| Taiwan Province 臺灣省 | |
| Taiwan Province of the Republic of China (in dark grey). The Tiaoyutai Islands to the northeast of the main island of Taiwan, claimed by the ROC as part of Ilan County are too small to be shown. | |
| Capital | Jhongsing Village |
| Official languages | Standard Mandarin |
| Area | 35,581 km² (1st) |
| Population (Feb 2006) - Density | 18,576,518 (1st) 522/km² |
| Ethnic groups | Han Chinese - 97.5% Other - 2.5% |
| County-level divisions | 16 |
| Township-level divisions | 287 |
| Currency | New Taiwan dollar (NT$) |
| Currency code | TWD |
| GDP (PPP) | NT$ to be added billion |
Taiwan Province excludes the Kinmen and Lienchiang counties, which are administered as Fujian province, and the centrally administered municipalities of Taipei and Kaohsiung, both of which located geographically within the island of Taiwan. Since 1998, the Taiwan Provincial Government has been streamlined, with most of its functions transferred to the Executive Yuan.
The People's Republic of China (PRC) in mainland China regards itself as the "successor state" of the Republic of China (ROC), which it claims no longer legitimately exists. The PRC further claims that as such, the PRC has sovereignty over all of China which it claims the island of Taiwan is a part of. The ROC disputes this position, maintaining that it still legitimately exists and that the PRC has not succeeded it to sovereignty over Taiwan. See also Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China and political status of Taiwan.
In 1683, following a naval engagement with Admiral Shi Lang, Koxinga's (Cheng Ch'eng Kung) grandson Zheng Keshuang and ruler of Taiwan submitted to the Qing Dynasty (Ch'ing Dynasty). Then the Qing Dynasty ruled Taiwan (including the Pescadores) as a prefecture of Fujian Province. In 1875, Taipei Prefecture was separated from the original prefecture. In 1887, Taiwan was made a separate province.
In 1895, Taiwan was ceded to Japan. Under Japanese rule, the province was abolished in favour of Japanese-style divisions. After Japan surrendered in 1945, the Allied Powers assigned administration of Taiwan to the Republic of China (ROC).
The ROC government did not immediately make Taiwan into a province, but put it under military occupation under Chief Executive Chen Yi. Chen was extremely unpopular and his rule led to an uprising - the 228 incident. Chen was recalled in May 1947 and the government-general was abolished. To assure the residents of Taiwan that they would be treated equally as other people in other parts of the country, the Taiwan Provincial Government was established.
When the Kuomintang (KMT) government was relocated to Taipei in 1949, the provincial administration remained in place under the theory that the ROC was still the government of all of China even though the opposition argued that it overlapped inefficiently with the national government. As such, Taiwan is considered to be one of the provinces under the Republic of China. Today, one of its legacies is Taiwanese today often say "all-province" in place of where many English speakers might use "national" or "country-wide".
The seat of the provincial government was moved from Taipei to Chunghsing Village (Jhongsing Village) in 1956. In 1967 and 1979 respectively, the cities of Taipei and Kaohsiung were separated from the province and turned into centrally-administered municipalities.
Until 1992, the governor of Taiwan province was appointed by the ROC central government. The office was often a stepping stone to higher office.
In 1992, the post of the governor of the province was opened to election. The then-opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) agreed to retain the province with an elected governor in the hopes of creating a "Yeltsin effect" in which a popular local leader could overwhelm the national government. These hopes proved unfulfilled as then-Kuomintang member James Soong was elected governor of Taiwan by a wide margin defeating the DPP candidate Chen Ding-nan.
In 1997, as the result of an agreement between the KMT and the DPP, the administration of the province was streamlined in curtailed constitutional changes. For example, the post of provincial governor and the provincial assembly were both abolished and replaced with a nine-member special council. Although the stated purpose was administrative efficiency, Soong and his supporters claim that it was actually intended to destroy James Soong's power base and eliminate him from political life, though it did not have this effect. In addition, the provincial legislature was abolished while the Legislative Yuan was expanded to include some of the former provincial legislators.
The provincial administration has been greatly streamlined in 1998, leaving counties and provincial cities the primary divisions in Taiwan Province. In contrast to the past where the head of Taiwan province was considered a major official, the Governor of the Taiwan Provincial Government after 1999 has been considered a very minor position.
