The introduction of the pot-bellied kingdom
Metropolitan Kingdom is an "inter-ethnic quasi-kingdom" established by Taiwan Province aborigines Baboulaz, Mao Wuyuan, Bazehai and some Hongya in the middle of16th century. Tribal co-owners are called Metropolitan Wang Fan. The field scope is mainly in today's Taichung County, as well as a part of Changhua County and Nantou County. A potbellied king, or potbellied king, is called Kaiser van Midge in Dutch, which means king during the day. This kingdom perished during the Yongzheng period of the Qing Dynasty. There are two monarchs who have written records and can be verified, namely Ganzaiha Alami (Dutch: Camachat Aslamie) and Ganzaiha Marlowe (Dutch: Camachat Maloe). Han people call it Aslamie Quataong, and scholar Weng Jiayin speculates that it may be a misinterpretation of Hoan-á-ong (Fanziwang) in Minnan dialect. The Dutch call it Keizer van Middag, while the aborigines in Taiwan Province Province call it Lelien, which means King of the Sun. Camachat is the surname of all potbellied kings, and Camachat is another name of Baboulaz. Some modern literary works will directly refer to Camachat kingdom as potbellied kingdom. 1648 After Camacht Aslamie died, his nephew Maloe succeeded to the pot-bellied king. After malloy succeeded to the throne, because he was still young, when negotiating with the Dutch East India Company, most of them were attended by his stepfather Talab holding a cane. At that time, because the potbellied society tended to maintain the female-centered family line, the local real power was in the hands of malloy's grandmother.