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Taipei You Might Not Know -Superimposition, Russian Bakery, and Derogatory Dihua

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 1. Taipei a Superimposition of a China Map At Xinsheng South, Heping East Intersection means I am in Zhejiang Province, with Jinhua (street), its capital city in 7 o'clock position.  When I say to people "Wow - Taipei is actually a China map!" Almost all of them, including foreigners say " why are you surprised?   I always know that, there are many street names changed to China's after 1949 ".  I say  "NO. I mean Taipei IS a China Map!"  - still many don't get it.   I have therefore, at opportunities, take peoples up this overhead bridge in my neighborhood, and show them EXACTLY what I mean. They all went a bit shocked hearing me out - including Taipei locals. It is complicated to explain, I will just brief it here. The best way, is still, show and explain  from the bridge.  I first noticed this 'dictator manipulative mentality' some 10 years ago when I was walking along Dihua street, I suddenly thought  "this is strange, all thes

In 1911 - Kobe Beef, Ice Cream (for Taiwan) and Revolution (for Republic Of China)

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  Banquet serving Kobe beef at  Tainan Union Hall  Source HERE The Chinese Revolution of 1911 – The Founding of the Republic of China Have you ever wondered in 1911 what it was like for Taiwan and for Republic of China? Reported on  the  Taiwan Daily News   1911 October-  Tainan Union Hall presented in a banquet Kobe beef dishes, sukiyaki, Nagasaki castella , w affle, millet and glutinous rice mochi, y ōkan. Source  台灣回憶探險團 . アイスクリーム Ice Cream  ( 圖/李火増攝影、 蒼壁出版社提供)seen on    臺灣古寫真上色 FB Gerald Warner image seen on  臺灣古寫真上色 FB Reported on  Taiwan Daily News  1911 (June) - Taipei's Dadaocheng was flooded with ice and ice cream businesses, common ice cream flavours include water melon and tea. Source   臺灣古寫真上色 FB. For the Dadaoheng ICE phenomenon we have done an article HERE. "The island’s first ice-making plant may have been the one set up in 1896 in Dadaocheng in Taipei by tea merchant Lee Chun-sheng (李春生) and his British business partners. In the 1910s, the  Taiwan Daily News  

Valentine's Gift and 19th-Century Taiwanese Head-Hunters (and a 160-year-old-letter)

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I n searching a map of Taiwan that matches the story timeline (1864) I settled on this one taken in Tainan in February. For the reason that  Tamsui Ting ended in 1876. "The ritual, highlighted as part of the Archive Awareness Campaign, is revealed in a letter to Kew written in 1864 by Kew gardener Richard Oldham, who explains why he cannot explore the Taiwanese mountains near Tamsui.  " While researching Tea-thief Robert Fortune who spent only a day in Tamsui in 1854 (a day of enough impact to write about in my forthcoming co-authored "  臺灣茶的故事   The Story of Taiwan Tea") I came across this bizarre article from the UK about Richard Oldham in Tamsui in 1864 linking western valentine's gift and 19th-century head-hunters in north Taiwan. I forwarded to my co-author Dr Cheng Hong-Ming - he responded  "I am not sure by 1864, there were still headhunters near Tamsui". I see his point and not sure either. 1903 Davison's report of northern fierce and activ