亚洲精品久久久久久一区二区_99re热久久这里只有精品34_久久免费高清视频_一区二区三区不卡在线视频

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
SPORTS
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Film in China
War on Poverty
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service
China Calendar
Telephone and
Postal Codes


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies
Info
FedEx
China Post
China Air Express
Hospitals in China
Chinese Embassies
Foreign Embassies
China
Construction Bank
People's
Bank of China
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
Travel Agencies
China Travel Service
China International Travel Service
Beijing Youth Travel Service
Beijing Xinhua Tours
Links
China Tibet Tour
China Tours
China National Tourism Administration

Online marketplace of Manufacturers & Wholesalers

The Gaoshan Ethnic Minority

Population: 415,000

Major area of distribution: Taiwan and Fujian

Language: Gaoshan people speak 13 languages

Religion: Polytheism

 

 

The Gaoshan people are about 415,000 in total, according to 2001 statistics. The majority of them live in mountain areas and the flat valleys running along the east coast of Taiwan Island, and on the Isle of Lanyu. About 1,500 live in such major cities as Shanghai, Beijing and Wuhan and in Fujian Province on the mainland.

 

The Gaoshans do not have their own script, and their spoken language belongs to the Indonesian group of the Malay/Polynesian language family.

 

Taiwan Island, home to the Gaoshans, is subtropical in climate with abundant precipitation and fertile land yielding two rice crops a year (three in the far south). Being one of China's major sugar producers, Taiwan also grows some 80 kinds of fruit, including banana, pineapple, papaya, coconut, orange, tangerine, longan and areca. Taiwan's oolong and black teas are among its most popular items for export.

 

The Taiwan Mountain Range runs from north to south through the eastern part of the island, which is 55 percent forested. Over 70 percent of the world's camphor comes from Taiwan. Short and rapid rivers flowing from the mountains provide abundant hydropower, and the island is blessed with rich reserves of gold, silver, copper, coal, oil, natural gas and sulfur. Salt is a major product of the southeast coast, and the offshore waters are ideal fishing grounds.

 

The Gaoshans are mainly farmers growing rice, millet, taro and sweet potatoes. Those who live in mixed communities with Han people on the plains work the land in much the same way as their Han neighbors. For those in the mountains, hunting is more important, while fishing is essential to those living along the coast and on small islands.

 

Gaoshan traditions make women responsible for ploughing, transplanting, harvesting, spinning, weaving, and raising livestock and poultry. Men's duties include land reclamation, construction of irrigation ditches, hunting, lumbering and building houses.

 

Customs and habits

The Gaoshans are monogamous and patriarchal in family system, though the Amei tribe still retains some of the vestiges of the matriarchal practice. Commune heads are elected from among elderly women and families are headed by women, with the eldest daughter inheriting the family property and male children married off into the brides' families. In the Paiwan tribe, either the eldest son or daughter can be heir to the family property. All the Amei young men and some of the Paiwan youths have to live in a communal hall for a certain period of time before they are initiated into manhood at a special ceremony.

 

Gaoshan clothes are generally made of hemp and cotton. Men's wear includes capes, vests, short jackets and pants, leggings and turbans decorated with laces, shells and stones. In some areas, vests are delicately woven with rattan and coconut bark. Women wear short blouses with or without sleeves, aprons and trousers or skirts with ornaments like bracelets and ankle bracelets. They are skilled in weaving cloths and dyeing them in bright colors and they like to decorate sleeve cuffs, collars and hems of blouses with beautiful embroidery. They also use shells and animal bones as ornaments. In some places, the time-honored tradition of tattooing faces and bodies and denting the teeth has been preserved. Some elderly Gaoshan women, though having lived on the mainland among the Han people for many years, still take pride in their distinctive embroidery.

 

For transportation in rugged terrain, the Gaoshans have built bamboo and rattan suspension or arch bridges and cableways over steep ravines. They are also highly skilled in handicrafts. Their rattan and bamboo weaving, including baskets, hats and armors, pottery utensils, wooden mortars and pestles and dugout canoes are unique in design and decoration. In the mountains, the Cao and Bunong tribes are experts in tanning hides, while the Taiya tribe makes excellent fishing nets.

 

Songs and dances are very much a part of Gaoshan life. On holidays, they would gather for singing and dancing. They have many ballads, fairy tales, legends, odes to ancestors, hunting songs, dirges and work songs. Instruments include the mouth organ, nose flute, and bamboo flute. One musical form unique to the Gaoshans is a work song accompanying the pounding of rice.

