Home
A Passage to China
A Profile of China
Activities
Antique
Attraction
Beijing
China-News
China-Pictures
China Architecture
China Ethnic Minority
Achang Minority
Bai Minority
Blang Minority
Bonan Minority
Bouyei Minority
Dai Minority
Daur Minority
Dong Minority
Dongxiang Minority
Drung Minority
Ewenki Minority
Gaoshan Minority
Customs and Habits
History
Gelo Minority
Hui Minority
Jing Minority
Jingpo Minority
Jino Minority
Kazak Minority
Kirgiz Minority
Korean Minority
Lahu Minority
Lhoba Minority
Li Minority
Lisu Minority
Manchu Minority
Maonan Minority
Miao Minority
Moinba Minority
Mongolian Minority
Mulam Minority
Naxi Minority
Nu Minority
Oroqen Minority
Ozbek Minority
Pumi Minority
Qiang Minority
Russian Minority
She Minority
Shui Minority
Tajik Minority
Tartar Minority
Tibetan Minority
Tu Minority
Tujia Minority
Uygur Minority
Va Minority
Xibe Minority
Yao Minority
Yi Minority
Yugur Minority
Zhuang Minority
China Opera
Chinese Cuisines
Chinese History
Chinese Music
Chinese Religion
Chinese Tea
Custom
Delicious Dish
Festivals in China
Friend of Nature
Journey to Adventure
Olympic-Games-2008
Provinces
Shaanxi
Traditional Culture
Traditional Literature
Traditional Medicine
Weather-China
Contact
Sitemap





Google
 

Dein Name auf Chinesisch



 

The Gaoshan ethnic minority

The Gaoshan people, about 415,000 in total, account for less than 2 per cent of the 17 million inhabitants, based on statistics published by Taiwan authorities in June 1982 of Taiwan Province. 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.

china ethnic minority gaoshan ethnic minority

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 per cent forested. Over 70 per cent 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.

Flatland inhabitants entered feudal society at about the same time as their Han neighbors. Private land ownership, land rental, hired labor and the division between landlords and peasants had long emerged among these Gaoshans. But, in Bunong and Taiya, land was owned by primitive village communes. Farm tools, cattle, houses and small plots of paddy field were privately owned. A primitive cooperative structure operated in farming and the bag of collective hunting was distributed equally among the hunters with an extra share each to the shooter and the owner of the hound that helped.


Welcome to China2Go, the talking Chinese phrase book for Windows Mobile Pocket PC and Palm OS. Featuring crystal clear voice recorded by a real person, this product is a great travel companion and an ideal tool to learn Chinese! With our cutting edge voice compression technology, this product includes more than 1000 phrases, their Chinese translation, and the voice in only a few megabytes.

Supports all Windows Mobile Pocket PCs.

H&H China2Go Talking Phrase Book for Windows Mobile

 



China Newsletter


Anmelden
Abmelden


Suche auf China-Guide


Social Bookmarks




Link Tipps

anonym Surfen
chinesisch Sprachkurs
TinyURL Kurz-URL
CMS ohne Datenbank
chinesisch Kochen





weitere Link Tipps
 
 

 © 2005 - 2012 china-guide.de

1913 information sides over China in German as well as
1029 sides in English.
There has been this internet page to the China topic for 2549 days

The contents of this internet page (texts, pictures and graphics) as well as its composition are subject to the copyright. Any use without a written consent is forbidden. Only writing arcades (no photos or graphics) from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia, this are excepted from it stand under the GNU license for a free documentation.

This domain is attainable also about these domain names:
中国向导 | chinesisch kochen | China-Club | Chinaclub

These also are looked after by us domains:
Hongkong | Macao | buntgrau

Link partner and recommended sides:
china-in-the-news (deutsch) | China Community | Praktikum China | Info2China
pixelpainter | Daus CBS | Tattoo-Net | China Travel und China Holiday
Reise-Maier | Cool-oder-Uncool | Tipps-zur-Webseite | Reiseversicherung

Information regarding China

Pandapassport.com   Backpackers Inn Guilin