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Taiwan Province

Administrative division of Taiwan

Taiwan Province

Administrative division of Taiwan

FieldValue
nameTaiwan
native_name臺灣省
translit_lang1Name
translit_lang1_typeChinese
translit_lang1_info臺灣省 (zh)
translit_lang1_type1Abbreviation
translit_lang1_info1TW / {{linktext臺}} (pinyin: zh)
translit_lang1_type2Hokkien POJ
translit_lang1_info2Tâi-oân-séng
translit_lang1_type3Hakka PFS
translit_lang1_info3Thòi-vàn-sén or Thòi-vân-sén
settlement_typeProvince
image_skyline{{Multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width280
image_styleborder:1
perrow1/2/2
image1TRA Hsinchu Station.jpg
image2Hinoki Village wooden wall by Chiayi Forestry District Office 20160326.jpg
image3基隆 大武崙砲台.jpg
image4八卦山大佛風景區 (cropped).jpg
image5北港朝天宮.JPG
image6Eluanbi Lighthouse 02.jpg
image7Penghu Great Bridge.jpg
image_flagTaiwan Province Flag.svg
flag_size120px
image_sealTaiwan Province Government emblem.svg
seal_typeSeal
seal_size100px
image_mapTaiwan Province in Taiwan.svg
mapsize275px
map_captionMap depicting subdivisions nominally part of the province (red)
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
seat_typeProvincial capital
seatZhongxing New Village (1956-2018)
Taipei (1945–1956)
seat1_typeLargest city
seat1Hsinchu
parts_typeDivisions
parts_stylepara
p111 counties
p23 cities
established_titleEstablished from Fujian
established_date1887
established_title2Annexed by Japan
established_date217 April 1895
established_title3Placed under the control of the ROC
established_date325 October 1945
established_title4Streamlined
established_date421 December 1998
extinct_titleGovernmental functions removed
extinct_date1 July 2018
government_typeProvince (nominal)
governing_bodyTaiwan Provincial Government (1945–2018, now de jure)
area_total_km225,110.0037
population_as_of2020
population_total7,060,473
population_density_km2auto
population_demonymTaiwanese
timezoneNST
utc_offset+08:00
Note

the administrative division of the Republic of China

Taipei (1945–1956) Thòi-vân |buc=Dài-uăng |j=Toi4waan1 |y=Tòihwāan |ci= |wuu=The平-uae平

44 ɣo13 miɛn13 kwa13--

Thòi-vân-sén

Taiwan Province (; PFS: Thòi-vàn-sén or Thòi-vân-sén) is a de jure administrative division of the Republic of China (Taiwan). Provinces remain a titular division as a part of the Constitution of the Republic of China, but are no longer considered to have any administrative function practically.

Taiwan Province covers approximately 69% of the island of Taiwan, and comprises around 31% of the total population. The province initially covered the entire island of Taiwan (Formosa), Penghu (the Pescadores), Orchid Island, Green Island, Xiaoliuqiu Island, and their surrounding islands. Between 1967 and 2014, six special municipalities (Kaohsiung, New Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Taipei and Taoyuan) were split off from the province, all in the most populous regions.

Taiwan was initially made a prefecture of Fujian Province by the Qing dynasty of China after its conquest of the Kingdom of Tungning in 1683. Following the French offensive in northern Taiwan during the Sino-French War, the island's strategic position in maritime security and defence was re-evaluated and given prominence by the Qing. Under the auspices of Liu Ming-chuan, a plan was commenced to develop Taiwan into a stand-alone division. In 1887, Taiwan was designated as a distinct province (namely "Fujian-Taiwan Province"; ), with Liu as the first governor, but the island was then ceded to the Empire of Japan in 1895, following China's defeat in the First Sino-Japanese War. After the surrender of Japan in World War II, the province was re-established on Taiwan by the Kuomintang (KMT) government in September 1945, and it became the last stronghold of the KMT government after their defeat in the Chinese Civil War. The provincial capital of Taipei has correspondingly become the provisional capital of the central government since 1949.

