Small Sea Travel Diaries

{{Short description|1697 book by Yu Yung-ho}}

Small Sea Travel Diaries (Chinese: 裨海紀遊), also known as Sulfur Mining Diaries (採硫日記), was written by Yu Yonghe, an official of the Qing Dynasty. The book describes the landscapes and local customs of Taiwan in the 17th century.

In 1696, there was a need for sulfur in Fuzhou, Fujian for the production of gunpowder. However, there was no sulfur in Fuchou, so Yu Yonghe volunteered to go to Taiwan. He arrived in Tainan on February 25, 1697, and stayed there for over two months, buying tools for sulfur mining and refining. Ignoring the advice of his friends, he personally led a team north by land on April 7 and arrived at Peit’ou (北投), a sulfur production area, on April 27.{{Cite book |last=Yang |first=Yun-pin |title=臺灣史上的人物 |publisher=Chengwen Publishing |year=1981 |edition=1st |trans-title=Historical Figures in Taiwanese History}} In the book, he recorded the scenes during the sea voyage from China to Taiwan, the peculiar journey across the Black Water Ditch (Taiwan Strait), and the local customs in Taiwan. Although Yu traveled in a hurry, he still recorded many Indigenous tribes in Taiwan at the end of the 17th century.{{Cite journal |last=Sung |first=Tse-lai |year=2011 |title=評郁永河的《裨海紀遊》──並論臺灣文學史上的傳奇時 |trans-title=Review of Yu Yung-ho's 'Small Sea Travelogue' and Discussion on Legendary Moments in Taiwanese Literary History |journal=Newsletter of Taiwan Studies |issue=1 |pages=108–128}}

Historian Yang He-chih (楊龢之) believes that Small Sea Travel Diaries provides modern people with an imagination of the world in 1697, when most of the land was still untouched by agricultural society, except for the areas near Tainan.{{Cite book |last=Yang |first=He-chih |title=遇見三百年前的臺灣:裨海紀遊 |publisher=Eurasian Press |year=2004 |edition=1st |trans-title=Encountering Taiwan from 300 Years Ago: 'Small Sea Travelogue'}}

Huang Wen-te (黃文德), an editor of the National Central Library, believes that Yu Yung-ho's observations on Taiwan's nature, culture, history, and the ethical thinking of intellectuals make Small Sea Travel Diaries a unique work. The book was different from the works of traditional Chinese literati, who blindly despised the Indigenous people or treated the tribes and their unique customs, which were different from Han culture, as subjects of "curious hunting”. Instead, the book served as a confession of the Han people's misunderstanding of the aborigines, which gave the book itself a special status.{{Cite journal |last=Huang |first=Wen-te |year=2011 |title=郁永河《裨海紀遊》 ——從臺灣自然人文的探奇到認同的調適 |trans-title=Yu Yung-ho's 'Small Sea Travelogue': From the Exploration of Taiwan's Nature and Culture to the Adjustment of Identity |journal=New Books: Recent Publications in Taiwan, ROC |issue=152 |pages=53–56}}

An English translation by Macabe Keliher (2004) is published by SMC Publishing in Taipei.

References