
Komundo or Port Hamilton, officially Geomun-do in
Korean (
Hangul: 거문도
'Geomun-do'' Hanja: 巨文島 or 巨門島) is a small group of
islands in the
Jeju Strait
Jeju Strait is a strait between the Korean Peninsula (South Jeolla Province) and Jeju Island (Jeju Province). The strait is the boundary between the Sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea as defined by the International Hydrographic Organization, and i ...
off the southern coast of the
Korean Peninsula, located approximately at . The islands are . There are three principal islands, the two larger ones, Sodo to the west (''Seo-do'', 서도, 西島) and Sunhodo to the east (''Dong-do'', 동도, 東島) forming a
harbor with the smaller island in the center. On this central island, Observatory Island (or ''Go-do'', 고도, 古島), there was a
British naval base from 1885 to 1887.
Today, the islands form a part of
Samsan-myeon, Yeosu
Samsan-myeon (), also called Samsan Township, or Samsan for short, is a myeon (township) in Yeosu, a city in South Jeolla Province, South Korea. The township is located in the south-western part of the city with a total area of . The population ...
City,
South Jeolla Province of South Korea, with the Samsan township offices located on Observation Island. The islands are also part of the
Dadohaehaesang National Park
Dadohaehaesang National Park () was designated in 1981 as the largest national park in South Korea. The total area is with being marine area and being land area. Main attractions of Dadohaehaesang National Park are Hongdo, Heuksando and Baek ...
.
History
Port Hamilton was surveyed in 1845 by
British naval officer
Sir Edward Belcher in
HMS ''Samarang'' and was named after the then secretary of the Admiralty, Captain W. A. B. Hamilton. The spacious harbour was also noted for its strategic importance by others, such as Russian Vice-Admiral
Yevfimy Putyatin, who visited the islands several times and obtained permission from natives in 1857 to establish a coal depot, though due to delays in the delivery of the coal, the plan was abandoned.

Although the
United States Secretary of the Navy "in 1884 urged the establishment of a naval station at Port Hamilton, off the southern Korean coast, and although it appears that such facilities were offered by the Korean government, nothing was done."
[James A. Field, Jr. ''History of United States Naval Operations: Korea''.]
Chapter 1: To Korea By Sea, Part 1. The Commodore's Treaty
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1962. Electronic edition released June 2000. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
In April 1885, Port Hamilton was occupied by three ships of the British
Royal Navy on orders from the Admiralty in what is known as the
Port Hamilton Incident. This was to forestall
Russian advances in the face of the
Panjdeh Incident in
Afghanistan. Port Hamilton served as a counterbalance to the Russian naval base at
Vladivostok. By occupying Port Hamilton, the British could prevent Russian advances in east Asia, and block Russian naval activity in the
Korea Strait. The British built a few buildings and defensive works and introduced
pheasants to the islands. Permission was obtained from China for a cable to be landed at
Saddle Island (at the mouth of the
Yangtze River). From there, the cable could be connected to the main telegraphic network at
Shanghai, thus enabling
telegraph communication with Port Hamilton.
After the Russian threat had diminished the British demolished the base and left on 27 February 1887, though they continued to frequent the islands, in one case burying a young sailor there. The visits were less frequent after 1910, when the Japanese Empire annexed Korea.
Until the end of
World War II, a Japanese graveyard stood in Port Hamilton. When Japanese claims to the islands were specifically renounced in the
Treaty of San Francisco, the Japanese graves were removed, but the British graveyard of ten British soldiers remains up to this day and has become a tourist attraction. Personnel of the British embassy have visited on occasion to pay their respects. The British Ambassador visited most recently in May 2021.
Ten British sailors and marines are buried on the islands including two sailors from HMS ''Albatross'' who were killed in March 1886 when their gun exploded, and a young sailor, Alex Wood from
HMS ''Albion'', who died in 1903.
Climate
References
External links
* Julian Coy
''The British Occupation of Komundo 1885-1887''
{{Authority control
Yeosu
Islands of South Jeolla Province
Royal Navy bases outside the United Kingdom
World War II sites of Japan