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Liu Ming-ch'uan and Modernization of Taiwan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

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Extract

In the latter decades of the nineteenth century, a number of Chinese officials acted as agents of modernization in their own regions of authority. The achievements of such men as Li Hung-chang and Chang Chih-tung are well known. The work of Liu Ming-ch'uan in Taiwan, however, has received little recognition outside his own country. After Taiwan was ceded to Japan in 1895, even Chinese scholars paid scant attention to Liu's work there, but with the removal of the Nationalist government to the island in 1949, there has understandably been a renewed interest in him. Chinese studies of Liu, however, generally treat his seven-year administration of the island without distinguishing between his efforts along traditional lines and those which required innovations. This is, of course, a perfectly valid approach, but Liu can also be seen as a modernizer. Because this paper is focused on the latter approach, it will take up only Liu's efforts at modernization.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1963

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References

1 Liu's collected memorials have been reissued by the Bank of Taiwan in its series of documentary reprints pertaining to the island's history. Bank of Taiwan, Economic Research Office, Liu Chuang-shu Kung chou-i, Taiwan Documentary Collection No. 27 (Taipei, 1958)Google Scholar (hereafter LCSK). Wen-hsien Chuan-k'an, a periodical of historical materials issued by the Taiwan Provincial Commission for Historical Documents, devoted an entire special issue to Liu (Vol. IV, No. 1–2, Aug., 1953). The only work which might be called a biography of Liu is in Japanese: Ino Yoshinori, Taiwan Jumbu to shite no Ryu Mei-den (Taihoku, 1905)Google Scholar (hereafter Jumbu). There is an unpublished nien-p'u of Liu compiled by Mr. Lo Kang, who kindly granted several lengthy interviews to the author in Taipei.

2 The following brief account of Liu's early career is based on his biography in Ch'ing-shih lieh-chtian (Taiwan Chung-hua Book Company ed.), 59.50a–52a. See also Hummel, Arthur, Emminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (Washington, 1944), pp. 526528.Google Scholar

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38 Rinji Taiwan Kyūkan Chōsakai [Provisional Investigative Commission on Taiwan's Customs], Chōsa keizai shiryō hōkoku [Report of the Investigation on Economic Materials], II (Tokyo, 1905), 330.

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82 TWTS, pp. 405406 Google Scholar. Shao had served under two Chinese ministers in Russia. Having won the gratitude of Liu Ming-ch'uan by aiding Liu from Shanghai during the Sino-French War, Shao was appointed lieutenant governor of Taiwan in March 1887. The two men apparently disagreed on policy. Shao resigned in the spring of 1889, and served as the governor of Hunan province until he was chosen to succeed Liu. Ch'ing-shih lieh-chuan, 63.8a–9a, and Jumbu, p. 109.Google Scholar

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84 There is an unaccountable discrepancy as to the year the school was founded. TWTS gives 1890, while other sources give various other years. Liu's memorial clearly indicates 1887 to be the correct year. LCSK, p. 297.Google Scholar

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