, however, this fear and unfamiliarity changed significantly. For example, on May 12, 1916,
Maeil sinbo reported, “Western and Korean medicine have begun to co-exist. Everyone can seek medical treatment in accordance with their preferences. People who admire Western medicine opt for that treatment, including general medicine and surgery; similarly, people who value Korean medicine receive Korean medical treatment; people who decide on medical treatment according to their situations usually choose Korean remedies for general medicine and western cure for surgery. This is not an absolute choice and there are various views [
47].” However, what was obvious was that they were overcoming their fear of Western medicines, and the preference for medical treatments seemed more diverse.
Moreover, many people were confused about which treatment was the best. For example, in September 1918, Choe Won-sik (崔瑗植), chief writer of Jungoe-uiyag-sinbo (中外醫藥申報), said, “Recently, a complex situation has emerged in the medical field, where Western doctors and medicine, and Korean doctors and medicine have amalgamated. Thus, patients are apprehensive as to which one is better [
48].” On May 4, 1924, an article in Chosun ilbo (朝鮮日報) stated, “Since the arrival of Western medicine, a consensus on which is the better option has not yet been reached in Korea [
49].” An obvious example was the questions from readers in the correspondence column of
Dong-a ilbo (東亞日報); many concerned the choice between Korean and Western medicine. For instance, a woman who suffered from a menstrual disorder due to dystocia during childbirth, wrote a letter seeking information on whether she should opt for Western or Korean medicine to conceive again; there was also a reader who was physically weak asking which tonic, Western or Korean, was better. There were many questions of a similar nature [
50]. This difficult choice indicated that Western medicine had gradually entered the day-to-day life of the average Korean.
However, it did not mean that the two systems were in disagreement. First, as mentioned above, at that time, Western medicine doctors and pharmacists were concentrated in urban areas, which largely limited the possibility of availing Western medicine. Second, the price of Western medicines was prohibitive for most Koreans. In many cases, patients would first try to take patent medicines, Korean herbal medicines, or other folk therapies, and only if all these failed, they would seek help from Western medicine doctors [
51]. Even if they visited a hospital, they were turned away due to their socio-economic status. For example, writer Jang Hyuk-joo (張赫宙) published a novel Rainbow in the newspaper from 1933 to 1934, and the following is a scene from it:
In Kyungsung, when Western medicine doctor Seo Young-hwan (徐永煥) heard the pharmacist downstairs mention about a patient visiting, he was glad. However, he did not expect that the patient would be an old man, aged about 50, from a remote village. He was carried by three farmers on a simple stretcher made of pine branches. Seo Young-hwan inquired about his symptoms perfunctorily, and then asked, “Have you brought money with you?” The old man motioned to his son to take the money from the pocket, and said, “We countrymen do not have much money. Here are about five won. Please provide medical treatment accordingly.” Seo Young-hwan could not help but laugh, and answered, “Let me tell you. Your illness is too serious to be cured with only five or ten won. Besides, you have to be hospitalized, and I am not sure if one or two months are enough for your healing. So, just go home and take Korean herbal medicine for treatment.” “I cannot get medical treatment without money? Oh, I am from Daegu. I have visited five hospitals before coming here, but all had the same answer. Whoever knew that people nowadays are so cold-hearted?” Saying this, the old man asked the farmers to carry him away [52].
Jang Hyuk-joo’s novel in this period was characterized as critical realism. The scenes described in it somewhat realistically depicted the medical field at that time. Since the 1920s, one of the most significant topics that people discussed was the prohibitive cost of Western medicines and treatment and the phenomenon of money worship [
53]. The aforementioned scene highlighted this reality. In the Western medicine doctor Seo Young-hwan’s opinion, poor patients only deserved Korean medical treatment. The choice between Korean and Western medicine seemed to be naturally associated with fortune and social rank, creating a new benchmark of status.
