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The Thao (邵族) are a small group of Taiwanese aborigines, with a population of only a few hundred, who have lived near Sun Moon Lake (Lake Candidius) in central Taiwan for at least a century, and probably since the time of the Qing dynasty. Image File history File links Information: Thao of Sun Moon Lake, Nantou, Taiwan/ Original photographer unknonw/ 1904 Information in Chinese: å±
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Image File history File links Information: Thao of Sun Moon Lake, Nantou, Taiwan/ Original photographer unknonw/ 1904 Information in Chinese: å±
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ä¸è©³/ 1904å¹´ Source: [1] File links The following pages link to this file: Thao ...
Dock of Sun Moon Lake/ Nantou, Taiwan/ taken by geoffroy/ 2003 Sun Moon Lake (Zintun in the Thao language) is the largest lake in Taiwan. ...
Nantou is the name of several places: Nantou County (南投縣) of Taiwan Nantou City (南投市) a city in Nantou County Nantou, Guangdong (南头镇) a town in the Guangdong province This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
A Rukai village Chief visiting the Department of Anthropology in Tokyo Imperial University during the Japanese rule. ...
Dock of Sun Moon Lake/ Nantou, Taiwan/ taken by geoffroy/ 2003 Sun Moon Lake (Zintun in the Thao language) is the largest lake in Taiwan. ...
The Qing Dynasty (Manchu: daicing gurun; Chinese: æ¸
æ; pinyin: qÄ«ng cháo; Wade-Giles: ching chao), sometimes known as the Manchu Dynasty, was founded by the Manchu clan Aisin Gioro, in what is today northeast China expanded into China proper and the surrounding territories of Inner Asia, establishing...
They are the smallest of the Taiwanese aborigine group in terms of population and the smallest ethnic group in Taiwan. Despite their small group size, the Thao have retained their customs, beliefs and traditional culture and language up until now, though they have been assimilated into mainstream Chinese culture as well. Most of the members of this ethnic group work today as menial workers, cooks and vendors in the tourism industry at Sun Moon Lake. The Chi-Chi earthquake of 1999 damaged or destroyed 80% of the houses of the Thao tribe and made many of them lose employment. This is the current collaboration of the week! Please help improve it to featured article standard. ...
Servant has a number of meaning: A servant is another word for domestic worker, a person who is hired to provide regular household or other duties, and receives compensation. ...
A tourist boat travels the River Seine in Paris, France Beaches make popular tourist resorts Tourist redirects here; for the album by Athlete, see Tourist (album) Tourism can be defined as the act of travel for the purpose of recreation, and the provision of services for this act. ...
The Chi-Chi earthquake (also known as 921 earthquake) occurred on September 21, 1999 in central Taiwan at 1:47 am local time (September 20 17:47 GMT) and measured 7. ...
1999 is a common year starting on Friday Anno Domini (or the Current Era), and was designated the International Year of Older Persons by the United Nations. ...
The Thao people have their own language, which is nearly extinct and spoken by only a few, mostly elders, of the (already small) Thao ethnic population. The language has been sinicized. Most people who speak Thao are bilingual and can speak Mandarin Chinese as well. The Thao language is classified as a Paiwanic language, a subgroup of the Formosan language family which is a subgroup of the much larger Austronesian language family. The Thao language has loanwords from the Bunun language, spoken by the Bunun ethnic group of which the Thao tribe cooperated with as well as intermarried. An endangered language is a language with so few surviving speakers that it is in danger of falling out of use. ...
Sinicization, or less commonly Sinification, is to make things Chinese. ...
This article is on all of the Northern Chinese dialects. ...
Paiwan is the native language of Taiwan. ...
The Formosan languages are a group of Austronesian languages spoken 2% of the population of Taiwan, almost exclusively aboriginals. ...
The Austronesian languages are a family of languages widely dispersed throughout the islands of Southeast Asia and the Pacific, with a few members spoken on continental Asia. ...
A loanword (or a borrowing) is a word taken into by one language from another but it is never given back. ...
The Bunun language (å¸è¾²è©±) is spoken by the Bunun people of Taiwan. ...
Bunun (布農) is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
On 15 August 2001, the Executive Yuan (Council) of Taiwan officially recognized the Thao tribe as the tenth ethnic group among Taiwan's indigenous peoples. The Thao have been mistakenly regarded as the ‘Tsou’ tribe (a separate and different ethnic group of aborigines) since the time of Japanese occupation. The error was caused by both a misunderstanding of the legend saying that “the ancestors of Thao were from the mountain Alishan (Mountain A Li)” and the similar pronunciation of ‘Thao’ and ‘Tsou’. Thus, the domain of the Thaos had been registered as “Tsous from the flatlands of the mountains” under the nine ethnic groups of Taiwan’s indigenous peoples. The Executive Yuan (行政院; literally executive court) is the executive branch of the government of the Republic of China. ...
Tsou youth, pre-1945 The Tsou are an indigenous people of Taiwan. ...
The Alishan National Scenic Area (é¿éå±±å家風æ¯å) is a mountain resort and natural preserve located in the mountains of Taiwans Chiayi County. ...
| Taiwanese aborigines | | Recognized: Ami | Atayal | Bunun | Kavalan | Paiwan | Puyuma | Rukai | Saisiyat | Tao | Thao | Tsou | Truku Taiwanese aborigines or aboriginal peoples (å使°, Tongyong Pinyin: yuánjhùmÃn, Hanyu Pinyin: yuánzhùmÃn, Wade-Giles: yüan2-chu4-min2, Taiwanese PeÌh-oÄ-jÄ«: gôan-chÅ«-bîn, literal meaning: original inhabitants) are the indigenous peoples of Taiwan. ...
In computing and telecommunications, abbreviation for Alternate Mark Inversion, a method of encoding data to be transmitted. ...
Atayal (泰雅) is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
Bunun (布農) is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
Yilan County (宜蘭縣, pinyin: Yílán Xiàn) is a county in Northeastern Taiwan. ...
Paiwan is the native language of Taiwan. ...
Puyuma (卑南族) is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
Rukai (魯凱族) is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
The Saisiyat (true people) are an indigenous people of Taiwan, part of the larger Taiwanese aborigine ethnic group. ...
Old photo of the Tao people on the shore of Orchid Island, ca. ...
Tsou youth, pre-1945 The Tsou are an indigenous people of Taiwan. ...
Truku (太魯閣族), sometimes spelled as Taroko, is one tribe of Taiwanese aborigine. ...
Unrecognized: Babuza | Basay | Hoanya | Ketagalan | Luilang | Pazeh/Kaxabu | Popora | Qaugaut | Siraya | Taokas | Trobiawan The Babuza (貓霧族; Pinyin: Māowùzú) are a Taiwanese aboriginal people, living primarily in Changhua County and around the western part of Taiwans Central Basin. ...
Basay was formerly spoken in the plains area of Northern Taiwan. ...
The Hoanya (洪雅族; Pinyin Hóngyǎ) are a Taiwanese aboriginal people who live primarily in Changhua county, Chiayi city, Nantou county, and near Tainan city. ...
Ketagalan is a Taiwanese aboriginal tribe originating in what is now the Taipei Basin. ...
The Papora (巴布拉; Pinyin Bābùlā) are a Taiwanese aboriginal people, living primarily in the area around Taichung and the Taiwanese western coastal littoral. ...
The Siraya were an indigeneous people of Taiwan. ...
| External links
- 'Home at last!' The Thao return to their ancestrial homeland.
[1] Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
The Wikimedia Commons (also called Commons or Wikicommons) is a repository of free content images, sound and other multimedia files. ...
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