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{{GSW|Giogsafn|玉山|Yu Shan}}, '''{{x|Gegsvoaf}}''', si [[Taioaan]] tiongpo [[Giogsafn svoameh]] ee cidee niafthaau, ti [[Køhioong-chi]], [[Lamtaau-koan]] kab [[Kagi-koan]] ee kaukaix, sieciuuii sied u [[Giogsafn Kokkaf Konghngg]]. Giogsafn ee koanto tuix haypengbin sngrkhie u 3952 kongchiøq, si Taioaan siong-koaan ee [[svoaf]]. | |||
== Miaa == | == Miaa == | ||
Ti [[Jidpurn]] thofngti Taioaan ee sizun, Giogsafn | Ti [[Jidpurn]] thofngti Taioaan ee sizun, Giogsafn høxzøx {{GS|Syn-køf-safn|新高山|''Niitakayama''}}. Khahzar Giogsafn ti [[Enggie]] ma hø "Mt. Morrison" si uixtiøh cidee American captain who sighted it (mxsi uixtiøh bøeq kieliam thoankaux-su [[Robert Morrison]]). | ||
== Jade Mountain == | == Jade Mountain == | ||
* 1857: W. Morrison, captain of the American freighter ''Alexander'', sighted this mountain while departing from Anping Harbor, in what is now Anping, Tainan ([[Anpeeng Khw]]). His log was the first western mention of the mountain. | |||
* 1900: two Japanese anthropologists became the first people recorded to summit the mountain. They gave the mountain the name Niitakayama (新高山) or Mount Niitaka, literally the "New High Mountain". Surveyed 176 m higher than Mount Fuji. | |||
* 1941: Imperial Japanese Navy used the mountain's name in the signal to attack Pearl Harbor. | |||
[[Category:Taioaan tøexlie]] | |||
[[Category:Taioaan | |||
[[Category:Svoaf]] | [[Category:Svoaf]] | ||
[[Category:Taioaan ee svoaf]] | [[Category:Taioaan ee svoaf]] |
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