However, when Koreans chose to take Korean herbal medicine, it was not only because of financial constraints. We should not overestimate the development of Western medicine in the colonial period. In fact, Western medicine was useless in curing many diseases at that time. For example, the Spanish flu hit Korea in the autumn of 1918, and 7.5 million of the 17 million population was infected. The death rate was 0.82%(
Kim T. J., 2017: 163). While western doctors expressed helplessness, the traditional Korean prescriptions of the Uisaengs, such as Toxin-Vanquishing Powder (敗毒散), Harmonious Flow Decoction (沖和湯), Flesh-Resolving Decoction (解肌湯), and Ephedra Decoction (麻黃 湯) showed favorable results. Even Japanese settlers and the Western medicine doctors supposedly took the aforementioned Korean drugs [
54].
Another example was tuberculosis, a chronic infectious disease and an epidemic at that time. Since western doctors did not have an effective treatment for it, Western and Korean medicine began competing with each other to discover how to prevent and treat it (
Choe, 2011: 187–188). The following is an excerpt from the medical treatment record of Lee Sun-yeong (李順泳, probably a writer or journalist) in
Oriental Medicine (東洋醫藥):
“I was diagnosed with tuberculosis by a provincial hospital on February 19, 1934. Subsequently, I availed medical treatment at the hospital for 40 days, but it had no effect. My grandfather advised me to take Korean herbal medicine initially, but I was apprehensive about taking it since I had graduated from the Secondary School (高等普通學校), so I ignored his advice. Nonetheless, I had no choice but to visit the Uisaeng recommended by my grandfather. I told the Uisaeng about my diagnosis, the process of medical treatment, and its effect in the provincial hospital. The Uisaeng examined me for a while and said, “No, they are wrong. Tuberculosis is the name they (Western medicine doctors) created. You are deficient in Yang-qi (陽氣不足). You will recover after taking the medicine to supplement your Yang-qi.” I took 40 doses of the medicine prescribed by the Uisaeng, and I was miraculously cured [55].”
Lee Sun-yeong was neither too poor to receive western medical treatment, nor did he favor traditional Korean medicine. It was only because of the former’s ineffectiveness that he turned to Korean doctors and medicine. Despite having enough money, most patients were faithful to neither system and just tended to choose the most effective treatment for themselves. In 1930, the Western medicine doctor Kim Eun-sun (金 殷善), who set up Chung Hwa Hospital (淸華醫院) in Goyang-gun (高 陽郡), Gyeonggi-do (京畿道), said, “Koreans fluctuate between Korean medicine and new medicine. For example, they consulted new doctors (Western medicine doctors), and were told they could recover within 20 days, but when they heard that Korean doctors could cure patients with several doses of decoction, they immediately changed their mind and took Korean herbal medicine. When that failed to help, they turned to modern medicine. They constantly changed their line of treatment, and thus became incurable in many cases [
56].”
The conflict between the two systems was not rare in works of literature either. Take the case of the hero Heo Il (許日) in the novel The Third Slave (第三奴隷) written by Lee Geun-yeong (李根榮) in 1938. He was diagnosed with pneumonia by the affiliated hospital of Keijo Imperial University (京城帝國大學) (that is, the Japanese Government-General Hospital). However, since he believed that Korean herbal medicine was better than western, he went home and took expensive supplementary drugs. Subsequently, his health deteriorated; he then chose to get admitted in the hospital to receive western medical treatment [
57].
