Online Encyclopedia

QUELPART (CHAT-Ju)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 741 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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QUELPART (CHAT-Ju)  , an island to the south of Korea, used as a Korean penal settlement . In
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measures 40 M. from E. to W. and 17 from N. to S . It rises gradually from the seaboard, is heavily wooded and is cleared for cultivation to a height of 2000 ft . There are several crateriform hills, and Hall
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San (Mount Auckland) has an altitude of 6558 ft . The island is entirely volcanic, and the
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soil is finely disintegrated
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lava . Broken black lava forms the
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beach, and blocks of it are the universal
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building material . There is no good drinking
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water . The
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flora and
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fauna are scarcely investigated . Pines of three
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species, junipers, larches, oaks, maples, willows and the Thuja Orientalis have been identified . The known fauna comprise boars, bears, deer, swans, geese, pheasants and quail . The roads are scarcely passable bridle tracks . Quelpart was introduced to
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European
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notice by the Dutchman, Hendrik Hamill, who was shipwrecked there in 1653 .

The estimated

population is roo,000, Korean by
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race, language and costume . There are about ninety villages . The valleys and slopes arc carefully cultivated in fields divided by stone walls, and produce beans, peas, sweet potatoes, "
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Russian
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turnip
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radish," barley, a little rice and millet, the last being the
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staple article of
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diet . Nuts, oranges, limes and plums are grown . Small but strong ponies are bred for export, and small cattle and pigs for home use . Apart from agriculture, the
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industries consist in the manufacture of
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fine
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bamboo hats and mats, and wooden combs for export and
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local use . For fishing the islanders use double-decked raft boats, similar to those of
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southern Formosa . Their lucrative pearl
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fisheries have been practically monopolized by the
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Japanese, who use proper diving apparatus . A valuable product is a species of clam, the shell of which furnishes a specially iridescent mothero'-pearl, which the natives barter with the Japanese for
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inlaying lacquer . European goods are not imported, but Japanese articles find ready barter . There are no markets, and only a few poor shops . Chu-sung, the capital and seat of government, a few miles from
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Port Pelto, has a black lava wall 25 ft. high, with three gates and towers; an imposing audience-hall in Chinese style;and a
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great bell tower, with a fine
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bronze bell, sounded to drive off " evil dragons." Its population is estimated at 16,000 .

The

governor has a hereditary army for coercive purposes . The
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uniform is a
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complete suit of
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mail, with a helmet, from which leather curtains fall over the shoulders . The weapons are equally antique . There are no good harbours, and the only anchorage for large vessels is Tai-chung, or Yung-su, at the east end, with 9 to 13 fathoms of water . Pelto has ancient breakwaters for the
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protection of small boats, erected, as many believe, by the Mongol conqueror, Kublai Khan, who in 1273 built on Quelpart one
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hundred
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ships for the invasion of
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japan .

End of Article: QUELPART (CHAT-Ju)
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