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Ushinosuke Mori (森丑之助, January 16, 1877–July 4, 1926),[1] who often published articles under pen names Mori Heiushi (森丙牛) and Mori (森), was a Japanese naturalist born in Gojo Muromachi (五條室町), Kyoto. A drop out of Nagasaki Commercial School (長崎商業學校), he went to Taiwan as an army interpreter and began to conduct research, until he ended up missing on board a steamship that was on Inner Taiwan route in 1926. The scope of his research not only included anthropological investigations on Taiwan aborigines, folklore objects, and archaeology, he was also well involved in collection and research of plants, making him a Taiwan naturalist during the early Japanese occupation period. Due to his fervent love and contributions to Taiwan aboriginal studies, he was praised as the “Leading researcher of Taiwan aborigines (臺灣蕃界調查第一人).” The specimens he collected were mostly preserved in the National Taiwan Museum.
Ushinosuke Mori | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | July 4, 1926 | (aged 49)
Occupation(s) | Anthropologist, folklorist |
Life
editMori Ushinosuke studied at the Nagasaki Commercial School (長崎商業学校, now Nagasaki City Nagasaki Commercial High School 長崎市立長崎商業高等学校) at a young age. He dropped out and ran away from home when he was 16, and began a wandering life.
In May 1895, he went to Taiwan as an army interpreter to conduct field study on Taiwan aborigines; he traveled all around the Taiwan Island and visited local tribes, collecting a copious amount of data in fields of anthropology, history, folklore, archaeology, botany, and geography in the process and compiled books from the data. He gained titles such as “Taiwan Aboriginal Know-it-all (台灣蕃通)” and “Grand Chief of Taiwan Aboriginal Tribes (台灣蕃社總頭目).”
In 1900, when Mori Ushinosuke conducted an anthropological survey with Torii Ryūzō (鳥居龍藏), he had the sudden impulse to hike the Niitakayama (新高山, now Yu shan 玉山). After enduring two days of food shortage crisis, his party crossed the Tataka Saddle (塔塔加鞍部), passed the Front Peak (前峰) and West Peak (西峰), and finally reached the summit of the Main Peak (主峰).[2]
On May 17, 1915, after the Bunun chief Lahu Ali (拉荷·阿雷) initiated the Dafun Incident (大分事件), Mori Ushinosuke advocated for a non-suppressive approach on administering aboriginal affairs and the bestowment of autonomy to aborigines.[3]
In July 1925, he boarded the steamship Kasadomaru (笠戶丸), which was on the Inner Taiwan route. While en route, he disappeared on June 4, and the authorities ruled that he committed suicide by jumping into the sea.
Contribution and Appraisal
editMori made significant contributions to the anthropology of Taiwan and research on Indigenous peoples. In his article “On the Investigation of Taiwan’s Aboriginal Tribes,” he outlined six main areas of his field investigation:[4]
- Physical Anthropometric Survey: Utilizing physical anthropometric charts and portrait photography to understand different Indigenous groups. Mori’s measurement charts were provided by Shōgorō Tsuboi (坪井正五郎), a professor at Tokyo Imperial University and one of the founders of the Anthropological Society of Tokyo. Tsuboi had studied in England between 1889 and 1892 and was also the mentor of Ryūzō Torii (鳥居龍藏).
- Exploration of Archaeological Remains: Conducting excavation records of prehistoric sites belonging to stone age and being the first to photograph Taiwan’s megalithic culture. In his 1911 article “On the Stone Age Sites in Taiwan” (Parts 1-3) published in the Taiwan Times(Japanese colonial period), Mori documented 169 Stone Age sites, laying a foundation for archaeological anthropology in Taiwan.
- Collection and Comparative Study of Myths and Legends: Published in various journals and periodicals such as the Journal of the Anthropological Society of Tokyo, the Taiwan Times, and the Oriental Times, as well as in volumes one and two of his monograph Taiwan Aboriginal Chronicles.
- Linguistic Collection: Published works include Paiwan Language Collection, Amis Language Collection, and Bunun Language Collection, among others.
- Collection of Ancient and Folk Songs.
- Collection and Study of Ethnographic Data: Mori’s collected and analyzed data covered topics such as the social organization of different tribes, burial practices, punishments, economic activities, and cultural observations between Indigenous tribes and the Japanese government and trading companies. These findings scattered across various articles and periodicals.
