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    政大機構典藏 > 文學院 > 歷史學系 > 期刊論文 >  Item 140.119/139955
    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/139955


    Title: Schools, Temples, and Tombs across the Sea: The Re-Civilization of Post-Zheng Taiwan, 1683–1722
    Authors: 雷恩‧侯洛伊德
    Holroyd, Ryan
    Contributors: 歷史系
    Keywords: Early Qing;Taiwan;Colonialism;Chinese religion;Zheng family
    Date: 2015-01
    Issue Date: 2022-04-14 15:30:32 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: This article examines the strategies employed by the Qing empire to induce the Han population in Taiwan to accept its rule following the island’s conquest in 1683. Late-seventeenth-century Taiwan had a sparse population and a huge hinterland, and this made it difficult for the Qing government to enforce its rule by military means alone. I will argue that the Qing officials in Taiwan also used a number of cultural tactics to legitimize their government in the eyes of the Han Taiwanese. First, they built culture temples and schools in the hopes of both demonstrating their moral authority and convincing the Taiwanese to participate in the dynasty’s examination system. Second, they involved themselves in local religion by founding or refurbishing temples to popular deities, demonstrating sympathy for local concerns and solidarity between religious groups on the mainland and in Taiwan. Finally, rather than denigrate the memory of the island’s former rulers, the Ming-loyalist Zheng family who had resisted the Qing government’s conquest of southern China, they portrayed them as honorable servants of the former dynasty whose legacy could be proudly remembered, but whose time had ultimately passed.
    Relation: Frontiers of History in China, Vol.10, No.4, pp.571–593
    Data Type: article
    DOI 連結: https://doi.org/10.3868/s020-004-015-0031-4
    DOI: 10.3868/s020-004-015-0031-4
    Appears in Collections:[歷史學系] 期刊論文

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