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'''{{TE|Tvafkao}}''' (Tvar+[[kao]]; [[wikt:打狗|打狗]]; Takao, an early name of {{w|Kaohsiung}})
'''{{x|Tvafkao}}''' (打狗; Takao, the previous name of {{w|Kaohsiung}})


==Notes==
==Notes==
''Tvafkao'' (打狗; "to beat a dog") was one of the earliest names of Kaohsiung ([[wikt:高雄|高雄]] [[Køhioong]]), formerly called "Takao".
''Tvafkao'' (打狗; ''lit.'' "to beat a dog") was one of the earliest names of Kaohsiung ([[wikt:高雄|高雄]] [[Køhioong]]), formerly called "Takao".


Founded near the end of the Ming Dynasty ([[Bengtiaau]]) in the 17th century, the village was known as ''Tvafkao'' in the Hoklo language ([[Høxlør-oe]]) spoken by most of the early immigrants. The name originates from the [[Makatao]] language of the local aboriginal tribe and translates as "bamboo forest".
Founded near the end of the Ming Dynasty ([[Bengtiaau]]) in the 17th century, the village was known as ''Tvafkao'' in the Hoklo language ([[Høxlør-oe]]) spoken by most of the early immigrants. The name originates from the [[Makatao]] language of the local aboriginal tribe and translates as "bamboo forest".

Revision as of 18:31, 15 June 2015

Tvafkao (打狗; Takao, the previous name of Kaohsiung)

Notes

Tvafkao (打狗; lit. "to beat a dog") was one of the earliest names of Kaohsiung (高雄 Køhioong), formerly called "Takao".

Founded near the end of the Ming Dynasty (Bengtiaau) in the 17th century, the village was known as Tvafkao in the Hoklo language (Høxlør-oe) spoken by most of the early immigrants. The name originates from the Makatao language of the local aboriginal tribe and translates as "bamboo forest".

In 1895, Taiwan was ceded to Japan as part of the Treaty of Shimonoseki. It was during this period that the city’s name was changed from 打狗 (Tvafkao) to 高雄 (Takao たかお Taka-o, Japanese kanji meaning "High Hero"). After control of Taiwan was handed to the Republic of China in 1945, the official romanization of the city name came to be “Kaohsiung”, based on the Wade-Giles romanization of the Standard Mandarin reading of the kanji name.

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