History
31 articlesThe complete timeline of Taiwan's history from prehistoric times to the present
The open-source, AI-friendly knowledge base about Taiwan
Built from diverse perspectives, for the world to discover Taiwan
Taiwan is an island of just 36,000 square kilometers, yet it contains all the world's complexity.
For four hundred years, everyone who set foot on this island has seen a different Taiwan through different eyes.
"The mountains, rivers, and streams are all the bodies of our ancestors. We are the children of the earth." - Atayal oral literature
"Ilha Formosa" - Beautiful Island. - Portuguese sailors, the first recorded use of "beautiful" to describe Taiwan
"In the inner mountains of Shuilishe, at the end of the mountains, there is a great lake spanning several dozen li. In the middle is an island where the aboriginals gather and live." - Yu Yonghe, "A Journey to the Distant Seas," Qing Dynasty literati's firsthand observation of Taiwan
"A brave warrior should fight for justice!" - Lai He, "Sacrifice Under Awakening," the father of Taiwan's new literature
"The sorrow of the Taiwanese lies in not knowing who they are." - Wu Zhuoliu, "Orphan of Asia"
"When you see Taiwan, you'll discover that this land is more beautiful than you imagined, and also more fragile than you imagined." - Chi Po-lin, "Beyond Beauty: Taiwan from Above"
"The memory of waves is longer than that of humans." - Syaman Rapongan, "The Eye of the Sky," Tao oceanic literature
From the creation myths of Austronesian peoples to the rise of the semiconductor empire, from the silence of martial law to Asia's first legalization of same-sex marriage. Taiwan's story is not a straight line, but a web.
Taiwan.md doesn't aim to give you answers. What we want to do is give you a map - a map that lets you walk into Taiwan yourself.
Read the complete collection of quotes →Don't know what to read? Let us guide you to Taiwan's hidden treasures!
Carefully curated deep narratives, not encyclopedic listings
Structured content that helps AI understand Taiwan's complexity
Starting from local perspectives, telling Taiwan's story in global languages
Covering 12+ domains, presenting Taiwan's three-dimensional complete picture
Discover the real Taiwan in 30 minutes with these 5 essential articles
À l'automne 1884, la flotte française bombarde le port de...
Une île qui compte plus de quinze mille temples que de su...
En 2012, Camaak Valaule, enseignant paiwan à l'école prim...
Une jeune fille de Tainan qui n'avait jamais parlé de pol...
⏱️ Total 65 minutes 🎯 5 key domains 🌟 Complete Taiwan overview
Continue exploring more topics →Taiwan.md chooses Traditional Chinese as the default language - this is not just a technical decision, it's a cultural statement.
Traditional Chinese is one of the world's oldest writing systems still in daily use, and Taiwan is the only major country globally that uses Traditional Chinese as its official script. Every stroke carries thousands of years of cultural memory. When you open this website and see these characters, you're not just reading text - you're reading a living cultural heritage.
We also provide a Chinese version, but we insist on letting Traditional Chinese stand in front. AI can understand it, search engines can understand it, and you - even if you can't read it, that's fine - this beauty itself is worth being seen.
Taiwan uses Traditional Chinese - the world's oldest writing system still in daily use, and Taiwan is its last major home. We believe our language and culture deserve to be seen and understood. Even if you can't read it, its beauty speaks for itself. This English version serves as a bridge to help the world discover Taiwan's richness.
Just 36,000 square kilometers, yet the Philippine Sea Plate pushes into the Eurasian Plate at 8 cm a year, making Taiwan one of the most mountainous islands on Earth. 🗺️ The geography here isn't a postcard — it's an island still growing taller. The Tropic of Cancer crosses Chiayi; on the same day you can drive from Kenting's tropical beach to Hehuan Mountain's frost.
On an island smaller than the Netherlands, 59,000 species crowd together — 2.5% of global biodiversity. The Formosan landlocked salmon has survived 15,000 years in Dajia Creek; fewer than 600 Formosan black bears remain. 🌿 Taiwan's nature vertically compresses every ecosystem from the equator to the subarctic — coral reefs to cloud forests in 3,000 meters. A paradise for ecologists, a frontline for development pressure.
