Sunday, 26 December 2021

Guting (古亭), Daan District, Taipei CIty.

Guting literally means “old pavilion”, but apparently was originally written with the similar sounding characters 鼓亭 that meant “drum pavilion”.

According to a stele at the local Changqing Temple (長慶廟), which is supported by Abe Akiyoshi (安倍 明義) in his 1938 publication 台灣地名研究 (Studies on Taiwan's Place Names), a tall drum tower was erected by local immigrants from Fujian Province's Quanzhou Prefecture to keep watch for “marauding Aboriginal headhunters,” whose presence would then be announced by beating a drum to assemble local people.




Text and photos copyright Jiyue Publications, 2021, 2022

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