 

Gaoshan art includes a great deal of carving and painting of human figures, animals, flowers and geometric designs on wooden lintels, panels, columns and thresholds, musical instruments and household utensils. Hunting and other aspects of life are also depicted, and figures with human heads and snake bodies are a common theme.

 

The Gaoshans are animists who believe in immortality and ancestor worship. They hold sacrificial rites for all kinds of occasions including hunting and fishing. The dead are buried without coffins in the village graveyard. There are vestiges of the worship of totems – snakes and animals – and certain taboos still remain.

 

History 

 

The name Gaoshan was created for the minority people in Taiwan following victory over Japan in 1945. There are several versions of the origin of the ethnic minority. The main theories are: they are indigenous, they came from the west, or the south, or several different sources. The theory that they came from the west is based on their custom of cropping their hair and tattooing their bodies, worshipping snakes as ancestors and their language, all of which indicate that they might have been descendants of the ancient Baiyue people on the mainland. Another theory says that their language and culture bear resemblance to the Malays from the Philippines and Borneo, and so the Gaoshans must have come from the south. The third and more reliable theory is that the Gaoshan ethnic group originated from one branch of the ancient Yue ethnic group living along the coast of the mainland during the Stone Age. They were later joined by immigrants from the Philippines, Borneo and Micronesia.

 

Cementing close economic and cultural ties through living and working together over a long period of time, these peoples had by the time of the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911) welded themselves into a new ethnic group known as Fan or Eastern Fan, which is today called the Gaoshan ethnic group.

 

Archaeological evidence suggests that the Gaoshan ethnic group has all along maintained close connections with the mainland. Until the end of the Pleistocene Epoch 30,000 years ago, Taiwan had been physically part of the mainland. Fossils of human skulls belonging to this period and Old Stone Age artifacts found in Taiwan show that humans probably moved there from the mainland during the Pleistocene Epoch. Neolithic adzes, axes and pottery shards unearthed on the island suggest that New Stone Age culture on the mainland was introduced into Taiwan 3,000 to 4,000 years ago.

 

In AD 230, two generals of the Kingdom of Wu led a 10,000-strong army across the Taiwan Straits, and brought back several thousand natives from the island. At that time, the ancestors of the Gaoshans belonged to several primitive, matriarchal tribes. Public affairs were run collectively by all members. Their tools included axes, adzes and rings made of stone and arrowheads and spearheads made of deer antlers. Animal husbandry was still in an embryonic stage.

 

By the early 7th century, the Gaoshans had started farming and livestock breeding on top of hunting and gathering. They planted cereal crops with stone farm tools. Each tribe was governed by a headman who summoned the membership for meetings by beating a big drum. There was neither criminal code nor taxation. Criminal cases were tried by the entire tribe membership. The offender was tied with ropes, flailed for minor offences or put to death for serious crimes.

 

These early Gaoshans had no written language, nor calendar; and they kept records by tying knots. People worshipped the Gods of Mountain and Sea, and liked carving, painting, singing and dancing.

 

In the Song and Yuan dynasties (960-1368), central government control was extended to the Penghu Islands and Taiwan, which were placed under the jurisdiction of Jinjiang and Tongan counties in Fujian Province. During the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), farming, hunting and animal husbandry further developed in Taiwan. In the early 17th century, an increasing number of Hans from the mainland moved to Taiwan, lending a great impetus to economic development along the island's west coast.

 

The Gaoshan and Han people in Taiwan worked closely together in developing the island and fighting against foreign invaders and local feudal rulers. Japanese pirates invaded Chilung, the major seaport in Northern Taiwan, in 1563. In 1593 the Japanese rulers tried to coerce the Gaoshan people into paying tribute to them but this demand was firmly rejected. The invasions of Japanese pirates from 1602 to 1628 were repeatedly beaten back.

 

Towards the end of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the Dutch and the Spanish time and again made forays into Taiwan, but were repulsed by the islanders. Finally, in 1642, the Dutch defeated the Spanish, seized the island and imposed tyrannical rule on the local people. This touched off immediate resistance. The anti-Dutch armed uprising led by Guo Huaiyi in the mid-17th century was the largest in scale. In April 1661, China's national hero Zheng Chenggong led an army of 25,000 men to Taiwan and freed it from under the Dutch with the assistance of the local Gaoshan and Han people, ending the Dutch invaders' 38-year-old colonial rule over Taiwan.

