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Taiwan Prefecture

Chinese prefecture during the Qing dynasty

Taiwan Prefecture

Chinese prefecture during the Qing dynasty

Location of Taiwan Prefecture in Fujian Province, 1820

Taiwan Prefecture or Taiwanfu was a prefecture of Taiwan during the Qing dynasty. The prefecture was established by the Qing government in 1684, after the island came under Qing dynasty rule in 1683 following its conquest of the Kingdom of Tungning. The Taiwan Prefecture Gazetteer () documented it as part of Fujian Province. The Gazetteer was completed by Gao Gonggan in 1695, the 34th year of the reign of the Kangxi Emperor. With the development and population growth of Taiwan during the Qing Era, the scope of Taiwan Prefecture was also varied over time. Following the establishment of in 1887, the prefecture correspondingly became a subdivision under the newly founded province.

1684–1723

When the Qing wrested the island from the control of the Kingdom of Tungning in 1683, Taiwan was made a prefecture under the administration of Fujian Province. The new prefecture consisted of three counties:

  • Zhuluo County, the central western plains and the north
  • , around the prefectural seat at Taiwan (now Tainan)
  • , which took up much of present-day Kaohsiung and Pingtung County The aboriginal lands on the east coastknown to the Qing as the "Land Behind the Mountains" ()were not controlled at all. The seat of government, also known as "Taiwan" or "Taiwanfu" (a contraction of , "prefectural city of Taiwan"), was located in modern-day Tainan, "which city had been in turn the capital of the Dutch, Koxinga, and the Chinese".

1723–1875

Map of Taiwan (right) in 1746
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During this period, Taiwan was administered as three counties and two subprefectures.

The counties ({{linktext|縣}}, xiàn) were, from south to north:

  • Fengshan County: one town, 8 Chinese villages, 73 uncivilized native villages, 8 civilized native villages
  • : one town, 4 Chinese villages, 22 uncivilized native villages, 8 civilized native villages
  • : one town, 16 villages The subprefectures ({{linktext|廳}}, tīng) were:
  • : one town, 132 farms, 70 native villages

1875–1887

An administrative change occurred in 1875, when Imperial Commissioner Shen Baozhen demanded that another prefecture be added in Taiwan to revamp the administrative organization of the northern area of the island. As a result, Taipeh Prefecture was created from part of Taiwan Prefecture.

1887–1895

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was established in 1887, consisting of four prefectures: Taipeh, Taiwan, Tainan, and Taitung. Tainan Prefecture was created from part of Taiwan Prefecture. Thus Taiwan Prefecture was reduced to the area of central Taiwan only, composed of the modern-day Miaoli County, Taichung City, Nantou County, Changhua County, and Yunlin County.

The new prefecture was divided into four counties and one subprefecture: , Changhua County, Yunlin County, Miaoli County, and . The new prefecture seat was located at the central city of Toatun (大墩), which was also designated as the site of the new provincial capital, taking its name as Taiwanfu or Taiwan (now Taichung). However, during construction of the new capital, the provincial capital was temporarily relocated to the city of Taipeh (Taipei). One of the administrators of Taiwan Prefecture was Raymund Tu, a native priest of Taiwan.

Four years after development of Toatun began, the seat of Taipeh (Taipei) was officially declared the provincial capital.

In 1895, with the Treaty of Shimonoseki and the successful Japanese invasion of Taiwan, Taiwan Prefecture was abolished. Under Japanese rule, the province was abolished in favor of Japanese-style divisions.

References

Citations

Bibliography

References

  1. Henckaerts, Jean-Marie. (12 September 1996). "The international status of Taiwan in the new world order: legal and political considerations". Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.
  2. (30 April 2007). "China: five thousand years of history and civilization". City University of HK Press.
  3. "Prefecture History". Taiwanpedia.
  4. Teng, Emma. (1 March 2006). "Taiwan's imagined geography: Chinese colonial travel writing and pictures, 1683–1895". Harvard Univ Asia Center.
  5. (2008). "Chinese Studies in History". International Arts and Sciences Press.
  6. link. Taiwanus.net Inc. (2003)
  7. "清代臺灣行政區劃沿革".
  8. (1977). "The City in Late Imperial China". Stanford University Press.
  9. "清代臺灣行政區劃沿革".
  10. Campbell, William. (1915). "Sketches from Formosa". Marshall Brothers.
  11. Gordon, Leonard H. D.. (2007). "Confrontation over Taiwan: nineteenth-century China and the powers". Lexington Books.
  12. (1890). "The Chinese times".
  13. David, M. D.. (1985). "Asia and Christianity". Himalaya Pub. House.
  14. (2011-12-27). "From Aboriginal Homeland to Modern City: A Look at Taichung's Rich History". Taichung City Government.
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