In some cases, patients would choose to take both Korean and western forms of treatment. The third leader of the Chendo-gyo Religion (天道敎) Son Byeong-hui’s (孫秉熙) experience late in his life is an example. In 1919, because Son Byeong-hui led the March 1st Movement (三一運動) as one of the 33 national representatives, he was arrested and imprisoned by the colonial authorities. In December 1920, he was released on medical parole after falling seriously ill. Suffering from multiple diseases such as arteriosclerosis, diabetes, and pleurisy, he was lodged in the villa of Sang Chun Won (賞春園) outside Dongdaemun (東大門) for recovery. The director of the Chendo-gyo Religious Hospital, Park Jong-hwan (朴宗桓) was his attending Western medicine doctor [
58]. In addition, the Uisaeng Park Chan-su (朴燦洙) was invited to administer Korean medical treatment. Moreover, he also took the Korean herbal medicine prescribed by the famous Uisaeng Kim Hong-je (金弘濟) from Hamheung (咸興). Therefore, when Son Byeong-hui passed away in May 1922, Park Jong-hwan shifted all responsibility to Park Chan-su [
59].
For an average family, besides these two systems, there was also folk medical treatment and Shamanism. These were always administered in combination and would compete with each other. For example, on March 23, 1927, an article in
Dong-a ilbo titled “Let’s Get Our New Women Out of Superstition” vividly described the general treatment in a Korean folk family. “Now let us check the situation in an old family. If a family member is sick, Korean herbal medicines and Western medicines are taken together. Simultaneously, a blind man comes through the front door [
60], and the witch comes through the back door. It is a unique situation that you can rarely find in other countries [
61].”
Furthermore, throughout the colonial period, although the general power and influence of Western medicine was expanding, Korean herbal medicine’s market share did not decrease sharply; in fact, it rose every so often. The first period was around World War I. Given that Western medicine and imported raw materials were deficient and expensive, the Japanese Home Ministry suggested that medicines should be prepared at home; they thus began to pay attention to domestic medicinal herbs and committed to the cultivation, experimentation, and research of drugs [
62]. Under these circumstances, the market for Korean herbal medicine thrived.
The second period was after the mid-1920s. During this time, the Japanese Kampo (Traditional Japanese Herbal) medical community launched a campaign for its revival. In addition, some people from the Western medicine community, represented by Prof. Asahina Yasuhiko (朝 比奈泰彦) of the Faculty of Medicine at Tokyo Imperial University (東京帝 國大學), also believed that chemical medicine and single substance drugs were limited, so they advocated the importance of Kampo medicine and its prescription (
Pan & Fan, 1994: 303–304). During the same period, Keijo Imperial University, set up by the Japanese in Korea, also regarded the research of Korean medicinal herbs as an important development for itself [
63]. Although the research was ultimately used for chemically extracting the effective ingredients from the herbs, and inventing new medicines, it categorically increased public attention on Korean herbal medicine, and strengthened the reputation of traditional Korean medicine to a large extent (
Huang, 2018: 219–220).
Moreover, in 1933, the Government-General, which wanted to alleviate the impact of the Great Depression on the Korean countryside, launched “the Campaign of Award for Cultivating Medicinal Herbs (藥草栽培獎勵運 動)” across the country [
64]. The public at that time had termed it as “the period of Korean herbal medicine” and “the golden age of medicinal herbs,” and it made people believe that the situation had changed again after many years of the spread of Western medicine to the East [
65]. In 1937, as the Sino-Japanese War started, the import of not only Western medicines but also Tangjae from China decreased significantly, and thus, Korean society’s dependence on the herbal medicines made in Korea increased. In short, throughout the colonial period, we can say with certainty that Korean herbal medicine was not marginalized or greatly impacted because of the importation of Western medicine.
Hereinabove, this paper mainly analyzes and summarizes the consumption of Korean herbal medicines in the Korean medical market at that time on a macro level. Finally, two figures’ diaries are examined to draw a picture of said consumption and the medical situation in the Korean society on a micro level.