During the constitutional reform initiated in 1996, the Taiwanese government decided to downsize the provincial structure to streamline overlapping personnel and administrative resources between the provincial and central governments, and cut excessive public spending. The provinces ceased to be self-governing bodies in December 1998, with their administrative functions transferred to the Executive Yuan's subsidiary National Development Council, as well as second-tier local governments such as counties. In July 2018, all provincial governmental organs were formally abolished, with their budget and personnel removed.

History

Qing Empire

In 1683, Zheng Keshuang (third ruler of the Kingdom of Tungning and a grandson of Koxinga), surrendered to the Qing Empire following a naval engagement with Admiral Shi Lang. The Qing then ruled the Taiwanese archipelago (including Penghu) as Taiwan Prefecture of Fujian Province. In 1875, Taipeh Prefecture was separated from Taiwan Prefecture. In 1885, work commenced under the auspices of Liu Ming-chuan to develop Taiwan into a province. In 1887, the island was designated as a province (officially "Fujian-Taiwan Province"; Chinese: 福建臺灣省), with Liu as the first governor. The province was also reorganized into four prefectures, eleven districts, and three sub-prefectures. The provincial capital, or "Taiwan-fu", was intended to be moved from the south (modern-day Tainan) to the more central area of Toatun (modern-day Taichung) in the revamped Taiwan Prefecture. As the new central Taiwan-fu was still under construction, the capital was temporarily moved north to Taipeh (modern-day Taipei), which eventually was designated the provincial capital.

CircuitPrefecturesDistrictsSub-Prefectures
TaiwanTaipehTamsuiKelung
Gilan
Hsinchu
TaiwanTaiwan (臺灣縣)
ChangwhaPuli
Yunlin
Miaoli
TainanAnpingPenghu
Kagi
Fengshan
Hengchun
Taitung

Empire of Japan

In 1895, the entire Taiwan Province, including Penghu, was ceded to Japan following the First Sino-Japanese War through the Treaty of Shimonoseki. Under Japanese rule, the province was abolished in favour of Japanese-style divisions.

After the surrender of Japan in 1945, Taiwan was handed over to the Republic of China (ROC).

Republic of China

Map of Taiwan Province within the ''de jure'' territory of the ROC.

The ROC government immediately established the Taiwan Provincial Government under first Chief Executive and government-general Chen Yi in September 1945. Chen was extremely unpopular and his rule led to an uprising: the February 28 Incident of 1947. Chen was recalled in May 1947 and the government-general position was abolished.

In 1949, Chinese Communist Party forces defeated the Kuomintang (KMT) in the Chinese Civil War, and the Republic of China government moved to Taipei. The provincial administration remained in place under the claim that the ROC was still the government of all of China even though the opposition argued that it overlapped inefficiently with the national government.

The seat of the provincial government was moved from Taipei to Zhongxing New Village in 1956. Historically, Taiwan Province covers the entire island of Taiwan and all its associated islands. The city of Taipei was split off to become a province-level special municipality in 1967, and the city of Kaohsiung was split off in 1979 to become another special municipality. In December 2010, Kaohsiung County left the province and merged with the original Kaohsiung City to become an expanded Kaohsiung City, Taipei County became the special municipality named New Taipei City. The cities and counties of Taichung and Tainan were also merged, respectively, and elevated to special municipality. On 25 December 2014, Taoyuan County was upgraded into a special municipality and split off from Taiwan Province.

Until 1992, the governor of Taiwan province was appointed by the ROC central government. The office was often a stepping stone to higher office.

In 1992, the post of the governor of the province was opened to election. The then-opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) agreed to retain the province with an elected governor in the hopes of creating a "Yeltsin effect" in which a popular local leader could overwhelm the national government. These hopes proved unfulfilled as then-Kuomintang member James Soong was elected governor of Taiwan province, defeating the DPP candidate Chen Ding-nan.

In 1997, as the result of an agreement between the KMT and the DPP, the powers of the provincial government were curtailed by constitutional amendments. The post of provincial governor was abolished. In addition, the provincial council was also replaced by the Taiwan Provincial Consultative Council. Although the stated purpose was administrative efficiency, Soong and his supporters claim that it was actually intended to impede James Soong's political life, though it did not have this effect.

