節錄來源 #Hong Kong History#聲音專欄|MADEFROM.HK
When people think of Hong Kong today,
they often imagine a modern skyline,
crowded streets,
and a city that never slows down.
But long before the towers,
before the roads,
before the city even had a name,
this land already carried human stories.
Thousands of years ago,
small groups of people lived along the coastlines and hills of this region.
They did not build cities.
They followed the land.
They settled near fresh water,
gathered plants,
caught fish from the sea,
and shaped simple tools from stone.
At that time, Hong Kong did not look the way it does today.
The sea was lower.
The land was wider.
What we now call islands were once connected to the mainland.
As the climate changed and the ice age ended,
the sea slowly rose.
Water covered the lowlands,
forming bays, islands, and narrow coastlines.
People adapted.
They learned where to live,
where to gather food,
and how to survive in a changing environment.
What we know about this time comes from archaeology.
From fragments of pottery.
From stone tools left behind.
From traces buried quietly beneath the soil.
These discoveries tell us one thing clearly:
Hong Kong did not begin as a city.
It began as a place where humans learned to live with nature,
long before history was written.
And every street that exists today
stands on land far older than memory.
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