Timeline of Taiwanese history

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This is a timeline of Taiwanese history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Taiwan and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Taiwan and History of the Republic of China. See also the list of rulers of Taiwan.

Historic

16th century

Year Date Event
1544 Portuguese sailors passing Taiwan record in the ship's log the name Ilha Formosa (Beautiful Island).
1582 Portuguese shipwreck survivors battle malaria and aborigines for ten weeks before returning to Macau on a raft.
1592 Japan unsuccessfully seeks sovereignty over Taiwan (Takayamakoku 高山国 in Japanese, lit. high mountain country).[1]

17th century

Year Date Event
1604 Dutch envoy Wijbrand van Waerwijck and his army are ordered to occupy the Pescadores in order to open trade with China. However Ming Dynasty general Shen You-rong demanded their withdrawal.[1]
1609 Tokugawa Shogunate of Japan sends feudal lord Arima Harunobu (有馬晴信) on an exploratory mission to Taiwan.[1]
1616 Nagasaki official Murayama Tōan (村山等安) leads troops on an unsuccessful invasion of Taiwan.[1]
1622 Dutch envoy Cornelis Reijerszoon occupies the Pescadores in an attempt to persuade China to open trade. The Ming court rejects his proposal.
1624 Ming China opens trade with the Dutch. The Dutch establish a trading base for commerce with Japan and coastal China. Dutch official Maarten Sonk takes up his new post at Tayuan (present-day Anping District, Tainan City) beginning the Dutch administration of Taiwan.
Dutch begin construction of Fort Zeelandia which is completed ten years later.
1626 Spain sends an expedition to Santissima Trinidad (Keelung) and build Fort San Salvador due to the Dutch threat to Chinese and Japanese trade to the Spanish Philippines.
1628 Spanish establish a settlement at Tamsui and build Fort Santo Domingo in an attempt to attract Chinese merchants.
1642 With the Dutch in southern Taiwan and the Spanish in northern Taiwan, confrontation between the two adversaries were inevitable and eventually the Dutch drive the Spanish out of Taiwan, becoming the sole ruling power on Taiwan.
1653 Taiwan becomes the second most profitable trading port in Asia, due to its ideal central location between Japan, China and southeast Asia.
1662 Koxinga lays siege to Fort Zeelandia with the Dutch surrendering nine months later.
1683 Kingdom of Tungning are defeated by the Qing Empire, which has assumed full control over mainland China.

18th century

Year Date Event
1722 Zhu Yigui rebellion suppressed.
1732 Qing forces under the administration of the Yongzheng Emperor suppress Dajiaxi (大甲西) aboriginal rebellion.[citation needed]
1787–1788 Lin Shuangwen rebellion (林爽文事件) suppressed after nine months of constant battling.[2]

19th century

Year Date Event
1809 Pirate Cai Qian is surrounded by the Qing navy and commits suicide.[citation needed]
1867 American military expedition sent to Kenting in response to the Rover incident.
1871 54 shipwrecked Ryūkyūan sailors killed by Paiwan aborigines in Mudan Incident.
1874 Japan sends punitive expedition of 3,600 soldiers to Taiwan in retribution for Mudan Incident.
1875 Taiwan is divided into two prefectures, north and south.
1884 Keelung and Tamsui harbor are blockaded by the French Navy during the Sino-French War.
1887 Taiwan is reorganized administratively as a Taiwan Province with Liu Mingchuan as the first governor.
1895 Qing China signs the Treaty of Shimonoseki ceding Taiwan and the Pescadores Islands to Japan after being defeated by the Japanese Navy in the First Sino-Japanese War.
Pro-Qing officials declare the Republic of Formosa in an attempt to resist the arrival of the Japanese. Tang Ching-sung (唐景崧) named president.
1899 The Japanese Imperial government suppressed any opposition to its rule and eliminated all anti-Japanese groups on the island.
Bank of Taiwan established to encourage Japanese investment into Taiwan.
Taiwan yen is issued by the Bank of Taiwan with an exchange ratio on par with the Japanese yen.