The provincial administration was downscaled in 1998, most of its power handed to the central government. The counties and provincial cities under the province became the primary administrative divisions of the country.

Government

Main article: Taiwan Provincial Government, Taiwan Provincial Consultative Council

The position of the Chairperson of the Provincial Government, appointed by the central government, is retained to comply with the Constitution.

The major operations of the provincial government, such as managing provincial highways and the Bank of Taiwan, have been transferred to the Executive Yuan since 1998. In July 2018, all remaining duties were transferred to the National Development Council and other ministries of the Executive Yuan.

The Taiwan Provincial Government was located in Zhongxing New Village, Nantou City, Nantou County between 1957 and 2018.

[[File:Taiwan the Province Government Building.JPG300pxthumbThe [[Taiwan Provincial Government]] building between 1957 and 2018. Currently the Office of the [[Zhongxing New Village]] Revitalization Project, [[National Development Council (Taiwan)National Development Council]]]][[File:Statues of Chiang Kai-shek in front of Taiwan Provincial Council Building 20101112.jpg200pxthumbThe [[Taiwan Provincial Consultative Council]] building between 1958 and 2018. Currently a heritage site managed by the [[Taichung]] [[Taichung City GovernmentCity Government]]]]

Divisions

Main article: Administrative divisions of Taiwan, List of administrative divisions of Taiwan

History of divisions

In October 1945, The Government of the Republic of China reformed the eight(8) Japanese prefectures under the Government-General of Taiwan into 8 counties and 9 cities.

YearDateDivision No.NotesCountiesCitiesBureaus
194525 October89
194926 August891Ts'ao-shan Administrative Bureau established from Taipei County
19501 April891Ts'ao-shan Administrative Bureau renamed to Yangmingshan Administrative Bureau
16 August1651
19671 July1641Taipei became the first Taiwanese special municipality
19681 July164Yangmingshan Administrative Bureau merged into Taipei
19731 July1641Li-shan Administrative Bureau established from Taichung County
19791 July1631Kaohsiung became the second Taiwanese special municipality
19811 March163Li-shan Administrative Bureau merged back to Taichung County
25 December163All county seats (originally urban townships) upgraded to county-administered cities.
19821 July165Upgrade Chiayi and Hsinchu to provincial cities (approved on 23 April 1981)
199821 December165Provincial government streamlined, all counties and cities are directly led by the Executive Yuan
201025 December123Upgrade Kaohsiung, New Taipei, Taichung, Tainan to special municipalities,
which covers 4 counties (Kaohsiung, Taipei, Taichung, Tainan) and 2 cities (Taichung and Tainan).
201425 December113Upgrade Taoyuan to a special municipality.
20181 July113Provincial government defunct, all counties and cities are directly led by the Executive Yuan

Current divisions

Taiwan Province is nominally divided into 11 counties and 3 cities . All divisions are directly administered by the central government in practice.

MapNo.NameMandarin
(Pinyin)Taiwanese
(Pe̍h-ōe-jī)Hakka
(Pha̍k-fa-sṳ)
**[[File:Subdivision types of the Republic of China (2014).svg350px]]**1Changhua CountyZhānghuà xiànChiong-hoà koān
2Chiayi CityJiāyì shìKa-gī chhīKâ-ngi sṳ
3Chiayi CountyJiāyì xiànKa-gī koānKâ-ngi yen
4Hsinchu CityXīnzhú shìSin-tek chhīSîn-tsuk sṳ
5Hsinchu CountyXīnzhú xiànSin-tek koānSîn-tsuk yen
6Hualien CountyHuālián xiànHoa-liân koānFâ-lièn yen
7Keelung CityJīlóng shìKe-lâng chhīKî-lùng sṳ
8Miaoli CountyMiáolì xiànBiâu-le̍k koānMèu-li̍t yen
9Nantou CountyNántóu xiànLâm-tâu koānNàm-thèu yen
10Penghu CountyPénghú xiànPhêⁿ-ô͘ koānPhàng-fù yen
11Pingtung CountyPíngdōng xiànPîn-tong koānPhìn-tûng yen
12Taitung CountyTáidōng xiànTâi-tang koānThòi-tûng yen
13Yilan CountyYílán xiànGî-lân koānNgì-làn yen
14Yunlin CountyYúnlín xiànHûn-lîm koānYùn-lìm yen

Note that the special municipalities of Kaohsiung, New Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Taipei, and Taoyuan are both nominally under and directly administered by the central government. They are not parts of any province.