Additionally, between 1900 and 1901, Mori studied botany and specimen collection methods under Konishi Narishige. From 1906 to 1909, while serving as a commissioned researcher in the Useful Plants Survey Division, he assisted in the extensive collection of alpine plant specimens. At least 20 plant species bear the Chinese name “森氏(Mori)” or the Latin term “morii,” such as Cyclobalanopsis morii (Mori Oak), Angelica morii Hayata (Mori Angelica), Dendranthema morii (Mori Chrysanthemum), Cirsium morii (Mori Thistle), Rubus morii Hayata (Coarse-haired Raspberry), and Polystichun morii Hayata (Yushan Shield Fern).[5]
Mori also contributed to significant discoveries in the study of Taiwan’s geography. In November 1908, with the assistance of Indigenous guides from eight different tribes, an expedition team was formed, including Noro Nagayoshi(野呂寧), Chief Engineer of the Office of Aboriginal Affairs; Shida Umetaro(志田梅太郎), a survey contractor; and Mori Ushinosuke, an Aboriginal Affairs contractor. This “Southern Central Mountain Range Expedition Survey Team” conducted explorations and mapping to determine the location of the Niitaka Mountain Range. They ultimately confirmed that the Niitaka (Yushan) Mountain Range was not a subsidiary branch of the Central Mountain Range, but rather an independent mountain range.[6]
In terms of recognition, Miyamoto Nobuhito (宮本延人) praised him as the “Leading researcher of early Taiwanese aboriginal studies;” Torii Ryūzō praised him as the “Leading researcher of Taiwan aborigines.”
Satō Haruo (佐籐春夫)--Colonial Journey (殖民地之旅) 〈Wusha (霧社)〉(February 6, 1925, stick memorization (生記)) Thirteen: “Later, after about three days, I arrived in Taihoku. I became a guest in the house of the author of Taiwan Aboriginal Chronicles (台灣蕃族誌). During this journey, I received most of the help from this person. He also set the schedule of this journey for me personally. Moreover, it was also this Mr. M (Mori Ushinosuke) who introduced me to the Chief of Civil Affairs Mr. S. He is a studious incognito, but is also an adventurous in-field surveyor. It is said that there is no one else who had conducted deeper surveying on the aboriginal mountains in this island than he did, and the most amazing and respectful point was that he was never armed when he conducted those surveys…”
Work collections and publications
editPublished works:
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1909. The Collection of Paiwan Aboriginal Language.(ぱいわん蕃語集) Published by The Aboriginal Affairs Section of the Police Department, Civil Affairs Bureau, Taiwan Sōtokufu. Archived in National Taiwan University Library, Inō collection(伊能文庫).
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1909. The Collection of Amis Aboriginal Language.(阿眉蕃語集:アミス族) Published by The Aboriginal Affairs Section of the Police Department, Civil Affairs Bureau, Taiwan Sōtokufu. Archived in National Taiwan University Library, Inō collection.
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1910. The Collection of Bunun Aboriginal Language.(ぶぬん蕃語集) Published by The Aboriginal Affairs Office, Taiwan Sōtokufu. Archived in National Taiwan University Library, Inō collection.
- U. Mori & S. Nakai. 1913. Landscape of Taiwan Mountains.(臺灣山岳景觀) Taihoku: Shinkodo. Online archived in National Museum of Taiwan History.
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1915. Atlas of Taiwan Aboriginals, volume I.(臺灣蕃族圖譜I) Taihoku: Temporary Taiwan Old Customs Investigation Committee. Online archived in National Museum of Taiwan History.
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1915. Atlas of Taiwan Aboriginals, volume II.(臺灣蕃族圖譜II) Taihoku: Temporary Taiwan Old Customs Investigation Committee. Online archived in National Museum of Taiwan History.
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1917. Taiwan Aboriginal Chronicles.(臺灣蕃族志) Taihoku: Temporary Taiwan Old Customs Investigation Committee. Archived in National Taiwan University Library, Inō collection.
