If the acting doesn't get an Oscar, I don't know what will.
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
Maybe a BAFTA!
@chrischiu12266Ай бұрын
支持歷史短劇系列!謝謝❤
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
謝謝
@傅美芳-r1vАй бұрын
很好看,我很喜歡,辛苦你了!花了三年的時間去爬梳這段台灣重要確又少被人知的曆史❤
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
謝謝
@YishushuАй бұрын
Thank you!
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
You're welcome! And thanks!
@u851326Ай бұрын
very interesting!! ^_^
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it!
@edmenpanАй бұрын
謝謝!
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
謝謝您 🙏
@bryonchen2758Ай бұрын
Great to know more about Taiwan's history, primarily related to Britain in trade.
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it!
@paiwanhanАй бұрын
Amazing episode. Qing promised to give up their monopoly on camphor in their resolutions, but I guess the 道台 had his own thoughts on the matters. I can feel the British's frustration in dealing with the Manchurian empire.
@AsiaHikelopediaАй бұрын
Thanks. I think the British were equally the villains in this tale! They wanted the camphor and used any means at their disposal to get it!
@paiwanhanАй бұрын
@AsiaHikelopedia Well, Wu Da-ting, the Daotai at the time, probably already hate Pickering's guts after the Rover incident. Both Qing and the British were outsiders looking to exploit Taiwan's natural resources. Camphor trees grow in the hill, which were firmly in indigenous territories. In Hsinchu, Qing government funded Hakka and Holo immigrants to form the 金廣福 Jinguangfu pioneering company to drive out indigenous peoples from Beipu to get their hands on camphor trees by force. If Pickering were negotiating with the Indigenous leaders, and have them hire workers to extract camphor, then honestly the Qing government was the one acting like colonials, and Pickering was just doing business.