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The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration

author:Passion talks about the world

Commenting on the song -- opposing independence and promoting reunification -- defending the motherland!

The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration
The history of the Taiwan Strait - the Great Migration

Taiwanese are mainly from Quanzhou, Zhangzhou and Putian in Fujian. Historical immigration occurred mainly in 1624, the period of Dutch rule over Taiwan, which was ruled by the Dutch for 40 years. The colonists practiced the Wangtian system, and they recruited a large number of immigrants from Fujian to reclaim the plains on Taiwan's West Beach.

The second large-scale organized migration occurred in 1628, when Xiong Wencan, the governor of Fujian Province, organized tens of thousands of coastal disaster victims to come to Taiwan to reclaim and colonize the land.

The third migration to Taiwan took place in 1683 during the Qing Dynasty. The Qing government sent General Shi Lang to retake Taiwan. At the same time, the Fujian people were continuously organized to arrive in Taiwan for general reclamation and development, and by 1811, the number of Han Chinese immigrants in Taiwan reached 1.95 million. By 1895, when Japan occupied Taiwan through the Treaty of Maguan, the population of Taiwan had reached 3.7 million. From the signing of the Treaty of Maguan to the surrender of the Japanese in 1945, the Japanese ruled Taiwan for 50 years. When the Japanese retreated to Taiwan, nearly half of the Japanese descendants, merchants, and soldiers no longer wanted to return to the Japanese mainland, which had been completely destroyed by the Americans, and they called themselves "Washi Soul Tailu", which was explained as "Yamato Soul and Taiwanese Soul", and these Japanese people in Taiwan have more than 1 million people.

The fourth migration to Taiwan occurred between 1945 and 1950, when the island's population reached 6 million, far higher than the 2 million people on Hainan Island.

From 1949 to 1950, the Kuomintang was defeated like a mountain, and the party, government, army, and people collectively retreated and fled, and 2 million people rushed to Taiwan, which increased Taiwan's population overnight, reaching 8 million. After 70 years of recuperation, Taiwan's population has soared to 23 million people, making Taiwan's resources unbearable and having to develop overseas to earn money from the world.

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