Episode 3 | Traces Left Behind

2026-02-03
           

節錄來源 #Hong Kong History#聲音專欄|MADEFROM.HK
Long before written history,
people left no names behind.
What remains are traces.
Across Hong Kong,
archaeologists have uncovered more than two hundred prehistoric sites.

They are scattered across hills, coastlines, and islands.
Some lie in places that look ordinary today.
Others rest beneath modern roads and buildings.
What these sites reveal is not grand events,
but everyday life.
Stone tools shaped by hand.
Fragments of pottery buried in the soil.
Animal bones and shells left behind after meals.
These objects tell us how people lived.
They hunted.
They fished.
They gathered what the land and sea provided.
Over time, life became more settled.
People stayed longer in one place.
Simple shelters appeared near water sources and coastal plains.
Pottery became more common.
Not finely decorated,
but practical.
The patterns were simple —
lines, waves, and dots pressed into wet clay.
They were not made to be displayed.
They were made to be used.
Each discovery adds a small piece to a much larger picture.
Not of kings or cities,
but of survival, adaptation, and routine.
These traces remind us that history does not begin with writing.
It begins with presence.
Long before Hong Kong became a city,
people lived here,
left quietly,
and trusted the land to remember them.

Listen

延伸閱讀
Season 2 · Episode 6 At the Threshold of a Port
By the time villages had taken root, this land had changed. Paths co…
Season 2 · Episode 5 Villages Before the City
Before there was a city, there were villages. They did not appear su…
Season 2 | Episode 4 Salt, Fish, and Survival
Before cities, before ports, before trade networks, there was surviv…
Season 2 | Episode 3 Paths Without Names — Ancient Roads and Movement
節錄來源 #Hong Kong History#聲音專欄|MADEFROM.HKBefore Hong Kong had streets…