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Taiwan
soon proved to be Japan's most profitable colony. The Japanese
took a careful survey of land ownership throughout Taiwan, so
that units of land measurement could be standardized and tax
collection could be enforced more efficiently. A population
census was taken in 1905, and the Japanese soon embarked on
a study of Taiwanese aborigines. Standardization of the measurements
of commercial goods and a standardized money system were implemented.
Once these preliminary steps were taken, the Japanese authorities
proceeded to monopolize the industries of salt, camphor, opium,
tobacco, and alcoholic beverages in Taiwan. To facilitate the
introduction of industrialization to the island, the transportation
facilities were expanded to include railway lines, steamships,
and highways. Agricultural production increased, and the Japanese
were soon able to export rice and sugar from Taiwan, to satisfy
the growing need for these products in Japan. The development
of the sugar industry under Japanese rule progressed at a dramatic
rate, but the expansion did not progress smoothly. Most Chinese
farmers preferred to grow rice, which could be stored for private
consumption, as well as for later sale, whereas sugar can could
not. Small Chinese cooperative farming enterprises were taken
over by a modern, government-supported Japanese sugar company.
Thus, although modernization and economic growth in Taiwan eventually
proved to be an economic asset to Japan, these changes were
achieved at great expense to the native (primarily Chinese)
population.
In 1895 when the Japanese first
acquired the colony of Taiwan, the Japanese government envisioned
the creation of an empire in which the colonial people would
serve as loyal subjects to the Japanese emperor. However, upon
their arrival in Taiwan, the Japanese encountered a diverse
society, including aborigines, and a clearly defined Chinese
population. Chinese settlement patterns and traditional Chinese
customs were integrated in villages throughout the
island; there was even a small class of literati
present, that functioned as a support for schools, teachers,
and the candidates who sat for the imperial examinations.
The Japanese determined at an
early stage in the planning of the colony that education of
the Taiwanese would serve as a valuable tool in shaping a peaceful,
industrious population. In order to achieve cooperation, allegiance,
and possible assimilation of the Taiwanese with their Japanese
rulers, the Taiwanese would have to be educated in the Japanese
way. The Japanese began to build an educational system modeled
upon the Meiji educational system of Japan. In Meiji Japan,
elementary schools served as one of the first steps in the introducing
new, western ideas of occupation and lifestyles to the general
population.
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