Paragraph: (History-Anthropology/oanc-HistoryHongKong-1.txt)
Sent 1: In the popular mind, the history of Hong Kong, long the entryway to China for Westerners, begins in 1841 with the British occupation of the territory.
Sent 2: However, it would be wrong to dismiss the long history of the region itself.
Sent 3: Archaeologists today are working to uncover Hong Kong's past, which stretches back thousands of years.
Sent 4: You can get a glimpse into that past at Lei Cheng Uk Museum's 1,600-year-old burial vault on the mainland just north of Kowloon.
Sent 5: In 1992, when construction of the airport on Chek Lap Kok was begun, a 2,000-year-old village, Pak Mong, was discovered, complete with artifacts that indicated a sophisticated rural society.
Sent 6: An even older Stone Age site was discovered on Lamma Island in 1996.
Sent 7: While Hong Kong remained a relative backwater in early days, nearby Guangzhou (Canton) was developing into a great trading city with connections in India and the Middle East.
Sent 8: By a.d.
Sent 9: 900, the Hong Kong islands had become a lair for pirates preying on the shipping in the Pearl River Delta and causing a major headache for burgeoning Guangzhou; small bands of pirates were still operating into the early years of the 20th century.
Sent 10: In the meantime, the mainland area was being settled by incomers, the "Five Great Clans": Tang, Hau, Pang, Liu, and Man.
Sent 11: First to arrive was the Tang clan, which established a number of walled villages in the New Territories that still exist today.
Sent 12: You can visit Kat Hing Wai and Lo Wai, villages with their walls still intact.
Sent 13: Adjacent to Lo Wai is the Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall, built in the 16th century, which is still the center of clan activities.
Sent 14: The first Europeans to arrive in the Pearl River Delta were the Portuguese, who settled in Macau in 1557 and for several centuries had a monopoly on trade between Asia, Europe, and South America.
Sent 15: As Macau developed into the greatest port in the East, it also became a base for Jesuit missionaries; it was later a haven for persecuted Japanese Christians.
Sent 16: While Christianity was not a great success in China, it made local headway, evidenced today by the numerous Catholic churches in Macau's historic center.
Sent 17: Intermarriage with the local Chinese created a community of Macanese, whose culture can still be seen in Macau's architecture and cuisine.
Question: How did Guangzhou develop so rapidly, and how was that affected in the early days? (true/0)
Question: Who were the first Europeans to control the greatest port in the East? (true/1)
Question: Why did traders from Canton have problems in the Pearl River Delta? (true/2)
Question: What occurred simultaneously in 900AD? (true/3)
Question: Where the British the first Europeans to settle Pearl River Delta and Hong Kong? (true/4)
Question: The mixture of what two races is seen in the Macanese people of Macau? (true/5)
Question: Which nation was responsible for Jesuit missionaries working in Macau? (true/6)
Question: Whose missionary efforts resulted in the spread of Catholicism in Macau? (true/7)
Question: In 900 ad, present-day Canton was beset by what sort of danger? (true/8)
Question: How many years elapsed between the settlements of the Portuguese and the British arrival in Hong Kong? (false/9)
Question: The mainland clan's walled cities can be viewed at what two intact sites? (true/10)
Question: How was Macau affected by the Portuguese that settled there? (false/11)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
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