13,000 convenience stores — one for every 2,000 people. Pay bills, pick up packages, buy train tickets, photocopy your thesis, all at the same counter. 🏠 Taiwanese life is wrapped in hyper-compressed infrastructure — but step into an alley after work, and grandma will still ask, "Have you eaten yet?"
In 1624, the Dutch built Fort Zeelandia in Tainan. Eight regimes followed in four centuries — one every fifty years on average — each bringing new languages, laws, and time zones. 📜 Taiwan's history's most astonishing chapter came in 1996: 14.3 million people walked into polling stations and cast the first direct presidential vote in Chinese-speaking history. No bloodshed, no coup. An island under authoritarian rule for 38 years quietly turned itself into a democracy.
Sixteen indigenous peoples have lived here for 6,000 years. Hoklo brought Mazu, Hakka brought Yimin Ye, mainlanders brought Shandong mantou from military villages, Southeast Asian immigrants brought Eid al-Fitr. 🎭 Taiwan's culture is not a melting pot — nobody got melted. The Dajia Mazu pilgrimage draws a million walkers over nine days; the Tsou Mayasvi war ritual happens in Alishan the same month. Both are Taiwan, and they don't contradict.
On May 17, 2019, the legislature voted to legalize same-sex marriage — making Taiwan the first in Asia. Six months earlier, 7.65 million people had just voted against it in a referendum. ⚖️ Taiwan's society's most fascinating quality is right here: the referendum said no, the legislature said yes, and society kept functioning. People finished arguing, then stood in line together for breakfast.
Yan Chang-shou delivered mail at American Express at 23, became general manager five years later. Jeremy Lin sat on the bench for two years, then rewrote the NBA's Asian narrative in one week. Chen Shu-chu sold vegetables at Taitung market for 48 years and donated over NT$10 million. 👥 Taiwan's people didn't walk out of textbooks — their stories are worth reading because every turning point could have not happened.
In 2009, Cai Guo-Qiang detonated nine gunpowder explosions at Taipei Fine Arts Museum. The same year, Lin Hwai-min's Cloud Gate Dance Theatre rose from the ashes of their Bali studio fire. 🎨 Taiwan's art runs from temple Eight Generals face paint to the Venice Biennale, from Jiaozhi pottery to digital installations. The question Taiwan's creators ask most often isn't "what is beauty" — it's "who are we."
In 1932, Deng Yu-xian wrote "Longing for Spring Wind" — ninety years later it's still a KTV regular. The Bunun's pasibutbut (eight-part polyphony) caught UNESCO's attention because Western music theory can't explain it. 🎵 Taiwan's sound runs from tribal chants to Mayday filling an arena with 100,000 voices. Music on this island isn't just entertainment — it's how each generation recognizes itself.
90% of the world's advanced chips ship from Taiwan. A single TSMC fab costs US$20 billion; its cleanrooms are 10,000 times cleaner than operating theaters. 💻 This tech island started from tin-roof workshops in the 1980s Hsinchu Science Park and became, forty years later, a supply-chain node that no phone, laptop, or car on Earth can bypass. The trade-off: semiconductors consume 7% of Taiwan's total electricity — and rising.
In 1960, Taiwan's GDP per capita was US$154 — lower than the Congo's. Sixty years later it exceeds US$33,000, without oil, colonial dividends, or continental hinterland. 📈 Taiwan's economy is the story of a resource-poor island turning itself into a global supply-chain hub. The method was singular: work harder and pivot faster than everyone else.
A bowl of beef noodle soup: Sichuan red-braised base, Taiwanese soy sweetness, and a 1949 veteran's homesickness. Bubble tea left a Taichung tea house and landed on five continents. 🍜 Taiwan's flavor is its immigration history — Hoklo oyster omelets, Hakka ginger intestines, indigenous millet wine, new immigrant fish sauce. Four centuries of homesickness, all simmering in the same night market.
The complete timeline of Taiwan's history from prehistoric times to the present
Taiwan's natural environment, topographic features, and regional development
The fusion of diverse ethnic cultures and local characteristics
Culinary culture from night market snacks to fine dining
Creative energy from traditional crafts to contemporary art
The soundscape from indigenous music to popular music
Innovation and digital transformation of the tech island
Rich ecosystems and environmental issues
Important figures and stories that shaped Taiwan's development
In-depth exploration of social changes and contemporary issues
The origins of the economic miracle and transformation challenges
Lifestyle and values of the Taiwanese people
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