How Taiwan Became Chinese: Dutch, Spanish, and Han Colonization in the Seventeenth Century

How Taiwan Became Chinese: Dutch, Spanish, and Han Colonization in the Seventeenth Century

by Tonio Andrade
How Taiwan Became Chinese: Dutch, Spanish, and Han Colonization in the Seventeenth Century

How Taiwan Became Chinese: Dutch, Spanish, and Han Colonization in the Seventeenth Century

by Tonio Andrade

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Overview

At the beginning of the 1600s, Taiwan was a sylvan backwater, sparsely inhabited by headhunters and visited mainly by pirates and fishermen. By the end of the century it was home to more than a hundred thousand Chinese colonists, who grew rice and sugar for export on world markets. This book examines this remarkable transformation. Drawing primarily on Dutch, Spanish, and Chinese sources, it argues that, paradoxically, it was Europeans who started the large scale Chinese colonization of the island: the Spanish, who had a base on northern Taiwan from 1626 to 1642, and, more importantly, the Dutch, who had a colony from 1623 to 1662. The latter enticed people from the coastal province of Fujian to Taiwan with offers of free land, freedom from taxes, and economic subventions, creating a Chinese colony under European rule.

Taiwan was thus the site of a colonial conjuncture, a system that the author calls co-colonization. The Dutch relied closely on Chinese colonists for food, entrepreneurship, translation, labor, and administrative help. Chinese colonists relied upon the Dutch for protection from the headhunting aborigines and, sometimes, from other Chinese groups, such as the pirates who ranged the China Seas.

In its analysis the book sheds light on one of the most important questions of global history: how do we understand the great colonial movements that have shaped our modern world? By examining Dutch, Spanish, and Han colonization in one island, it offers a compelling answer: Europeans managed to establish colonies throughout the globe not primarily because of technological superiority but because their states sponsored overseas colonialism whereas Asian states, in general, did not. Indeed, when Asian states did, European colonies were vulnerable, and the book ends with the capture of Taiwan by a Chinese army, led by a Chinese warlord named Zheng Chenggong.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231128551
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 12/09/2008
Series: Gutenberg-e
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 324
Product dimensions: 0.88(w) x 9.00(h) x 6.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Tonio Andrade received his Ph.D. from Yale University and is associate professor of history at Emory University.
Tonio Andrade grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah, and has degrees from Reed College, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and, most recently, Yale University. His Ph.D. dissertation, which examines cross cultural interactions in Taiwan during the seventeenth century, won Yale Universitys Hans Gatzke Prize and the American Historical AssociationsGutenberg-e Prize. He is working on a manuscript entitled How Taiwan Became Chinese: Imperial Rivalries and Co-colonization in the Seventeenth Century, which will be published by Columbia University Press. He currently holds an appointment as Assistant Professor at Emory University, where he teaches global and East Asian History

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Preface xv

Reader's Guide xvii

Introduction 1

1 Taiwan on the Eve of Colonization 23

2 A Scramble for Influence 40

3 Pax Hollandica 63

4 La Isla Hermosa: The Rise of the Spanish Colony in Northern Taiwan 80

5 The Fall of Spanish Taiwan 100

6 The Birth of Co-Colonization 115

7 The Challenges of a Chinese Frontier 133

8 "The Only Bees on Formosa That Give Honey" 159

9 Lord and Vassal: Company Rule over the Aborigines 182

10 The Beginning of the End 208

11 The Fall of Dutch Taiwan 228

Conclusion 251

Works Cited 265

Appendix A Weights, Measures, and Exchange Rates 291

Appendix B Governors-General, Governors, and Missionaries 293

Appendix C Income and Outlays in Dutch Taiwan 299

What People are Saying About This

American Historical Association

Superb.... Andrade brilliantly reminds us of how important the brief episode of European occupation was.

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