Korea was a separate province within the Mongol empire too. That's my point.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_the_Yuan_dynasty
Which you made by comparing it with England, Gaul and Rome, which sullies your point with false comparison. No land bridge existed between Gaul and Britain, from the moment of conquest it was always a separate adminstrative province.
That was my exact point.
Rome conquered Gaul, then from that foothold, conquered the more remote Britain.
Mongolia conquered China, then from that foothold, conquered the more remote Korea.
Gaul and Britain were distinct provinces of the empire, but so were mainland China and Korea. The Mongols recognized enough difference there to make a new province just for the small portion of the peninsula.
I do not have any issue with the distinctness of China or Korea, I have issue with the comparison you are making. Rome conquered Gaul and from Gaul went on to conquer the island of Britain, Mongolia conquered Manchuria, from there vassalized the peninsula of Korea, then went on to conquer China - before centralizing its rule and dividing its territories into separate administrative regions. That is to say nothing of the differences between a nomadic horde making the transition from acquiring tributes to become a bureaucratic Empire, compared to the constant administrative efforts of the Roman Empire to manage direct control, client Kings and tin/copper extraction efforts. To reiterate, England was never a part of Gaul, this is in contrast to Korea which until the Yuan's administrative reform, was governed the same as northern China, and China proper wasn't even under full Mongol rule. Hence why I find the Britain-India-Burma example far more appropriate
England is still Denmark though
#daneluv4ever
Sadly Normans killed it
*EDIT
It gets worse
At one point Britain and Gaul were the same administrative province under Rome