Hakka

Contributing yet another strand to the patchwork of overseas
Chinese speech and customs were the Hakkas, latecomers to the
southernmost provinces, moving into Fukien and Kwngtung in two separate
migrations: during the tenth century and the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries. The Hakkas whose name means `guest families’ have been
described as the gypsies of China, people who live side by side with
speakers of different dialects in enclaves scattered across six southern
provinces, without a homeland of their own. They were a rugged lot, and
even their women had to be hardy. Little wonder that the Hakkas were
the only Chinese to refrain altogether from binding their daughters’
feet into the `golden lilies’ that were de rigueur everywhere else. One
thing Hakka women were not was dainty.

Men moving across great distances into an unknown landscape,
assailed by the hostility of settlers who have preceded them, band
together; and if Hakkas were (and still are) thought a very clannish
people, they had good reasons to be. The banding-together took a
palpably defensive form, in communal living and communal housing Their
dwellings, still to be seen today in a border area in Fukien province,
are extraordinary constructions, rising out of the countryside like
veritable fortresses, gigantic, multi-storied, round. They are built to
a circular plan, with a thick outer wall of tamped earth pierced by
tiny squint-holes, presenting a resolutely sealed and embattled look to
the world. In the walled complex, an entire community, numbering six to
seven hundred inhabitants, could be concentrated.

It was no easy matter to live among the Cantonese, to contend for
land and water. Feuds were easily ignited in such an atmosphere, and
there evolved a tradition of armed fighting between the migrant and the
settler. We read of a period of prolonged fighting between the two in
the years 1855-67, a war in which about half a million people are said
to have lost their lives. It is not hard to see why the Hakkas
emigrated to Nanyang [South-East Asia]. In China they were pushed on to
marginal land, hilly country rejected by those who had got there first.

[from Sons of the
Yellow Emperor : The Story of the Overseas Chinese
by Lynn Pan,
Mandarin Paperbacks 1991, page 16]

Here are some pictures of traditional Hakka round earth builidings (click to get a higher resolution version).

Round Earth Building




This type of building is round in shape and divided into
three classes, small, medium and big. The small ones are usually 2 to 3
stories tall with a single ring. The medium dwelling is usually 3 to 4
stories tall with a large inner open space (single ring) or double
rings. The large round building is usually 4 to 5 stories tall
consisting of as many as three rings.

The very small round building has
about 12 to 18 rooms, the small ones have 21 to 28 rooms, the medium
ones have about 30 to 40 rooms, the large ones have about 42 to 58
rooms, and the super large round buildings have about 60 to 72 rooms.

Two-third of the round building are 3 stories high and hold roughly 20
families or 100 people. The round earth building is a “group-oriented”
residence, usually with one main entrance. Its wall is usually around 1
meter thick. The main entrance door is padded with iron sheet and is
locked by 2 horizontal wood bars. The wooden bars retract into the walls
in order to open the door. In the event the wood bars are sawed through,
the locking mechanism is still intact.

Inside the entrance is a huge
central courtyard where all the doors of the rooms and inner windows are
open to. At the ground level except the hall and the staircases, the
rooms are used as kitchens and dining rooms. The rooms on the second
floor are used for storage. The rooms on the 3rd level are used as
bedrooms. The rooms in each level are identical. In front of each room,
there is an open round hallway and usually there are 4 staircases to
move from one level to another. Thus each family occupies one vertical
units with lower level as kitchen, 2nd level for storage and
miscellaneous use and 3rd level and above used as bedroom. Sometime
there is no open round hallway. Instead, every family has its own
private staircase. A typical room is about 10-13 square meter in size.

The larger round earth building has room around 15 square meters. The
windows facing outside tends to be small, with the window size at the
outer wall smaller and the window size at the inner wall larger enabling
wider surveillance from the inside. It is extremely hard for outsiders
to come in through the windows. There is usually no window at the ground
level. While the round building is fairly large, it has an inner ring,
which is like a round building within a round building. For round
building that built earlier than 15th century, they have other defensive
features that would counter siege. It is said that during Ming dynasty
as Japanese pirates intruded the coastal areas, they always leave the
Hakka’s Earth Buildings area alone.

[Hakka – An Important Element of Chinese Culture]

Japan claims title to world’s first bicycle

The world’s first bicycle was developed by a Japanese feudal lord in
1732, a model recently created on the basis of a Edo-Period drawing has
suggested.

A 30-centimeter-long scale model of a
bicycle designed in 1732.

Toshio Kajiwara, 60, a former bicycle company technical adviser,
analyzed the drawing of a “newly-developed, boat-style ground vehicle,”
and Kenjiro Kawakami, professor of industrial archeology at Tama
University of Arts, created a 1/5 scale model.

“Our discovery that a bicycle with pedals existed in Japan in the
1730s has drastically changed the history of bicycles,” Kajiwara said.

It has been widely believed that the first bicycle was invented in
France in 1861.

“The pedal structure of the ‘newly-developed, boat-style ground
vehicle’ is identical to that of bicycles. However, it did not spread
throughout Japan probably because most of the roads in the country were
bumpy at the time,” Kawakami, president of the Japan Industrial
Archeology Society, said.

The drawing is in a document compiled by Kuheiji Hiraishi (1696 to
1771), the lord of the Hikone feudal clan in Shiga Prefecture. It is
preserved at the Hikone Municipal Library.

The document says that a so-called “boat-style ground vehicle”
developed by a farmer living in the Kodama district of Bushu (currently
the Saitama Prefecture city of Honjo) became popular in Edo (Tokyo).

It shows that the vehicle could climb up slopes. One of Hiraishi’s
retainers living at the clan’s Edo residence reported the vehicle to the
lord who was also a scientist.

Since the vehicle’s mechanism was unclear, Hiraishi designed his own
boat-style ground vehicle and built it in 1732, the document says.

The vehicle comprises of a boat-shaped wooden body, a single front
wheel and two rear wheels. The pedals are connected to a disk that
resembles a flywheel with an iron rod similar to a crankshaft.

The document claims that it ran at about 14 kilometers per hour.

[Mainichi
Shimbun
]

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