Taiwan and Modern China

Emma J. Teng
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Abstract

The China–Taiwan relationship continues to be one of the most highly fraught international political issues in the post-Cold War era, and a potential flashpoint in US–China affairs. Lying 180 kilometers off the southeastern coast of China, Taiwan’s relation to the mainland has undergone numerous permutations since the 17th century, when it was a Dutch colony. In 1662, Taiwan was conquered by Ming loyalist forces who retreated to the island from China and took it from the Dutch. This loyalist regime then held the island until 1683, when Qing imperial forces crossed the Taiwan Strait to quell the insurgents. The Qing in turn ruled Taiwan until 1895, when it was ceded to Japan as an outcome of the Sino-Japanese war. Taiwan was returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1945, following Japan’s defeat in World War II, but has been divided from mainland China since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949. Taiwan’s evolving relationship to modern China has been profoundly shaped by three crucial factors: the island’s location along China’s strategic maritime perimeter; its role in global trade networks; and fears of its being used as an enemy base against the mainland. Taiwan has also played an important role in Chinese migration history. The island was one of the earliest destinations for overseas migration from China, and it has seen successive waves of Han Chinese migrants over the centuries, making it home to the largest ethnic Chinese population outside the PRC in the early 21st century. In addition to ancestral and cultural ties, a staggering volume of trade and investment links the two sides together economically, despite ongoing political friction, and the contemporary cross-Strait relationship is thus characterized by collaboration as well as conflict. Important historiography of the subject has been produced in China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, the United States, and Europe within the frameworks of Chinese history, East Asian regional and maritime history, comparative colonial history, and the history of international relations. It is worth noting that beyond the China–Taiwan relationship, a different strand of historiography, that of Pacific history, treats Taiwan as part of the history of the Pacific Islands, focusing on its indigenous people rather than the Han Chinese majority, and on their links to other Austronesian-speaking peoples across Oceania.
台湾与近代中国
中国与台湾的关系仍然是后冷战时代最令人担忧的国际政治问题之一,也是美中关系的潜在爆发点。台湾距离中国东南海岸180公里,自17世纪成为荷兰殖民地以来,台湾与大陆的关系经历了多次变化。1662年,台湾被明朝的保皇派军队征服,他们从中国撤退到台湾,并从荷兰人手中夺取了台湾。这个忠诚的政权一直统治着台湾岛,直到1683年,清朝军队越过台湾海峡镇压叛乱。清朝反过来统治台湾,直到1895年,作为中日战争的结果,台湾被割让给日本。1945年,日本在第二次世界大战中战败后,台湾主权回归中国,但自1949年中华人民共和国成立以来,台湾一直与中国大陆分离。台湾与现代中国关系的演变受到三个关键因素的深刻影响:台湾位于中国的战略海上边界;它在全球贸易网络中的作用;担心它会被用作敌人对抗大陆的基地。台湾在中国移民史上也扮演了重要角色。该岛是中国最早的海外移民目的地之一,几个世纪以来,它经历了连续的汉族移民浪潮,使其成为21世纪初中国以外最大的华人人口的家园。除了祖传和文化纽带,尽管政治摩擦不断,但惊人数量的贸易和投资在经济上将两岸联系在一起,因此,当代两岸关系的特点是合作与冲突并存。在中国历史、东亚地区和航海史、比较殖民史和国际关系史的框架内,中国、台湾、日本、韩国、美国和欧洲都出版了这一主题的重要史学著作。值得注意的是,在中国-台湾关系之外,另一种不同的史学——太平洋史学——将台湾视为太平洋岛屿历史的一部分,重点关注台湾的土著居民,而不是占多数的汉族,以及他们与大洋洲其他说南岛语的民族的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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