The Qauqaut (Chinese: 猴猴族; pinyin: Hóuhóuzú) were a Taiwanese Indigenous people who lived primarily in the town of Su-ao in Yilan County. They spoke the Basay language, which is a Kavalanic language, an Austronesian language family of Taiwan. According to Japanese anthropologist Inō Kanori, the Qauqaut people had been assimilated by the Kavalan people by early 20th century. The Qauqaut people are not recognised by the government of Taiwan.[1]

Qauqaut people live in northeastern Taiwan, within the Kavalan people area.

According to oral tradition from various Atayal villages, the Qauqaut originally settled in the middle portion of the Takiri River (Wade–Giles: Liwuhsi). In the mid-1700s, following pressure from Atayals, they moved to the east coast down the Takiri. Later, some moved north to Langsu in Nan'ao County.[2]

Early modern Chinese documents on the Kavalan territories reported that the Qauqaut were linguistically and culturally distinct from the other Formosan ethnic groups and that they did not intermarry with the other communities.[3]

Taiwanese linguist Paul Jen-kuei Li hypothesised that, in about 200 BCE, the Qauqaut migrated from Southeast Asia to the Marshall Islands and the Caroline Islands and in around 1000 AD arrived on the east coast of Taiwan, based on his linguistic comparison with the nearby Taroko (Seediq) language of Taiwan, which he said varies greatly from the Qauqaut.[4] This contrasts with the rest of the Taiwanese aborigines, who are said to have arrived on the island much earlier.[5]

The Qauqaut bury the dead in a sitting position, like those of neighbouring villages in southern Kavalan territory.[6]

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References

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  1. ^ Miller, Bruce Granville (2003). Invisible Indigenes: The Politics of Nonrecognition. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 189. ISBN 0-8032-3232-2.
  2. ^ Li, Paul Jen-kuei (2001). "The Dispersal of the Formosan Aborigines in Taiwan" (PDF). Language and Linguistics / Yǔyán jì yǔyánxué. 2 (1): 276. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-08. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  3. ^ Li 2004, p. 967.
  4. ^ Dodd, John 約翰・陶德 (2007). Pào chá zǒu xī zǐ fǎn: Qīng fǎ zhànzhēng Táiwān wài jì 泡茶走西仔反: 清法戰爭台灣外記 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Translated by Chen, Zhengsan 陳政三. Taibei Shi: Taiwan wunan tushu chuban gufen youxian gongsi. p. 83. ISBN 9789866764158.
  5. ^ Paz, Victor, ed. (2004). Southeast Asian Archaeology: Wilhelm G. Solheim II Festschrift. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press. p. 58. ISBN 9789715424516.
  6. ^ Mabuchi, Toichi (1956). "Some Oral Traditions Relating to Urn-Burial in Formosa". Proceedings of the Fourth Far-Eastern Prehistory and the Anthropology Division of the Eighth Pacific Science Congresses Combined: Quezon City and Manila: November 16–28, 1953. Quezon City: National Research Council of the Philippines. Part I, fasc. 2, sect. 1, pp. 319–328.

Works cited

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