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The museum was officially opened in June 1994 and displays various types of artefacts from different indigenous tribes in Taiwan. The Formosan Aborigines live mainly in the mountainous regions of eastern and southern Taiwan and have historically spoken a variety of Austronesian languages. Both permanent and rotating exhibitions are a part of ...
The Aboriginal Village Park is the largest outdoor museum in Taiwan. It is composed of nine villages on the hillside above Amusement Isle, each representing a different aboriginal tribal community. The buildings were reconstructed based on fieldwork and blueprints drawn up by anthropologists in the 1930s and 40s. [4]
The Taiwan Indigenous Peoples Cultural Park (traditional Chinese: 台灣原住民文化園區; simplified Chinese: 台湾原住民文化园区; pinyin: Táiwān Yuán Zhùmín Wénhuà Yuánqū) is a cultural park about Taiwanese aborigines in Beiye Village, Majia Township, Pingtung County, Taiwan.
National Taiwan Museum in Taipei, Taiwan's oldest museum, built in 1908 This is a list of museums in Taiwan , including cultural centers and arts centres . Kinmen County
Taiwanese indigenous peoples, also known as Formosans, Native Taiwanese or Austronesian Taiwanese, [3] [4] and formerly as Taiwanese aborigines, Takasago people or Gaoshan people, [5] are the indigenous peoples of Taiwan, with the nationally recognized subgroups numbering about 600,303 or 3% of the island's population.
The museum displays the history, customs, culture, rituals, religious faith and festivals of the Atayal aboriginal tribe. [3] The ground floor displays artifacts regarding origins, migration and natural ecology of Wulai, the middle floor displays face tattoo culture and the top floor displays the daily life and traditional crafts.
Taiwan's indigenous art finds expression in various forms including weaving, pottery, carving, music, etc. The Lan Yang Museum and the Taitung Taiwan History Pre-Cultural Museum offer insights into these expressions, with specific tribes, like the Paiwan and Rukai, standing out for their embroidery.
The building was subsequently taken over by the museum founder and the Taiwan Folk Art and Antique House was established there, dedicated to preserving folk relics and aboriginal art from earlier times. [citation needed] The name was later changed to the current name Beitou Museum.