Black Dwarf Cave

Coordinates: 22°19′48.7″N 120°21′20.6″E / 22.330194°N 120.355722°E / 22.330194; 120.355722
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Black Dwarf Cave
烏鬼洞
Map showing the location of Black Dwarf Cave
Map showing the location of Black Dwarf Cave
LocationLiuqiu, Pingtung County, Taiwan
Coordinates22°19′48.7″N 120°21′20.6″E / 22.330194°N 120.355722°E / 22.330194; 120.355722
Geologysolutional cave
Black Dwarf Cave
Hanyu Pinyin
Wūguǐdòng Fēngjǐng Qū
Wade–GilesWu-kuei Tong Fêng-ching Ch‘ü

Black Dwarf Cave[1] is a cave and tourist attraction in Tianfu Village on Liuqiu Island, off Pingtung County, Taiwan. Its scenic area includes paths around the surrounding coasts and its ticket includes access to some other nearby attractions such as Mountain Pig Ditch and Beauty Cave.

Name

The Chinese name of the cave does not involve dwarves but devils,[2] ghosts,[3] or spirits.[4] Carved on the entrance of the cave is this story:

It was in 1661 (the 15th year of the Yong Li

Ming Dynasty) national hero Koxinga (Cheng Chen-kung, 鄭成功), knighted as Yen Ping King, drove the Dutch and restored Taiwan and the Pescadores (Penghu). During the Dutch escape, some Negroes were separated from their unit and arrived at this island. They lived in this cave. Some years later, a British boat with soldiers landed at the place northeast of the cave. As they were enjoying the scenery, those Negroes robbed their food and other things, burned the boat and killed all the British. It was discovered by the British warship that they landed this island and sought the murderers while the Negroes hid in the cave. In spite of many threats, they refused to surrender. Finally, the British burned the cave with oil. Then, all the Negroes died there in the cave. Later it was named as the Black Spirit Cave, which means the cave in which the foreign Negroes had lived before.[4]

The township website reports that black slaves "abandoned the Dutch" and "were found" in the cave, but doesn't credit their discovery to aggrieved British.[1] Instead, it says that the local Taiwanese and Filipino fishermen and traders often anchored in Geban Bay and the slaves became pirates who would cut holes in the bottoms of the boats by night and then raid their wrecks.[1] At some point, crews who had experienced this before investigated the area, discovered the cave, and massacred the pirates with a large fire.[1]

Both legends were later fabrications. The actual "Negroes" were the members of the local

Liuqiu Island Massacre.[4][5][6][3]

History

At some point after the

Qing Dynasty, the roof of the cave's entrance and main cavern collapsed. It wasn't reopened until 1975, when the township government turned it into a tourist attraction.[2]

Geology

The cave is a solutional cave.[7] The main entrance of the cave has collapsed leaving only one narrow passage,[7] which is long, narrow, dark, and very damp.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Black Dwarf Cave", Official website, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c "Black Dwarf Cave", Xtreme Taiwan, 2016.
  3. ^ a b Gibson, Matt, "Wander the Walkway at Black Dwarf Cave", Afar, San Francisco: AFAR Media.
  4. ^ a b c Momphard, David (18 July 2004), "Of Grottoes and Graves", Taipei Times.
  5. .
  6. ^ Gibson, Matt (2014), "Xiao Liuchiu: Taiwan's Little Secret", XpatMatt
  7. ^ a b "Black Dwarf Cave". roundTAIWANround. Retrieved 15 April 2017.