Unpublished works:
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1910. Adventure Report on Crossing the Central Mountain Range between Jiji and Bazaizhuang. (集集.拔仔庄間中央山脈橫斷探險報文)
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1910. The Collection of Taroko Aboriginal Language.(大魯閣蕃語集)
- Ushinosuke, Mori. 1910. The Collection of Taroko Aboriginal Language in Puli Society.(埔里社方面トルコ蕃語集)
Published articles (newspaper, journals, magazines):
- Journal of the Anthropological Society of Tokyo (24 articles)
- Taiwan Nichinichi Shinpō (18 articles)
- Taiwan Times (Japanese colonial period, 34 articles)
- Industrial Taiwan (7 articles)
- Oriental Review (6 articles)
- Taiwan Agricultural Report (4 articles)
- Bulletin of the Taiwan Natural History Society (3 articles)
- The Aboriginal Territories (3 articles)
- Taiwan Education (2 articles)
- Patriotic Women (1 article)
- Japanese Encyclopedia (1 article)
- Outline of Aboriginal Policy (1 article)
- New Taiwan (1 article)
Related studies
edit- Yang, Nanjun; Miyaoka, Maoko; Miyazaki, Seiko; etc., The Phantom Anthropologist: Mori Ushinosuke: A Lifetime Dedicated to Studying Taiwan Aborigines (《幻の人類學者:森丑之助:台灣原住民の研究に捧げた生涯》), Tokyo: Fukyosha, 2005.
- National Taiwan Museum’s permanent exhibition Discovering Taiwan: Revisit the Age of Taiwan’s Natural History and Naturalists (〈發現臺灣:重訪臺灣博物學與博物學家的年代〉)and its dedicated exhibition book:[7] The exhibition brought up discussions on early 20th century, a period where the Government-General of Taiwan Library was first established and called the “Age of Discovery” as the study of Taiwan’s natural history and naturalists flourished. The discussions were meant to reexamine the discoveries, discoverers, and the tradition of discovery of natural history that served as the foundation of National Taiwan Museum’s collection and shaped the museum’s style. Mori Ushinosuke’s story and specimen collection were displayed in the first unit “Way to Discovery,” outlining how naturalists of that generation emphasized personal on-site surveying-which referred to the so-called “knowledge is gained alongside people’s journeys” investigation tradition.[8]
Related entries
editReferences
edit- ^ "The Slow Ship Back to Taiwan: Mori Ushinosuke, a Man Who Cared About Taiwanese Aborigines". culture.teldap.tw. Retrieved 2024-05-16.
- ^ Tierney, Robert Thomas (2010-05-20). Tropics of Savagery: The Culture of Japanese Empire in Comparative Frame. University of California Press. pp. 85–86. ISBN 9780520265783.
- ^ 笠原政治 (2002). 文化人類学の先駆者・森丑之助の研究. 科学研究費補助金基盤研究(C)(2)研究成果報告書, 課題番号12610307. 橫濱國立大學人間教育科学部. hdl:10131/6418.
- ^ 丙牛生 (28 February 1912). "台灣蕃族の調查に就いて". Taiwan Times(Japanese colonial period). 臺灣時報. (30).
- ^ 森丑之助/原著, 楊南郡/譯註 (2021). 生蕃行腳:森丑之助的台灣探險(台灣調查時代5:典藏紀念版) [Traveling to Aboriginal lands: Mori Ushinosuke’s Taiwan Adventure] (in Chinese). 遠流. pp. 57–62. ISBN 9789573292524.
- ^ Numai, Tetsutarō (沼井鐵太郎) (1997). Pioneering the Age of Adventure: A Brief History of Mountaineering in Taiwan (開拓探險時代: 臺灣登山小史). 晨星.
- ^ 李, 子寧; 吳, 佰祿; 歐陽, 盛芝; 方, 建能; 許, 毓純; 李, 金賢; 陳, 英豪 (2017). 發現臺灣:重訪臺灣博物學與博物學家的年代. 台北市: 國立臺灣博物館. ISBN 9789860538304.
- ^ 國立臺灣博物館 (2023-03-29). "國立臺灣博物館官網".
External links
edit- Digital Museum of Taiwan Indigenous Peoples
- 呉蜜察 監修 遠流台湾館 編著 (2000), 台灣史小事典, 円流出版公司, p. 138, ISBN 957-32-4161-7