Post by galvatron prime on Apr 3, 2019 1:58:03 GMT
The Hakka People
The term "Hakka" was not originally a designation for a certain ethnic group living in a particular area. When the term "Hakka" first appeared in household registries during the Song Dynasty, it was used to indicate "guests" who had left their homelands to settle down in other parts of the country, in contrast to residents originally from the area. Although evidence is sketchy, the Hakkas are thought to originate from the lands bordering the Huang River (Yellow River) or Shanxi, Henan, and Hubei Provinces of the Northern China of today. To escape calamity, they would later flee southward traveling through many lands. They eventually settled down in the Jiangxi, Fujian, and Guangdong Provinces. Referred to by locals as "Hakka" or "guests", the Hakkas appeared on the world stage for the first time.
The Hakkas took to the road in five separate major migrations. The nickname "Jews of Asia" intimates these mass migrations and their pioneering spirit.
The Hakka Migrations
According to research by Luo Xiang Lin, five mass movements of Hakka took place as they trekked south from their original place of residence in the Central Plains in the Huang (Yellow) River Basin.
The first Hakka displacement took place when China was in tumult as it was under attack by five tribes during the time of Qin Shi Huang. The capital at Luoyang was removed to Nanjing and large numbers of people, including aristocrats, the general populace, and the ancestors of the Hakka, fled south to escape catastrophe.
The second Hakka migration occurred at the end of the Tang and the beginning of the Song Dynasties. The major reason for the displacement was the , which drove the predecessors of the Hakkas to southern Anhui, southwestern Jiangxi, southern and western Fujian, and the border area of Guangdong.
The third Hakka migration came to pass around the end of the Northern Song and the beginning of the Ming Dynasties. The Mongolians took control of the Central Plains and the Royal Song Household fled south. The Hakkas that had previously settled down in southern Jiangxi and southern Fujian escorted the Song royal household as it fled to eastern and northern Guangdong Province. They fought bravely and many died courageously in battles with the Mongolian armies.
The fourth Hakka migration took place around the end of the Ming Dynasty up until the time of the Qianjia Reign at the beginning of the Qing Dynasty and was a result of factors including the swelling population and the Manchurian armies sweeping southward. They migrated from southern and northern Guangdong and southwestern Jiangxi to the central and coastal regions of Guangdong, as well as Sichuan, Guangxi, Hunan, and Taiwan. Smaller numbers headed to southern Guizhou and the .
The fifth mass exodus occurred after the Qianjia Reign of the Qing Dynasty and was triggered by local skirmishes and the Taiping Rebellion. Hakkas left Xinxing and Taishan in central Guangdong for the prefectures of Gao, Lei, Qin, and Lian in Guangxi Province. Some fled as far away as Hainan Island.
As a result of sharp population increases at the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, Hakkas living in Guangdong Province relocated en masse to Sichuan, Guangxi, Chaonan, Guizhou, Hainan Island, and Taiwan to find better lives for themselves. Many who had relocated to Taiwan before the Qing military conquered Taiwan around the 22nd year of the Kangxi Reign (1683) were sent back to their original places of residence. Furthermore, the government adopted a suggestion by Shi Liang to strictly forbid emigration to Taiwan by people from Chaozhou and Huizhou (1684).
Hakkas from Meizhou, Dingzhou, and Zhangzhou looking for a better way of life continued to stream into Taiwan. They took their positions next to other ethnic groups to develop Taiwan.
The Zhu Yigui Rebellion broke out in the 60th year of the Kangxi Reign (1721). The Hakkas residing in the area of Fengshan Mountain organized the Liudui Voluntary Army. It was very accomplished on the field of battle on the side of the Qing military as it quelled the insurrection. As a result, the restriction to emigrate to Taiwan was especially lifted and the Hakkas of Guangdong were permitted to relocate to Taiwan.
The ancestors of Taiwan's Hakka population continued to flow into Taiwan. Far fewer Hakkas than Minnan Chinese immigrated to Taiwan leaving the Hakkas with no alternative but to develop infertile foothills and land at the foot of mountains. For the sake of their livelihoods, some Hakkas blended into Minnan society becoming known as Fujian Hakkas (). About 3 million of the 20 million people living in Taiwan speak Hakka and the majority of those live in farming villages. They are distributed in two main areas-in the North, they are concentrated in the Taoyuan, Hsinchu, and Miaoli areas; in the South, they reside in the Kaohsiung and Pingtung areas. About 400,000 Hakkas live in the greater Taipei area. There are also many Hakkas living in Taichung, Changhua, Nantou, Yunlin, Chiayi, Tainan, Yilan, Hualien, and Taitung.
edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm
Learning Hakka
Learning Hakka
The term "Hakka" was not originally a designation for a certain ethnic group living in a particular area. When the term "Hakka" first appeared in household registries during the Song Dynasty, it was used to indicate "guests" who had left their homelands to settle down in other parts of the country, in contrast to residents originally from the area. Although evidence is sketchy, the Hakkas are thought to originate from the lands bordering the Huang River (Yellow River) or Shanxi, Henan, and Hubei Provinces of the Northern China of today. To escape calamity, they would later flee southward traveling through many lands. They eventually settled down in the Jiangxi, Fujian, and Guangdong Provinces. Referred to by locals as "Hakka" or "guests", the Hakkas appeared on the world stage for the first time.
The Hakkas took to the road in five separate major migrations. The nickname "Jews of Asia" intimates these mass migrations and their pioneering spirit.
The Hakka Migrations
According to research by Luo Xiang Lin, five mass movements of Hakka took place as they trekked south from their original place of residence in the Central Plains in the Huang (Yellow) River Basin.
The first Hakka displacement took place when China was in tumult as it was under attack by five tribes during the time of Qin Shi Huang. The capital at Luoyang was removed to Nanjing and large numbers of people, including aristocrats, the general populace, and the ancestors of the Hakka, fled south to escape catastrophe.
The second Hakka migration occurred at the end of the Tang and the beginning of the Song Dynasties. The major reason for the displacement was the , which drove the predecessors of the Hakkas to southern Anhui, southwestern Jiangxi, southern and western Fujian, and the border area of Guangdong.
The third Hakka migration came to pass around the end of the Northern Song and the beginning of the Ming Dynasties. The Mongolians took control of the Central Plains and the Royal Song Household fled south. The Hakkas that had previously settled down in southern Jiangxi and southern Fujian escorted the Song royal household as it fled to eastern and northern Guangdong Province. They fought bravely and many died courageously in battles with the Mongolian armies.
The fourth Hakka migration took place around the end of the Ming Dynasty up until the time of the Qianjia Reign at the beginning of the Qing Dynasty and was a result of factors including the swelling population and the Manchurian armies sweeping southward. They migrated from southern and northern Guangdong and southwestern Jiangxi to the central and coastal regions of Guangdong, as well as Sichuan, Guangxi, Hunan, and Taiwan. Smaller numbers headed to southern Guizhou and the .
The fifth mass exodus occurred after the Qianjia Reign of the Qing Dynasty and was triggered by local skirmishes and the Taiping Rebellion. Hakkas left Xinxing and Taishan in central Guangdong for the prefectures of Gao, Lei, Qin, and Lian in Guangxi Province. Some fled as far away as Hainan Island.
As a result of sharp population increases at the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, Hakkas living in Guangdong Province relocated en masse to Sichuan, Guangxi, Chaonan, Guizhou, Hainan Island, and Taiwan to find better lives for themselves. Many who had relocated to Taiwan before the Qing military conquered Taiwan around the 22nd year of the Kangxi Reign (1683) were sent back to their original places of residence. Furthermore, the government adopted a suggestion by Shi Liang to strictly forbid emigration to Taiwan by people from Chaozhou and Huizhou (1684).
Hakkas from Meizhou, Dingzhou, and Zhangzhou looking for a better way of life continued to stream into Taiwan. They took their positions next to other ethnic groups to develop Taiwan.
The Zhu Yigui Rebellion broke out in the 60th year of the Kangxi Reign (1721). The Hakkas residing in the area of Fengshan Mountain organized the Liudui Voluntary Army. It was very accomplished on the field of battle on the side of the Qing military as it quelled the insurrection. As a result, the restriction to emigrate to Taiwan was especially lifted and the Hakkas of Guangdong were permitted to relocate to Taiwan.
The ancestors of Taiwan's Hakka population continued to flow into Taiwan. Far fewer Hakkas than Minnan Chinese immigrated to Taiwan leaving the Hakkas with no alternative but to develop infertile foothills and land at the foot of mountains. For the sake of their livelihoods, some Hakkas blended into Minnan society becoming known as Fujian Hakkas (). About 3 million of the 20 million people living in Taiwan speak Hakka and the majority of those live in farming villages. They are distributed in two main areas-in the North, they are concentrated in the Taoyuan, Hsinchu, and Miaoli areas; in the South, they reside in the Kaohsiung and Pingtung areas. About 400,000 Hakkas live in the greater Taipei area. There are also many Hakkas living in Taichung, Changhua, Nantou, Yunlin, Chiayi, Tainan, Yilan, Hualien, and Taitung.
edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm
Learning Hakka
Learning Hakka