英文摘要 |
This paper looks at the Tunio Ditch(Tuniu Ditch), constructed by the Ching(Qing) government in 1761 to delimit the boundary between the Han and the indigenous people, as a way of examining the continual boundary changes within Taiwan’s Ne San(Nei Shan)frontier history, and how they coincided with shifts in how the Ching viewed its own domain and other internal and external factors. At the same time, the paper also examines the expansion of Ching territory as a way of understanding the interactions between Han pioneers and other tribes outside of Ching territory, and further analyzes the relationships between the Hakka and other ethnic groups in Northern Taiwan. The Hakka have been a dominant ethnic group in Taoyen (Taoyuan), Sinchu (Hsinchu) and Miaoli counties in Northern Taiwan and have played an important role in its NeSanfrontier history as a result, not only directing frontier development and changing the population composition but also influencing relations between all ethnic groups. Hence the Taoyen-Sinchu-Miaoli region, which has been characterized by a high level of interaction between ethnic groups, was chosen as the scope of the paper, despite its late development by the Han. |