14 Facts About Taiwanese people

1.

Taiwanese people may refer to the indigenous peoples of the areas under the control of the Government of the Republic of China since 1945, including Penghu as well as Kinmen and Matsu Islands that collectively form its streamlined Fujian Province.

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2.

In 1945, the Taiwanese people faced a new unequal binary relationship when Taiwan entered the political sphere of the Republic of China.

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3.

The concept of a separate Taiwanese people identity has become such an integral factor to the election culture in Taiwan, that identifying as a Taiwanese people has become essential to being elected in Taiwan.

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4.

Term "New Taiwanese people" was coined by former President of the Republic of China, Lee Teng-hui in 1995 to bridge the ethnic cleavage that followed the February 28 Incident of 1947 and characterized the frigid relations between waishengren and benshengren during forty years of martial law.

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5.

The ethnic identity of assimilated Plains Aboriginals in the immediate vicinity of Tainan was still known since a pure Hoklo Taiwanese people girl was warned by her mother to stay away from them.

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6.

Hoklo Taiwanese people has replaced Pazeh and driven it to near extinction.

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7.

Taiwanese people criticized the Japanese colonial period, probably because of her blue-camp affiliation, but ignored the period of KMT rule under which the aboriginals suffered.

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8.

Overseas Taiwanese, called "people of Taiwanese descent", are people who are living outside of Taiwan but are of Taiwanese ancestry or descent.

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9.

Taiwanese people have traveled between China and Taiwan throughout history.

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10.

Taiwanese people Japanese do not currently have their own Wikipedia article.

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11.

In modern times, Australians of Taiwanese people descent are mostly concentrated around the cities of Brisbane, Melbourne, and Sydney, with significant populations in other major Australian cities.

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12.

Activists have used Lin's findings to argue the view that the majority of Taiwanese who did not descend from migrants from the Chinese Civil War are not descendants of Han Chinese but rather descendants of Plains indigenous peoples; and therefore Taiwan should not be considered as part of a Chinese state.

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13.

Taiwanese Plains indigenous people who have suffered racial and cultural assimilation often despise these so called "blood nationalists", whom they view as pushing a political agenda by claiming indigenous status.

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14.

Alak Akatuang, secretary of the Pingpu Indigenous Peoples Cultural Association, said that the pan-green camp used the indigenous peoples to create a national identity for Taiwan, but the idea that Taiwanese people are not overwhelmingly descended from Han settlers was false.

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