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Mysterious oriental country, China, and what happens every day.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Northeast China, the ancient tribal falconry
A
falcon
raiser
in
Da
Yulou
village
shows
his
bird
on
Jan
9, 2012.
Da
Yulou
village
,
located
by
Songhua
River
in
Northeast
China
’
s
Jilin
province
,
is
home
to
the
country
'
s
last
living
ancient
falconry
tribe
.
Da
Yulou
village
,
located
by
Songhua
River
in
Northeast
China
'
s
Jilin
province
,
is
home
to
the
country
'
s
last
living
ancient
falconry
tribe
.
Falconry
in
Jilin
province
and
Xinjiang
Uygur
autonomous
region
has
become
China
'
s
most
characteristic
intangible
cultural
heritage
.
The
village
was
the
cradle
of
civilization
during
the
Jin
Dynasty
(1115 - 1234),
and
became
a
royal
tribute
base
in
1658
during
the
Qing
Dynasty
(1644 -1911).
Since
then
the
empire
'
s
troops
settled
down
and
trained
hawks
as
a
tribute
to
the
royal
family
,
and
their
descendants
handed
down
the
falconry
technique
and
preserved
their
traditional
hunting
culture
.
Falcons
are
thought
to
be
holy
birds
by
many
hunting
civilizations
in
China
,
including
the
Manchu
ethnic
group
,
who
hunted
with
trained
falcons
.
They
called
a
perfect
falcon
Hai
Dongqing
,
meaning
"
green
falcon
flying
over
from
the
east
side
of
the
sea
."
The
falcon-training
and
traditional
hunting
cultures
have
maintained
a
presence
for
nearly
a
whole
millennium
here
.
Expert
Cao
Baoming
said
that
China
boasts
the
biggest
falconry
population
and
Da
Yulou
village
is
a
typical
falconry
area
.
More
than
70
percent
of
its
villagers
raised
and
trained
falcons
during
its
heyday
.
And
now
there
remain
more
than
50
households
raising
falcons
.
The
village
was
renamed
Falcon
Village
in
the
1980s
by
Jilin
officials
.
Falcon
raisers
show
their
birds
at
a
falconry
event
on
Jan
9.
A
falcon
hunts
down
a
pheasant
at
a
falconry
event
on
Jan
9.
The
falcon-training
and
traditional
hunting
cultures
have
maintained
a
presence
for
nearly
a
whole
millennium
.
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