 

After recovering Taiwan from the Dutch, Zheng Chenggong instituted a series of measures to advance economic growth and cultural development there. He forbade his troops engaged in reclamation to encroach on the Gaoshan people's land, helped the local people improve their farm tools and learn more advanced farming methods from the Han people, encouraged children to attend school, and expanded trading. With the growth of production, the feudal system of land ownership came into being, and the gap between the rich and the poor was getting wider and wider. The feudal landlord economy developed in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), when the Gaoshans began using ox-driven carts, ploughs and rakes developed by the Hans.

 

Zheng died five months after recovering the island, and his son succeeded him. The Zhengs governed Taiwan for 23 years. In 1683, the Qing court brought the island under central government control and this rule lasted for 212 years till Taiwan fell under Japanese rule following the signing of the Sino-Japanese Treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895.

 

After the Opium War of 1840, British, American, Japanese and French colonialists invaded and plundered Taiwan one after another. The foreign invasion and plundering were met with fierce resistance. To fight the British invaders, the local people formed a volunteer army of 47,000 troops who beat back all the five British invasions.

 

Taiwan fell into the hands of the Japanese in 1895 after China's defeat in the Sino-Japanese War. Fighting shoulder to shoulder for five months, Gaoshan and Han people inflicted 32,315 casualties on the Japanese invaders.

 

During the 20 years from 1895 to 1915, the people of Taiwan staged some 100 armed uprisings against Japanese occupation. One of them was the Wushe Uprising mounted by the Gaoshan people in Taichung County in 1930. Enraged by the murder of a Gaoshan worker by Japanese police, over 300 Gaoshan villagers wiped out the 130 Japanese soldiers stationed there and held Wushe for three days. In the following months, the insurgents killed and wounded more than 4,000 Japanese occupationists. In retaliation, the Japanese moved in most of their garrison forces in Taiwan along with planes and guns and crushed the uprising. They slaughtered over 1,200 Gaoshans including all the insurgents.

 

After victory over Japan in 1945, Taiwan was returned to China and placed under Kuomintang rule.

 

Gaoshans on the mainland

 

Twenty-nine hundred Gaoshans now live on the mainland. Though small in number, these Gaoshans have their deputies to the National People's Congress, China's supreme organ of power. They enjoy equal rights in the big family of all ethnic groups on the mainland.

 

(China.org.cn June 21, 2005)