First, let us read the story of Kim Yun-sik (金允植, 1835–1922), who was also known as Unyang (雲養). He was an invincible political leader at the end of the Great Han Empire, as well as a moderate reformer (穩 健開化派), senior official, and scholar. There were many medical records in his diary
Sogeumcheongsa (續陰晴史, 1887–1921). Since Kim Yun-sik was active and highly placed in the diplomatic field at the end of the Great Han Empire, he had more opportunities than the general public to learn about Western medicine, although he had crossed the age of 50 by the late 1880s. He often consumed quinine to cure malaria around 1891. Because he was then exiled to Mincheon (沔川, currently Mincheon-myeon [沔川面], Dangjin-si [唐津市], Chungcheongnam-do [忠淸南道]), and could not adapt to the southern environment, he frequently took quinine. Thus, he could identify which consignment of the drug from the peddlers was fake [
66]. Moreover, when he returned to Seoul in 1895, he began to receive medical treatment from western doctors. For example, in February 1895 of the lunar calendar, he began coughing and also reported a large amount of phlegm. When he failed to recover even after taking Korean herbal medicine, the British doctor Boord came to visit him and gave him two bottles of Western medicines—one was to cure the cough, and the other a supplement of qi (氣) [
67].
In the 1900s, Kim Yun-sik had a deeper sense and understanding of Western medicine. On April 16, 1908, he was administered anesthesia by the American doctor Avison, the dean of Jejungwon (濟衆院), when he underwent a tongue surgery. Although Kim said, “The anesthesia is too poisonous, as I had a headache and edema in my throat after that. I had difficulty in swallowing food, and I suffered a lot,” it was indeed an unforgettable experience for him [
68].
There was, however, a more dramatic experience. In April 1908, his son Chamseo (參書) was “coughing up blood for a long time, and he had fever and could not eat. So he became very skinny and contracted Nochae (勞 瘵, the pattern of pulmonary tuberculosis).” Thinking “ordinary doctors could not heal him,” Kim invited An Sang-ho (安商浩) to see his son. An Sang-ho had graduated from the Tokyo Jikei Medical College (東京 慈惠醫學專門學校) and was the first Korean to acquire the license of a Japanese doctor. He examined Chamseo’s sputum under a microscope. Kim recorded: “There are five or six thin red worms in the sputum, that are bacteria. The doctor said the name of the disease is tuberculosis [
69].” The western doctor could not cure Chamseo, but Kim had practical experience of Western medicine, which was based on the theory of bacteria.
Additionally, in March 1908 (Kim Yun-sik was 74 then), when he barely had any teeth in his lower jaw, he first went to the Nozu Dental Clinic (野津齒醫所) set up by the Japanese in Myeongdong (明洞) and then to a dental clinic run by Americans in Sangdong (尙洞) for artificial teeth. Before the Japanese Annexation of Korea, Kim was about 70, but as an exponent of the idea of Dongdoseogi (東道西器) among the group of moderate reformers, he was open-minded toward Western medicine.
After the Japanese Annexation of Korea, the colonial authorities bestowed the title of viscount on him. Although he did not have any actual political power, he was rich and famous. Thus, the medical resources he and his family could use, as compared with those available for the common folk, were sufficient. According to his diary, famous Uisaengs from various places had checked the pulse and prescribed treatment for him and his family, such as Chae Eung-rok (蔡應祿) in Gyeongwon (慶源), Lee Hyeon-jae (李顯宰) in Changwon (昌原), and Jo Byeong-geun (趙炳 瑾), Seo Byeong-hyo (徐丙孝), and Kim Seong-gi (金性璂) in Kyungsung. Concurrently, Kim Yun-sik had acquired the resources of top western doctors. He maintained a good relationship with the American doctor Avison, Korean Western medicine doctor An Sang-ho, and military doctor Sato Tsunemaru (佐藤恒丸) of the Government-General. We can say that the challenges faced by the common man to avail medical services did not bother Kim. Meanwhile, from the perspective of medical resource availability, Korean and Western medicine were not different for him.
Nonetheless, he and his family preferred Korean herbal medicine as their main line of treatment until Kim passed away in the early 1920s. Whether it was general medicine or surgery, they always chose Korean herbal medicine after an Uisaeng’s examination, and only after trying several ineffective prescriptions would they be persuaded to turn to a western doctor.