20th century

Year Date Event
1901 Railroad between Keelung and Hsinchu rebuilt.
1904 Taiwan bank notes issued.
1905 Earthquake in Chiayi.
First population census. (First Provisional Taiwan Household Registration Survey)
Taiwan becomes financially self-sufficient and is weaned off subsidies from Japan's central government.
1907 Beipu Incident led by Cai Ching-lin (蔡清琳).
1908 North-South (Western Line) Railway completed.
1913 Miaoli Incident.
1915 Tapani Incident, largest revolt in Taiwanese history; over 100 protesters killed by Japanese authorities.
Silai Temple Incident led by Yu Ching-fang (余清芳).
1921 Taiwanese Cultural Association founded.
"Petition to Establish a Taiwan Parliament" movement begins.
1923 Crown Prince Hirohito (Later Emperor) of Japan visits Taiwan.
1924 Yilan Line Railroad completed.
1926 Hwatung Line Railroad completed.
1927 Taiwanese People's Party, Taiwan's first political party, founded.
1928 Taihoku Imperial University (now National Taiwan University) founded.
1930 Jianan (or Chianan) Canal (嘉南大圳) completed.
Wushe Incident; Japan forcefully crushes rebellion by the Atayal aborigine group.
1935 Earthquake in Miaoli.
Exposition to Commemorate the 40th Anniversary of the Beginning of Administration in Taiwan.
1937 Four national parks planned.
Sun Moon Lake Hydroelectric Power Plant completed.
1939 Industrial production surpasses agricultural production.
1941 Taiwan Revolutionary League formed to coordinate anti-Japan resistance.
Segregation of primary schools between Japanese and Taiwanese children ends.
Pingtung Line Railroad completed
1943 Compulsory primary education begins. Enrollment rates reached 71.3% for Taiwanese children (including 86.4% for aborigine children) and 99.6% for Japanese children in Taiwan making Taiwan's enrollment rate the second highest in Asia after Japan.[3]
In the Cairo Declaration, the Allied Powers declared the return of Taiwan (including the Pescadores) to the Republic of China as one of several Allied demands.
1945 Popular Legislature Election Law enacted.
Japan (then including Taiwan) is defeated in World War II, signs Japanese Instrument of Surrender (September). United States directs Japanese forces to surrender to ROC as per General Order No. 1 (August).
Chen Yi of the Kuomintang is appointed as Chief Executive of Taiwan as the Republic of China proclaims October 25 as Retrocession Day.
1947 February 28 Incident; "White Terror" begins.
US consulate in Taipei proposed "status of Taiwan is undetermined" and "Taiwan Under UN trustee" program in March; proposal was rejected by the United States State Department.
Chen Yi recalled and Taiwan Provincial Government established.
1948 National Assembly of the Republic of China passes Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations General Assembly. P. C. Chang is among its authors.
1949 April 6 Incident.
The New Taiwan dollar is issued, exchanged at 1:40,000 old Taiwan dollars.
Kuomintang army defeated in the Chinese Civil War, flees in exile to Taiwan with 2 million refugees.
The capital of the Republic of China (ROC) relocated from Nanjing to Taipei.
Martial law and the White Terror period. (to 1987)
1950 In late June, President Truman proclaims: "The determination of the future status of Formosa must await the restoration of security in the Pacific, a peace settlement with Japan, or consideration by the United Nations."[citation needed]
1951 Treaty of San Francisco officially signed by 49 nations; Japan officially renounced claims to Taiwan, but without designating a recipient.
1952 Treaty of San Francisco comes into force. Japan renounces all right, title, and claim to Taiwan, but no "receiving country" is designated. However, Japan and the Republic of China then sign Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty (Treaty of Taipei).
1958 823 Artillery War.
1959 August 7 Flood: serious flooding in central Taiwan.
1960 Free China Incident.
1964 Shihmen Reservoir completed.
Peng Ming-min arrested for the draft of A Declaration of Formosan Self-salvation.
1966 Chinese Cultural Renaissance
1971 The seat for "China" at the United Nations Security Council is assumed by the People's Republic of China, in place of the ROC.
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758
1972 The United States establishes diplomatic ties with the People's Republic of China, and acknowledges the One China Policy in the Shanghai Communique.
1975 President Chiang Kai-Shek dies. Yen Chia-kan assumes the presidency until May 20, 1978.
1978 Chiang Ching-kuo elected President.
1979 The United States passes the Taiwan Relations Act, which affirms US commitment to defend Taiwan militarily and to treat Taiwan as a state for most purposes of U.S. law.
Kaohsiung Incident.
Western Line Railroad fully electrified; North-Link Line completed.
1980 Lin Family Murders on the anniversary of the February 28 Incident.
Hsinchu Science Park founded.
1981 Chen Wun-cheng (陳文成) Incident.
1984 Labor Standards Law enacted.
1986 Typhoon Wayne makes landfall in the west coast of central Taiwan.
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), the first oppositional political party after World War II, formed illegally from the Tangwai movement.
Yuan T. Lee wins the Nobel Prize in chemistry.
1987 1987 Lieyu massacre (March 7 Incident); followed by the Martial law lifted on July 15.
1988 President Chiang Ching-kuo dies; Lee Teng-hui assumes the presidency.
Bans on publishing newspapers lifted.
1989 Bans on establishing new commercial banks lifted.
Cheng Nan-jung Self-immolation.
1990 Wild Lily student movement in Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall.
1991 Legislative Yuan and National Assembly elected in 1947 were forced to resign.
Opposition parties legalized.
South-Link Line Railroad completed.
1992 Fair Trade Law enacted.
The first democratic election of the Legislative Yuan.
1992 Consensus
1994 National Health Insurance begins.
1995 US government reverses policy and allows President Lee Teng-hui to visit the US. The People's Republic of China responds with the Third Taiwan Strait Crisis by launching a series of missiles into the waters off Taiwan. The Taiwan stock market loses one-third of its value.
February 28 Incident monument erected; President Lee Teng-hui publicly apologizes on behalf of the KMT.
1996 President Bill Clinton dispatches the USS Nimitz supercarrier to patrol the Taiwan Strait.
The first direct presidential election; Lee Teng-hui elected.
Muzha Line of the Taipei Metro completed.
1997 Tamsui Line of the Taipei Metro completed.
Private cellular phone companies begin services.
1999 Resolution on Taiwan's Future
Chi-Chi earthquake.
2000 Chen Shui-bian, the opposition candidate from the DPP, elected president by a lead of 2.5% of votes marking the end of the KMT status as the ruling party. Voter turnout was 82.69%; first peaceful transfer of power.
Four Noes and One Without
Yilan Line railroad electrified.

