RAS-1996 — Page 97

RASHKB Journal 皇家亞洲學會香港分會學刊 All AI Reviewed

68

Table 30

Dialects Spoken in the Home (Southern District, Land Population). 1911

Enumeration district Punti Hakka Hoklo Others and unstated Total Cheung Chau (M) 1421 59 348 14.6% 621 (F) 1022 64.9% 216 13.7% 336 Total 2443 61.6% 564 14.2% Lantau (M) 2999 85.5% 466 13.3% 40 (F) 2695 84.2% 478 14.9% 29 Total 5694 Lamma (M) 168 84.9% 944 14.1% 69 (F) 489 98.8% 6 1.2% Total 657 79.5% 129 Total (M) 4588 73.7% 6229 (F) 4206 79.8% 700 13.3% 365 Total 8794 76.5% 1637 14.2% 1066 9.3% 3 11500 15.6% 40 150% 701 4.8% 826 5271

Male:Female Ratios and Emigration

The village population tables in the 1911 Census which give the male and female population of each village in the New Territories are of value, not only in giving the basic population statistics of the area, but also because they enable us to identify villages with abnormal population characteristics.

It is not easy to extrapolate from the 1911 Census figures to detailed analysis of village society, because of the problem of the under-reporting of infant children and teenage girls in the Census. The problem is made worse by the 1921 Census having no tables parallel to those giving the village-by-village population statistics in the 1911 Census. While the under-reporting of youngsters in 1911 is clear, it is not, for instance, clear if the under-reporting was universal in incidence, or more typical of wealthier, Punti, villages, or, conversely, of poorer Hakka villages. Since more young girls went under-reported than young boys, the standard ratio as reported should have been about 51.5 males, 48.5 females. In fact, in many villages, more females than males are recorded. Given the general under-reporting of young girls, this feature can only be explained as the result of the temporary emigration out of the village (to the local market town, to Hong Kong, or abroad) of young adult

Edit History

2026-05-13 08:32:51 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
68 Table 30 Dialects Spoken in the Home (Southern District, Land Population). 1911 Enumeration district Punti Hakka Hoklo Others and unstated Total Cheung Chau (M) 1421 59 348 14.6% 621 (F) 1022 64.9% 216 13.7% 336 Total 2443 61.6% 564 14.2% Lantau (M) 2999 85.5% 466 13.3% 40 (F) 2695 84.2% 478 14.9% 29 Total 5694 Lamma (M) 168 84.9% 944 14.1% 69 (F) 489 98.8% 6 1.2% Total 657 79.5% 129 Total (M) 4588 73.7% 6229 (F) 4206 79.8% 700 13.3% 365 Total 8794 76.5% 1637 14.2% 1066 9.3% 3 11500 15.6% 40 150% 701 4.8% 826 5271 Male:Female Ratios and Emigration The village population tables in the 1911 Census which give the male and female population of each village in the New Territories are of value, not only in giving the basic population statistics of the area, but also because they enable us to identify villages with abnormal population characteristics. It is not easy to extrapolate from the 1911 Census figures to detailed analysis of village society, because of the problem of the under-reporting of infant children and teenage girls in the Census. The problem is made worse by the 1921 Census having no tables parallel to those giving the village-by-village population statistics in the 1911 Census. While the under-reporting of youngsters in 1911 is clear, it is not, for instance, clear if the under-reporting was universal in incidence, or more typical of wealthier, Punti, villages, or, conversely, of poorer Hakka villages. Since more young girls went under-reported than young boys, the standard ratio as reported should have been about 51.5 males, 48.5 females. In fact, in many villages, more females than males are recorded. Given the general under-reporting of young girls, this feature can only be explained as the result of the temporary emigration out of the village (to the local market town, to Hong Kong, or abroad) of young adult
Baseline (Original)
68 Table 30 Dialects Spoken in the Home (Southern District, Land Population). 1911 Enumeration district Punti Hakka Hoklo Others and Total unstated Cheung Chau | (M) 1421 59 5% 348 14,6% 621 (F) 1022 64,9% | 216 13 7% | 336 Total 2443 61 6% 564 14.2% Lantau (M) 2999 85.5% 466 13 3% 40 (F) |2695 84 2% | 478 14/9% 29 269% 2390 21,3% 1574 957 24 1% - 3964 1 1% 3 0.1% | 3508 0.9% 3202 Total 5694 Lamma (M) | 168 84 9% 944 14 1% | 69 10% 3 00% |6710. 50 8% 123 37.2% | 40 48% 331 (F) 489 98.8% 6 12% - 495 Total 657 79 5% 129 Total 937 (M) | 4588 73 7% 113% 3 0.0% | 6229 (F) |4206_79,8% | 700 13.3% 365 6.9% Total 8794 76 5% | 1637 14 2% 1066 9.3% 3 0.0% 11500 15.6% 40 150%| 701 4.8% 826 5271 Male:Female Ratios and Emigration The village population tables in the 1911 Census which give the male and female population of each village in the New Territories are of value, not only in giving the basic population statistics of the area, but also because they enable us to identify villages with abnormal population characteristics.% It is not easy to extrapolate from the 1911 Census figures to detailed analysis of village society, because of the problem of the under-reporting of infant children and teenage girls in the Census. The problem is made worse by the 1921 Census having no tables parallel to those giving the village-by-village population statistics in the 1911 Census While the under-reporting of youngsters in 1911 is clear, it is not, for instance, clear if the under-reporting was universal in incidence, or more typical of wealthier, Punti, villages, or, conversely, of poorer Hakka villages. Since more young girls went under-reported than young boys, the standard ratio as reported should have been about 51.5 males. 48.5 females. In fact, in many villages, more females than males are recorded. Given the general under-reporting of young girls, this feature can only be explained as the result of the temporary emigration out of the village (to the local market town, to Hong Kong, or abroad) of young adult
2026-05-13 08:32:51 · Baseline
View content