For example, in December 1921, Kim Yun-sik felt there was a stagnation of qi in his stomach, and then, Kim Seong-gi (金性璂), who often visited him and shared a good personal relationship with him, decided that it was caused by wind-heat common cold (感熱), and a Toxin-Vanquishing (敗毒) drug should be taken for recovery. Therefore, he gave him three packets of Supplemented Qi-Righting Decoction (加味正氣湯). After Kim Yun-sik had taken the decoction for several days and it had not proved effective, his relatives and friends recommended other good doctors for him; yet, he still preferred to discuss the treatment with Kim Seong-gi. Later, he invited the western doctor Kim Yong-chae (金容彩) to see him. Kim Yong-chae diagnosed the disease as “pleurisy,” and claimed that thoracentesis and medication were both needed for therapy. Kim Yun-sik found that reasonable and decided to try the treatment [
70].
Throughout Kim Yun-sik’s experience with western doctors, we cannot say he had any bias toward Western medicine, and he even had more experience with it than common people did. Interestingly, however, like what has been mentioned above, all his life, Kim did not want to abandon Korean medical treatment unless it was absolutely necessary.
Now, let us turn our focus from Kyungsung to other areas. There was a man called Lee Byeong-gon (李炳鯤, 1882–1948) who lived in Toe Ro-ri (退老里), Milyang-gun (密陽郡, now known as Milyang-si [密陽市]), Gyeongsangnam-do (慶尙南道). His family belonged to the famous Lee family of Yeoju (驪州, located in Gyeonggi-do), and he was a traditional and prosperous landowner. The family began to actively absorb new learning techniques after the end of the Great Han Empire, and established the Hwasan School (華山義塾) in 1907, inviting Japanese teachers to teach the techniques to all family members. The atmosphere in his family had greatly affected Lee Byeong-gon. He accepted the education of Confucianism in his early years and was especially skilled in the learning of rituals (禮學). He persisted in traditional learning, and at the same time, paid attention to modern civilization. Although he was living in a remote place, he often visited Kyungsung, Daegu, and Busan, witnessed the emerging society, and paid close attention to current affairs by reading newspapers like
Maeil sinbo and
Dong-a ilbo. Moreover, he also sent the men in his family to Kyungsung for higher education. In 1921, Lee and his family members established in his native town another private elementary school called the Jeongjin School (正 進學校), a modern educational institution, and he was its headmaster for many years. He studied both traditional and new educational styles, and we can say that he was a rare figure in the Confucian community around Yeongnam (嶺南) [
71].
Lee Byeong-gon had extensive knowledge in the field of medicine, and held the strong tradition of a Confucian physician (儒醫). As an intellectual persisting in Confucian ethics, he focused on whether he could use his medical knowledge to cure his parents’ diseases as a mark of respect toward them. In reality, medicinal resources were limited in the remote countryside, and thus, expanding his knowledge of medicine was a struggle for survival. He owned typical Korean medical books, such as Donguibogam (東醫寶鑑) and Bangyakhappyeon (方藥合編); they were an important source of medical knowledge for him [
72]. Moreover, Lee Byeong-gon’s cousin Lee Byeong-won (李炳瑗) set up a Korean herbal store, which helped Lee Byeong-gon’s family take advantage of medical services, and at the same time, verified and promoted his medical knowledge through communication [
73].