Taiwan Province is divided into 16 counties (縣; hsien) and 5 provincial cities (市; shih):
| Romanization | Chinese | Tongyong Pinyin | Hanyu Pinyin | Wade-Giles | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiayi County | 嘉義縣 | Jiayì | Jiāyì | Chia1-i4 | Taibao City |
| Changhua County | 彰化縣 | Jhanghuà | Zhānghuà | Chang1-hua4 | Changhua City |
| Hsinchu County | 新竹縣 | Sinjhú | Xīnzhú | Hsin1-chu2 | Jhubei City |
| Hualien County | 花蓮縣 | Hualián | Huālián | Hua1-lien2 | Hualien City |
| Kaohsiung County | 高雄縣 | Gaosyóng | Gāoxióng | Kao1-hsiung2 | Fongshan City |
| Miaoli County | 苗栗縣 | Miáolì | Miáolì | Miao2-li4 | Miaoli City |
| Nantou County | 南投縣 | Nántóu | Nántóu | Nan2-t'ou2 | Nantou City |
| Penghu County (Pescadores) | 澎湖縣 | Pénghú | Pénghú | P'eng2-hu2 | Magong City |
| Pingtung County | 屏東縣 | Píngdong | Píngdōng | P'ing2-tung1 | Pingtung City |
| Taichung County | 台中縣 | Táijhong | Táizhōng | T'ai2-chung1 | Fongyuan City |
| Tainan County | 台南縣 | Táinán | Táinán | T'ai2-nan2 | Sinying City |
| Taipei County | 台北縣 | Táiběi | Táiběi | T'ai2-pei3 | Banciao City |
| Taitung County | 台東縣 | Táidong | Táidōng | T'ai2-tung1 | Taitung City |
| Taoyuan County | 桃園縣 | Táoyuán | Táoyuán | T'ao2-yüan2 | Taoyuan City |
| Yilan County | 宜蘭縣 | Yílán | Yílán | I2-lan2 | Yilan City |
| Yunlin County | 雲林縣 | Yúnlín | Yúnlín | Yün2-lin2 | Douliou City |
| Romanization | Chinese | Tongyong Pinyin | Hanyu Pinyin | Wade-Giles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiayi City | 嘉義市 | Jiayì | Jiāyì | Chia1-i4 |
| Hsinchu City | 新竹市 | Sinjhú | Xīnzhú | Hsin1-chu2 |
| Keelung City | 基隆市 | Jilóng | Jīlóng | Chi1-lung2 |
| Taichung City | 台中市 | Táijhong | Táizhōng | T'ai2-chung1 |
| Tainan City | 台南市 | Táinán | Táinán | T'ai2-nan2 |
Note: The cities of Taipei and Kaohsiung are administered directly by the central government and are not part of Taiwan province, though the counties of the same name surrounding these cities are part of the province. The PRC, which does not administer Taiwan Province, does not recognize Taipei and Kaohsiung as central municipalities and lists them as provincial municipalities.
The Senkaku Islands, which is currently administered by Japan is disputed by both the ROC and PRC which claims them as Tiaoyutai/Diaoyutai Islands. The ROC government claims them as part of Toucheng Township, Yilan County.
| Governor | Chinese | Tongyong Pinyin | Hanyu Pinyin | Term in office |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen Yi | 陳儀 | Chen Yí | Chen Yí | August 29, 1945 - April 22, 1947 |
| Governor | Chinese | Tongyong Pinyin | Hanyu Pinyin | Term in office |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| James Soong | 宋楚瑜 | Sòng Chǔyú | Sòng Chǔyú | December 20, 1994 - December 21, 1998 |
| Governor | Chinese | Tongyong Pinyin | Hanyu Pinyin | Term in office |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chao Shou-po | 趙守博 | Jhào Shǒubó | Zhào Shǒubó | December 21, 1998 - May 20, 2000 |
| Chang Po-ya | 張博雅 | Jhang Bóyǎ | Zhāng Bóyǎ | May 20, 2000 - February 1, 2002 |
| Fan Kuang-chun | 范光群 | Fàn Guangcyún | Fàn Guāngqún | February 1, 2002 - October 13, 2003 |
| Lin Kuang-hua | 林光華 | Lín Guanghuá | Lín Guānghuá | October 13, 2003 - January 25, 2006 |
| Lin Si-yao | 林錫耀 | Lín Síyào | Lín Xíyào | December 7, 2007 - May 19, 2008 |
| Tsai Hsun-hsiung | 蔡勳雄 | Cài Syunsyóng | Cài Xǖnxióng | May 20, 2008 - |