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The Taiwanese resistance movement that emerged in the early
1920's addressed issues that had been fermenting since the beginning
of the occupation period, muffled by the stern hand of the Japanese.
Many of the grievances voiced by the protesters were directly
precipitated by Japanese colonization methods in Taiwan.
The history of Taiwan before 1895
is filled with incidents of foreign colonization attempts: attempts
to take advantage of the islands rich resources. The island
had the reputation of a "formidable wilderness," inhabited by
"Chinese fisherman, pirates, and lawless adventures." Before
1622, Taiwan was used as a refuge for Chinese and Japanese pirate
ships. Most of the permanent inhabitants were wither aborigines
or Chinese settlers who had crossed over from the mainland.
By 1624, the Dutch East India Company attempted to develop aborigine
territory. Dutch rule lasted almost forty years. The island
was then invaded by Zheng Chenggong (known to the west as Koxinga),
a Ming Dynasty loyalist who vowed to overthrow the Manchu Qing
Dynasty from his base in Taiwan. It was absorbed into China
in 1683 and thereafter administrated as a prefecture of Fukien.
Taiwan remained under Chinese jurisdiction until China's defeat
in the Sino-Japanese war of 1895, when the island was ceded
to Japan 'in perpetuity" under the terms of the Shimonoseki
Peace Treaty.
Taiwan, Japan's first colony,
served as an important testing ground for the training of colony
officials, as well as for the implementation of colonial development
programs such as land surveying, the taking of a population
census, and the establishment of government monopolies. In 1905,
Japan acquired the colonies of Sakhalin (Karafuto) and
Guandong, in 1910 Korea, and in 1914 the Pacific
Islands. Japan had become the only non-western colonizing nation.
In the first few years of the
occupation period, the Japanese had their hands full, attempting
to bring order to chaos that prevailed throughout the island.
Taiwan was placed under the rule of a Govern-General, appointed
by the Japanese emperor. His primary task in 1895 was to implement
strict police control over the island, to rid the colony of
rampant banditry, guerilla warfare, and disease. By the early
1900's, the widespread disorder was largely under control, and
the Japanese began to lay the foundations for economic development
of the island.
Japan hoped to develop an integrated
economy, in which its colonies would provide supplies of raw
materials and foodstuffs for Japan, and in return, Japan would
provide the colony with capital and modern technology.
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