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History
............................................................................................................................History Little is know about
Taiwans earliest history, however archaelogists
believe Taiwans link with mainland China is at
least 10,000 years old. The archaelogists have identified
four stages of prehistoric tool development that match
those of the mainland. Two distinct groups of aborigines
were living on Taiwan before the arrival of the Chinese.
One group lived sedentary agricultural lives on the rich
alluvial plains of the centre and southwest. The others
were violent people, roaming the mountains, fighting
incessantly among themselves, and practicing ritual
tattooing and head-hunting, right up to the present
century. Although it is not known exactly when the
Chinese first began to settle on Taiwan, the first
mainland immigrants came from an ethnic group called the
Hakka. They were driven from their native home in Hunan
province about 1,500 years ago and forced to flee south
of the Fujian and Guangdong coasts of the mainland.
There, they successfully engaged in fishing and trading
activities that eventually brought them to the Pescadores
Islands , now known as Penghu, and then later to Taiwan.
Today, the Hakka rank among Taiwan most enterprising
people.
Koxinga was the first Taiwan Chinese
ruler. He was forced to flee to Taiwan from the mainland
after failing to recaptured Nanjing from the Manchu. In
Taiwan, Koxinga encountered the Dutch, who have been
there since the early 1600s. The Dutch, discounted him as
a mere pirate, incapable of mounting a serious threat was
defeated by Koxinga and force to leave Taiwan in 1662.
Taiwan became the personal domain of Koxinga. He gave the
island its first formal Chinese government, turning it
into a Ming enclave until his sudden death in 1663 at the
age of 38, a year after his conquest of Taiwan.
Koxingas reign was brief but influential. He set up
his court and government at Anping, near Tainan and
developed transportation system and educational systems.
Great strides were made in agriculture. Tainan became the
political and commercial centre and Anping grew into a
prosperous harbor. Koxingas son and grandson
maintained rule over Taiwan until 1684, when the Manchu
finally succeeded in imposing sovereignty over the
island, snuffing out the last pocket of the Ming
patriotism. Taiwan officially became an integral part of
the Chinese empire when the Qing court conferred the
status of fu or prefecture on the island. Taiwan was
declared the 22nd province of China in 1886 and the
population at that time was 2.5 million.
In 1895, The Treaty of Shimonoseki,
written by Japan, ceded Chinese possession of both the
Ryukyu Islands and Taiwan to Japan. It marked the start
of half a century of Japanese rule over Taiwan. The
Japanese undertook an intensive modernisation of Taiwan
infrastructure. Between 1918 and 1937, Japan consolidated
its regime in Taiwan, exploiting Taiwans rich
natural resources exclusively for the benefit of Japan.
Taiwan toiled under Japanese occupation until Japan
defeat in World War II. After Japan surrendered, Taiwan
was restored to Chinese sovereignty on 25 October 1945,
an event still celebrated annually on the island as
Restoration Day. However, civil war raged across the vast
Chinese landscape for four year after the end of the
Japanese occupation.
In 1948, Chiang Kaishek was elected the
president of the Republic of China, however war was
swinging in favor of the Communists as they took Tianjin
and Beijing. On 21st January, 1949, Chiang Kaishek
resigned from the presidency. After nearly a year of
self-imposed solitude, in December 1949, he returned to
lead an exodus of Nationalist soldiers and a rambling
entourage of merchants, monks and masters of
classical arts across the Taiwan Strait to Taiwan. Still
calling his retreating government the Republic of China,
Chiangs army defeated pursuing Communists in a
last-stand battle on Quemoy, holding that island ever
since. Chiang was determined to reform Kuomintang
policies on Taiwan and he governed the island according
to Sun Yatsens Three Principles of the People,
Sanminchui. With the outbreak of the Korean war in 1950,
Taiwan was places under the American protective umbrella
from possible Communist attacks, and received substantial
economic aid too. In 1955, the United States and Taiwan
ratified the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty. Chiang
Kaishek continued to maintain strict political discipline
and social order but he gave enterpreneurs free reign in
the economic sphere. At the same time, the islands
population doubled to 16 million people. Chiang died on
April 5, 1975. He was succeeded by vice president, Yen
Chia-kan however in the next presidential elections the
following year, Chiang Kaisheks son, Chiang
Ching-kuo was elected president. In 1971, Taiwan lost its
membership in the United Nation organisation and was
replaced by the Peoples Replublic. In 1978, The
United States, announced the recognition of the
Peoples Repulic of China and ceased official
diplomatic relations with Taiwan. Chiang Ching-kuo died
in 1988 and was succeeded by Lee Teng-hui who was the
islands first Taiwanese born president who is the
current president of the Republic.
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