Print This Page
|
Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
亚洲精品久久久久久一区二区_99re热久久这里只有精品34_久久免费高清视频_一区二区三区不卡在线视频
久久精品亚洲乱码伦伦中文| 亚洲欧美在线一区二区| 正在播放欧美视频| 亚洲国语精品自产拍在线观看| 国产一级揄自揄精品视频| 国产精品久久夜| 国产精品爱啪在线线免费观看| 欧美女激情福利| 欧美国产在线电影| 欧美激情综合色综合啪啪| 麻豆乱码国产一区二区三区| 久久亚洲影音av资源网| 久久婷婷激情| 久久综合九色欧美综合狠狠| 久久蜜桃精品| 猛干欧美女孩| 欧美精品91| 欧美日韩国产综合新一区| 欧美日韩亚洲一区三区| 欧美日韩在线视频一区| 国产精品黄色在线观看| 国产精品一区二区久激情瑜伽| 国产精品日韩在线观看| 国产日韩精品一区二区| 韩国三级电影久久久久久| 精品不卡一区| 亚洲国产天堂久久综合网| 亚洲美女区一区| 亚洲一区二区视频在线| 性欧美办公室18xxxxhd| 久久精品一二三| 日韩一级黄色片| 亚洲欧美999| 久久久www成人免费精品| 免费成人在线视频网站| 欧美日韩亚洲免费| 国产美女精品视频| 在线观看中文字幕亚洲| 日韩一区二区精品| 亚洲欧美日韩爽爽影院| 亚洲高清视频中文字幕| 一本到12不卡视频在线dvd| 亚洲免费影视| 精品成人一区二区三区四区| 亚洲最新合集| 欧美一区二区精品在线| 另类人畜视频在线| 欧美日韩在线视频一区| 国产手机视频一区二区| 亚洲国产婷婷| 亚洲制服少妇| 亚洲精品国产系列| 性18欧美另类| 免费一区二区三区| 国产精品国产三级国产| 在线不卡免费欧美| 亚洲一区二区三区免费在线观看 | 亚洲欧美日韩一区二区三区在线观看| 欧美伊人久久久久久久久影院| 猛男gaygay欧美视频| 欧美特黄一区| 永久555www成人免费| 亚洲午夜免费视频| 亚洲国产精品一区二区第四页av | 亚洲精品美女91| 午夜精品福利一区二区三区av | 中文无字幕一区二区三区| 欧美一区二区三区在线| 欧美电影打屁股sp| 国产欧美一区二区精品婷婷| 亚洲欧洲精品一区二区三区波多野1战4 | 国产精品swag| 亚洲国产另类久久久精品极度| 亚洲一区视频在线| 亚洲精品视频在线| 久久免费视频观看| 国产精品视频第一区| 亚洲精品黄网在线观看| 亚洲丁香婷深爱综合| 亚洲欧美日韩综合一区| 欧美理论电影在线观看| 国内精品久久久久久影视8| 在线亚洲成人| 99国产精品私拍| 免费久久精品视频| 国产一区二区久久精品| 亚洲一区二区欧美日韩| 一区二区激情| 欧美成人激情视频免费观看| 国产一区二区三区久久| 亚洲影院色无极综合| 一区二区免费在线播放| 欧美大片在线观看一区二区| 国产亚洲欧美一区二区三区| 亚洲永久在线| 亚洲影视在线| 欧美日韩天天操| 亚洲高清久久久| 亚洲国产一区在线| 久久免费少妇高潮久久精品99| 国产模特精品视频久久久久| 一区二区成人精品| 亚洲特级片在线| 欧美日韩精品免费观看视一区二区| 伊人久久成人| 欧美在线日韩精品| 久久精品三级| 国产一区二区三区观看| 性久久久久久久久| 久久精品亚洲一区二区| 国产视频亚洲| 欧美在线看片| 久久亚洲美女| 极品中文字幕一区| 亚洲国产日韩在线| 免费亚洲电影在线| 在线观看不卡| 亚洲精品中文在线| 欧美人与性动交a欧美精品| 亚洲日本va午夜在线电影| 日韩视频一区| 欧美日韩综合久久| 亚洲视频 欧洲视频| 香蕉视频成人在线观看| 国产女主播在线一区二区| 性欧美暴力猛交69hd| 久久久久国色av免费观看性色| 国产日韩欧美综合在线| 久久se精品一区二区| 蜜臀av性久久久久蜜臀aⅴ| 最新成人av在线| 在线一区观看| 国产精品免费视频xxxx| 午夜精品久久| 久久一区中文字幕| 亚洲欧洲一区二区三区久久| 亚洲视频一区二区| 国产精品羞羞答答| 久久精品国语| 欧美精品色网| 亚洲网友自拍| 久久久人人人| 亚洲国产精品尤物yw在线观看 | 美女成人午夜| 亚洲精品欧美日韩| 亚洲中字黄色| 国产亚洲美州欧州综合国| 亚洲国产二区| 欧美精品久久久久a| 亚洲已满18点击进入久久| 久久久久久一区| 亚洲七七久久综合桃花剧情介绍| 亚洲色在线视频| 国产日本欧洲亚洲| 亚洲美女色禁图| 国产精品一区二区三区乱码| 亚洲国产精品第一区二区| 欧美精品九九| 欧美一二三视频| 欧美伦理在线观看| 午夜日韩在线| 欧美精品一区二区在线观看| 亚洲午夜激情| 麻豆国产va免费精品高清在线| 日韩视频在线一区二区三区| 欧美在线三区| 亚洲精品资源美女情侣酒店| 久久国产免费| 亚洲毛片播放| 久久视频一区二区| 中文在线一区| 久久综合久久综合九色| aa亚洲婷婷| 女主播福利一区| 亚洲欧美另类中文字幕| 欧美韩日一区二区| 性欧美videos另类喷潮| 欧美日韩国产在线播放| 久久se精品一区二区| 欧美午夜精品一区二区三区| 亚洲国产导航| 国产精品一区一区三区| 日韩午夜免费视频| 国产自产女人91一区在线观看| 在线视频你懂得一区二区三区| 国内精品视频在线观看| 亚洲欧美日韩国产另类专区| 亚洲二区精品| 久久精品国产亚洲5555| 宅男精品视频| 欧美激情在线有限公司| 欧美一区二区三区在线看 | 久久久久**毛片大全| 一区二区三区欧美视频| 欧美成人免费大片| 欧美一区二区三区在线看| 国产精品激情电影| 一区二区三区免费在线观看| 在线视频国内自拍亚洲视频| 久久精品视频99|