21st century

Year Date Event
2001 Three mini-links between Kinmen, Matsu and the mainland of Fujian begins.
Private fixed-line telephone companies begin services.
Serious flooding caused by Typhoon Nari.
2002 Entry into the World Trade Organization.
Penetration rate of cellular phones exceeds 100%.
2003 SARS outbreaks.
North-Link Line railroad electrified.
2004 Second north-south freeway completed.
228 Hand-in-Hand Rally.
President Chen Shui-bian is re-elected by a margin of 0.22% votes after being shot the day before.
Taipei 101 becomes World's Tallest Building.
2005 The first direct commercial airplane flights from Beijing to Taipei for the Chinese New Year.
The PRC passes an "anti-secession law" authorizing the use of force against Taiwan and the ROC government should it formally declare independence. In response, 1.6 million people marched in Taipei against China's "anti-secession law". Similar marches occur across the world by Taiwanese nationalists. Protests against the PRC were held worldwide, including, but not limited to: Chicago, New York City, Washington DC, Paris, and Sydney.
Pan Blue visit to mainland China
President Chen is invited and attends the funeral of Pope John Paul II. He is the first Taiwanese president to visit the Vatican.
The National Assembly of the Republic of China convenes for the last time to implement several constitutional reforms, including single-member two-vote districts, and votes to transfer the power of constitutional reform to the popular ballot, essentially abolishing itself.
2006 Taiwan's first high-speed rail line, Taiwan High Speed Rail, begins operation.
Rename "Chiang Kai-shek International Airport" to Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport.
2007 Rename Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall to National Taiwan Democracy Memorial Hall.
Taiwan applies for membership in the United Nations under the name "Taiwan", and is rejected by the General Assembly.
2008 1025 demonstration
Chen Yunlin visit
Wild Strawberry student movement
Lien Chen meets Hu Jintao at APEC Peru 2008
March 9 Red Line of the Kaohsiung MRT completed.
March 22 presidential election; with 58.48% of the vote, KMT candidate Ma defeats DPP candidate Hsieh. Many voters boycott the referenda on whether and how to join UN so the level of voter participation required for referenda to be considered valid is not achieved.
May Mayor Ma Ying-jeou sworn into office as the 12th term and current President of Taiwan (ROC) and the Chairman of the Kuomintang Party.
July the first direct China-Taiwan flights begin in nearly 6 decades.[4][5][6]
2009 World Games 2009
Typhoon Morakot

Notes

References

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External links