We can find in Lee Byeong-gon’s diary (1906–1945) that when he or his family members fell sick, he often sought treatment from the herbal store owned by Kim Hwa-sun (金和善), Kim Dong-su (金童壽), and Kim Jong-chae (金鍾采), which was about 2 km away. If the prescription was not effective, he would travel another 8 km to Milyang-eup, or even further in search of treatment. On May 8, 1911, when his mother was sick, he first purchased medicines from Kim Hwa-sun’s herbal store. After his mother did not respond to those, on May 13, he went to Daegu, which is over 60 km away, to invite Jang Du-hwan (張斗煥) to treat his mother but was unable to meet the doctor. Later, Lee invited Kim Hyeon-chan (金顯燦) in Changwon-gun (昌原郡), which is 50 km away, twice [
74]. In addition, he had also invited Lee Chun-hae (李春海) in Busan, which is 80 km away, many times for diagnosis and prescriptions for himself or his family, and visited doctors in Busan. His channels for medical treatment were numerous (see
Figure 9) [
75]. Furthermore, the Gyeongbu Railway Line (京釜線) passing through Daegu, Milyang, and Busan had become operational in 1905; thus, it was convenient to avail medical treatment from other places.
Although Lee Byeong-gon sometimes purchased medicines from Korean herbal stores, in many cases, he chose to order medicinal herbs from the Daegu Market. He would also personally prepare, even grind and process, the medicinal herbs into pills. For example, on March 12, 1927, when he was preparing drugs at home, his uncle visited him with a prescription “Bomyeong-dan (保命丹)” for his cousin who was afflicted with wind impediment (風疾). Since many medicinal herbs from the prescription were difficult to source, Lee Byeong-gon said: “Since uncle doesn’t have trustworthy doctors, you can leave the prescription with me, I’ll make it.” He helped his uncle order medicinal herbs from Daegu by mail, and carefully dried and ground them with help from other family members [
76]. The reason Lee Byeong-gon did not buy from stores or doctors, but bought the raw materials to process and prepare the medicine himself was possibly because “uncle doesn’t have trustworthy doctors to make it.” He did not believe the merchants or doctors would make the medicine honestly. At that time, it was common for families to order raw materials from the market or stores for making or processing medicines at home.
As mentioned earlier, Lee Byeong-gon was unprejudiced toward modern western society; hence, he did not reject Western medicine. For example, as early as March 1910, when his son Heunglyong (興龍) had been sick for a long time, he heard that “An Sang-ho set up a clinic in Kyungsung and amazingly cured diseases with foreign medicine effectively.” He decided to “resort to his treatment … however far he had to travel.” He also wrote to An Sang-ho’s friend Ah Geun-hoe (安根 晦) to inquire about An Sang-ho’s medical skills [
77]. This indicates that Lee Byeong-gon had begun to try Western medicine. Yet, there were only a few records on Lee and his family’s treatment with Western medicine, except that they occasionally took so-called “Japanese medicine” (possibly patent medicine), and that in 1929 and 1931, he visited a Japanese hospital in Milyang-eup for issues such as face ringworm (面廯), tooth filling, and foot disease [
78]. In terms of medical resource availability, Lee Byeong-gon obviously could not be compared with a senior official such as Kim Yun-sik in Kyungsung. Nonetheless, if we take into account Lee’s financial capability for affording long journeys to places like Daegu, Changwon, and Busan, or inviting traditional medicine doctors to his house, it can be inferred that his family could easily receive western medical treatment if they desired. Furthermore, Lee Byeong-gon was born almost half a century after Kim Yun-sik.
Kim Yun-sik and Lee Byeong-gon certainly do not represent the Koreans during the colonial period. However, I surmise that their experiences could reflect the picture of medical practices in colonial Korean society, where both old and new treatments collaborated. Different from the impoverished masses who could hardly afford to avail Western medicine, Kim Yun-sik and Lee Byeong-gon enjoyed better geological and economic conditions, and greater accessibility to Western medicine, but they continued to use Korean herbal medicines as part of their regular treatment; Western medicine was only a supplementary option or an alternative. I believe that one reason for this is the inertia of tradition, and another that Western medicines were not necessarily effective for diseases that could not be cured by traditional Korean medicines. In other words, Western medicine lacked greater appeal and was not influential enough to break the monopoly of traditional Korean medicine in the medical world.