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Hakka people

The Hakka (Chinese: 客家), sometimes also referred to as Hakka Han,[1][3] or Hakka Chinese,[4] or Hakkas, are a Han Chinese subgroup whose ancestral homes are chiefly in the Hakka Chinese-speaking areas of Guangdong, Fujian, Jiangxi, Guangxi, Sichuan, Hunan, Zhejiang, Hainan, and Guizhou in China, as well as in Taoyuan City, Hsinchu County, Miaoli County, Pingtung County, and Kaohsiung City in Taiwan. Unlike other Han Chinese subgroups, the Hakkas are not named after a geographical region, e.g. a province, county or city, in China. That is because their origins were of northern Chinese refugees fleeing social unrest, upheaval and invasions throughout the northern parts of China (such as Gansu and Henan) throughout history who then sought sanctuary in the south where the Cantonese-speaking provinces such as Guangdong and Guangxi are. The Chinese characters for Hakka () literally mean "guest families".[5] The word is Cantonese in origin and as the name implies, they are the guest of the Cantonese people. Over the centuries though, they have since more or less assimilated with the Cantonese-speaking population. Modern day Hakka are generally identified by both full Hakka and by different degrees of Hakka ancestry and usually speak Hakka Chinese.

"Hakka" redirects here. For other uses, see Hakka (disambiguation).

The Hakkas are thought to have originated from the central plains.[6] Genetic studies have shown that the Hakka people are largely descended from North Han Chinese.[7] In a series of migrations, the Hakkas moved and settled in their present areas in South China and from there, substantial numbers migrated overseas to various countries throughout the world.[8] As the most diasporic among the Chinese community groups, the worldwide population of Hakkas (including in mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan) is about 80 million to 120 million.[2] The Hakkas moved from Central China into Southern China at a time when the earlier Han Chinese settlers who already lived there had developed cultural identities and languages distinctive from Hakkas. The Tunbao and Chuanqing people are other Han Chinese subgroups that migrated from possibly somewhere in Central or Eastern China to Southwestern China while maintaining their ancestral traditions which differentiated them from the native Chinese people.


The Hakka people have had a significant influence on the course of modern Chinese and overseas Chinese history; in particular, they have been a source of many government and military leaders—in 1984, over half of the Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party Politburo were Hakka.[9]


The Hakka language is the most closely related to Gan and is sometimes classified as a variety of Gan, with a few northern Hakka varieties even being partially mutually intelligible with southern Gan. There are also some studies that consider Hakka people and Gan people have related genetics and shared areal features.[10] Today, Hakka is one of the official languages of Taiwan.[11] But like other official languages such as Hokkien and Formosan languages, they do not have the de facto special status of Taiwanese Mandarin.

Media[edit]

In Taiwan, there are seven Hakka Chinese radio channels. The Chinese radio station China National Radio's Sound of the Divine Land (神州之聲) has a Hakka Chinese radio break.


Taiwan's Hakka TV was the first Hakka Chinese TV channel in the world. Meizhou TV-2 was the first Hakka Chinese TV channel in China.

Foot binding[edit]

Historically, Hakka women did not bind their feet when the practice was commonplace in China.[25]

Discrimination[edit]

Imperial era[edit]

In retaliation after defeating the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, the Xiang Army killed 30,000 Hakkas every day during the height of the anti-Hakka mass-killing operation.[29]


Government officials mobilized officers and men to kill the Hakkas, regained the Guanghai villages (region of Taishan, Guangdong) which was occupied by the Hakkas and massacred Hakkas indiscriminately. The number of Hakkas killed was tens of thousands in the Dalongdong area of Guanghai alone.


In retaliation for killing three Hunanese officers, the Hunanese forces exterminated the entire Hakka population of Wukeng and Chixi during military counter-attacks on the Hakkas in the year 1888. The Xiang Army also massacred tens of thousands of other Hakkas in Guanghai.

(Chinese: 客家之歌), a 1997 30-episode Singapore television drama about four young Hakka men who migrated from China to Singapore in the 1950s and were caught in the tumultuous anti-colonial period of the country's history. The Hakka-language version of the drama was broadcast in Taiwan. The drama was nominated for the Best Drama Series awards in the Asian Television Awards and the New York Television Festival, 1998.

The Guest People

or Blue Brave: The Legend of Formosa 1895 (Chinese: 1895乙未), a 2008 Taiwan Hakka-language film about the Hakka militias fighting the Japanese during the Japanese invasion of Taiwan in 1895. The edited version for television won the Best Drama Series award in the Asian Television Awards, 2009.

1895

(Chinese: 大南迁 or 葛藤凹), a 2012 32-episode China television drama about the Hakkas' migration to Southern China during the late Tang dynasty in the 9th century.

The Great Southern Migration

(Chinese: 客家女人) or To Be or Not to Be (Chinese: 来生不做香港人), a 2014 25-episode Hong Kong television drama about the lives of two Hakka sisters separated when young, one in Hong Kong and the other in China.

Hakka Women

(Chinese: 茶金), a 2021 Taiwanese period drama about the booming tea trade in Taiwan during the 1950 and a Hakka Taiwanese tea trader family owned tea exporting company.

Gold Leaf

Hakka architecture

Hakka cuisine

Hakka hill songs

Hakka language

(Hakka opera)

Han opera

Larut War

Punti-Hakka Clan Wars

Tea-picking opera

(1969). The Hakka Chinese – Their Origin & Folk Songs. Jade Mountain Press.

Char, Tin-Yuke

Eberhard, Wolfram (1974). Studies in Hakka Folktales. Taipei: Chinese Association for Folklore.

Kiang, Clyde (July 1991). The Hakka Search for a Homeland. Allegheny Press.  9780910042611.

ISBN

Constable, Nicole, ed. (1996). Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad. University of Washington Press.  9780295984872.

ISBN

Leong, Sow-Theng (1997). Wright, Tim (ed.). Migration and Ethnicity in Chinese History: Hakkas, Pengmin and Their Neighbors. Stanford University Press.  9780804728577.

ISBN

Chung, Yoon-Ngan (2005). The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs and Nursery Rhymes. Poseidon Books.  978-1921005503.

ISBN

Leo, Jessieca (September 2015). Global Hakka: Hakka Identity in the Remaking. BRILL.  9789004300262.

ISBN