68

Table 30

Dialects Spoken in the Home (Southern District, Land

Population). 1911

Enumeration

district

Punti

Hakka

Hoklo

Others and Total unstated

Cheung Chau

| (M)

1421 59 5% 348 14,6% 621 (F) 1022 64,9% | 216 13 7% | 336 Total 2443 61 6% 564 14.2% Lantau (M) 2999 85.5% 466 13 3% 40 (F) |2695 84 2% | 478 14/9% 29

269%

2390

21,3%

1574

957

24 1%

-

3964

1 1% 3 0.1% | 3508

0.9%

3202

Total 5694 Lamma (M) | 168

84 9%

944

14 1% | 69

10% 3 00% |6710.

50 8%

123

37.2% | 40

48%

331

(F) 489

98.8%

6

12%

-

495

Total 657 79 5%

129

Total

937

(M) | 4588 73 7%

113% 3 0.0% | 6229 (F) |4206_79,8% | 700 13.3% 365 6.9% Total 8794 76 5% | 1637 14 2% 1066 9.3% 3 0.0% 11500

15.6% 40 150%| 701

4.8%

826

5271

Male:Female Ratios and Emigration

The village population tables in the 1911 Census which give the male and female population of each village in the New Territories are of value, not only in giving the basic population statistics of the area, but also because they enable us to identify villages with abnormal population characteristics.%

It is not easy to extrapolate from the 1911 Census figures to detailed analysis of village society, because of the problem of the under-reporting of infant children and teenage girls in the Census. The problem is made worse by the 1921 Census having no tables parallel to those giving the village-by-village population statistics in the 1911 Census While the under-reporting of youngsters in 1911 is clear, it is not, for instance, clear if the under-reporting was universal in incidence, or more typical of wealthier, Punti, villages, or, conversely, of poorer Hakka villages. Since more young girls went under-reported than young boys, the standard ratio as reported should have been about 51.5 males. 48.5 females. In fact, in many villages, more females than males are recorded. Given the general under-reporting of young girls, this feature can only be explained as the result of the temporary emigration out of the village (to the local market town, to Hong Kong, or abroad) of young adult

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.