Sister states/provinces

Taiwan Province was twinned with 42 U.S. states:

  • Indiana (1979)
  • Utah (1980)
  • Oklahoma (1980)
  • Arizona (1980)
  • Missouri (1980)
  • Tennessee (1980)
  • West Virginia (1980)
  • Virginia (1981)
  • South Carolina (1981)
  • Kentucky (1982)
  • Colorado (1983)
  • Mississippi (1983)
  • Nebraska (1983)
  • Arkansas (1983)
  • Alabama (1983)
  • California (1984)
  • Idaho (1984)
  • Minnesota (1984)
  • Georgia (U.S. state) (1984)
  • Wyoming (1984)
  • South Dakota (1984)
  • Louisiana (1985)
  • Ohio (1985)
  • New Mexico (1985)
  • Montana (1985)
  • Nevada (1985)
  • North Dakota (1986)
  • Wisconsin (1986)
  • Oregon (1986)
  • Texas (1988)
  • Alaska (1988)
  • New Jersey (1989)
  • Iowa (1989)
  • Kansas (1989)
  • North Carolina (1991)
  • Massachusetts (1992)
  • Florida (1992)
  • Illinois (1992)
  • Hawaii (1993)
  • Connecticut (1999)
  • Vermont (1999)
  • Delaware (2000)

Territorial disputes

Main article: Senkaku Islands, Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China, Two Chinas

The People's Republic of China (PRC) regards itself as the "successor state" of the Republic of China (ROC), which the PRC claims no longer legitimately exists, following establishment of the PRC on Mainland China. The PRC asserts itself to be the sole legitimate government of China, and claims Taiwan as its 23rd province, even though the PRC itself has never had control of Taiwan or other ROC-held territories. The ROC disputes this position, maintaining that it still legitimately exists and that the PRC has not succeeded it.

The PRC claims the entirety of the island of Taiwan and its nearby islands and islets, including the Penghu, as parts of its Taiwan Province, corresponding to the ROC's Taiwan Province before the special municipalities were split off. The PRC claims that Taiwan is a part of China, that the PRC succeeded the ROC as the sole legitimate authority in all of China upon its founding in 1949, and that therefore Taiwan is a part of the PRC.

The Senkaku Islands, which are currently administered by Japan, are disputed by both the ROC and the PRC, which claim them as the Tiaoyutai/Diaoyu Islands. The ROC government claims them as part of Toucheng Township, Yilan County.

Notes

References

References

  1. link. (28 June 2018)
  2. "Local governments".
  3. Sarah Shair-Rosenfield. (November 2020). "Taiwan combined".
  4. (1903). "The Island of Formosa, Past and Present: History, People, Resources, and Commercial Prospects: Tea, Camphor, Sugar, Gold, Coal, Sulphur, Economical Plants, and Other Productions". Macmillan & Co..
  5. Bi-yu Chang. (24 March 2015). "Place, Identity, and National Imagination in Post-war Taiwan". Routledge.
  6. Sherry Hsiao. (29 June 2018). "Provincial-level agencies to be defunded next year".
  7. {{harvp. Davidson. 1903
  8. Campbell, William. (1915). "Sketches from Formosa". Marshall Brothers.
  9. adapted from {{harvp. Davidson. 1903
  10. link. 麥田出版社. (19 December 2007)
  11. "The Feb. 28 Incident".
  12. "Taiwan Provincial Government Official Website".
  13. "Taiwan Provincial Administration Information Hall".
  14. "Welcome to the Ohio Department of Development".
  15. "Archived copy".
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