This is a list of the highest-ranked rulers based on the island of Taiwan.
See main article: Dutch Formosa and Governor of Formosa.
The Dutch Empire, during the period of the Dutch United Provinces and under the auspices of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), attempted to conquer Macau in 1622. Later they colonized the Pescadores Islands, where they built a fort in Makung. In 1624, the Chinese attacked, and the Dutch were driven to Taiwan (then called Formosa, meaning "beautiful island"). That year they established Fort Zeelandia on Taiwan's southwest coast. In 1637, the Dutch conquered Favorolang (also Favorlang; present day Huwei, Yunlin). The names listed here are the Dutch governors:[1]
align=center style="background:#FD8301; color:white;" colspan="5" | Dutch Formosa (Nederlands Formosa) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:#FD8301; color:white;" | No.! | Portrait | Name | From | Until |
1 | Martinus Sonck | 1624 | 1625[2] | ||
2 | Gerard Frederikszoon de With | 1625 | 1627 | ||
3 | Pieter Nuyts | 1627 | 1629 | ||
4 | Hans Putmans | 1629 | 1636 | ||
5 | Johan van der Burg | 1636 | 1640 | ||
6 | Paulus Traudenius | 1640 | 1643 | ||
7 | Maximilian le Maire | 1643 | 1644 | ||
8 | François Caron | 1644 | 1646 | ||
9 | Pieter Anthoniszoon Overtwater | 1646 | 1649 | ||
10 | Nicolas Verburg | 1649 | 1653 | ||
11 | Cornelis Caesar | 1653 | 1656 | ||
12 | Frederick Coyett | 1656 | 1662 |
See main article: Spanish Formosa. In response to the Dutch settlements, the Spanish settled at Keelung on the northeast coast of the island in 1626 and built Fort San Salvador. Later they built another outpost, Fort Santo Domingo, at Tamsui in the northwest. In 1629 these forts had a combined total of about 200 Spaniards and 400 Filipinos. By 1635, the Tamsui settlement was abandoned; however, the Keelung settlement remained in Spanish hands until 1642, when a Dutch force of 11 ships and 1,000 men attacked the fort of 446 people. The Spanish surrendered.
align=center style="background:#AA151B; color:#F1BF00;" | No.! | Portrait | Name | From | Until | Governor-General of the Spanish East Indies | Monarch |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Antonio Carreño de Valdes 伐爾得斯 | 16 May 1626 | 1629 | Fernándo de Silva Ad Interim (July 1624 – 29 June 1626) | Philip IV House of Habsburg (31 March 1621 – 17 September 1665) | ||
Juan Niño de Tabora (29 June 1626 – 22 July 1632) | |||||||
2 | Juan de Alcarazo 阿爾卡拉索 | 1629 | 1634 | ||||
Lorenzo de Olaza y Lecubarri Real Audiencia (22 July 1632 – 1633) | |||||||
Juan Cerezo de Salamanca Ad Interim (29 August 1633 – 25 June 1635) | |||||||
3 | Alonso García Romero 羅美洛 | 1634 | 1639 | ||||
Sebastián Hurtado de Corcuera (25 June 1635 – 11 August 1644) | |||||||
4 | Pedro Palomino 帕囉米諾 | 1639 | 1640 | ||||
5 | Gonzalo Portillo 波爾的里奧 | 1640 | 1642 |
align=center style="background:#AA151B; color:#F1BF00;" | No.! | Portrait | Name | From | Until | Governor-General of the Spanish East Indies | Monarch |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Antonio Carreño de Valdes 伐爾得斯 | 1627 | 1629 | Juan Niño de Tabora(29 June 1626 – 22 July 1632) | Philip IV House of Habsburg (31 March 1621 – 17 September 1665) | ||
2 | Luis de Guzmán 格司曼 | 1629 | 1634 | ||||
Lorenzo de Olaza y Lecubarri Real Audiencia (22 July 1632 – 1633) | |||||||
Juan Cerezo de Salamanca Ad Interim (29 August 1633 – 25 June 1635) | |||||||
3 | Bartolomé Díaz Barrera 奧就 | 1634 | 1637 | ||||
Sebastián Hurtado de Corcuera (25 June 1635 – 11 August 1644) | |||||||
4 | Francisco Hernández 赫爾南勒茲 | 1637 | 1642 |
See main article: Kingdom of Tungning and House of Koxinga. The Southern Ming (Ming dynasty loyalists) came to Taiwan under Koxinga, expelling the Dutch and capturing Fort Zeelandia. They established the Kingdom of Tungning.
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" colspan="6" | Kingdom of Tungning 【東寧王國】 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | No. ! | Portrait | width=200 | Name ! | Title(s) | Reign | |
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | 1 | Koxinga | Prince of Yanping (Chinese: 延平王) Prince Wu of Chao (Chinese: 潮武王) | 14 June 1661 | 23 June 1662 | ||
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | 2 | Zheng Xi | Protector (Chinese: 護理) | 23 June 1662 | November 1662 | ||
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | 3 | Zheng Jing | Prince of Yanping (Chinese: 延平王) Prince Wen of Chao (Chinese: 潮文王) | November 1662 | 17 March 1681 | ||
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | 4 | Zheng Kezang | Prince Regent (Chinese: 監國) | 17 March 1681 | 19 March 1681 | ||
align=center style="background:white; color:black;" | 5 | Zheng Keshuang | Prince of Yanping (Chinese: 延平王) Duke Haicheng (Chinese: 海澄公) | 19 March 1681 | 5 September 1683 |
* Regency of Feng Xifan from 1682 to 1683.
See main article: Taiwan under Qing rule.
The Qing dynasty invaded Taiwan; the Ming rulers surrendered and were expelled.
Qing rule was reestablished after a month-long revolt. The Taiwan Circuit was established in 1727 with its seat in Taiwan-fu, unlike its predecessor, the Taiwan-Amoy Circuit, which was based in Xiamen. The Taiwan Circuit Commissioner had its powers checked by the Taiwan Circuit Investigating censors.
Start of office | Investigating Censor (Manchu-banner) | No. | No. | Investigating Censor (Han) | Start of office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1722 | Aisin Gioro Wudali (PR) | 1 | 1 | Huang Shujing | 1722 |
1724 | Shanjibu (BB) | 2 | 2 | Ding Shiyi | 1724 |
3 | Jing Kaoxiang | 1725 | |||
1726 | Suolin (BR) | 3 | 4 | Wang Jijing | 1726 |
1726 | Hesuse (PR) | 4 | |||
5 | Yin Qin | 1727 | |||
6 | Xia Zhifang | 1728 | |||
1730 | Xideshen (PR) | 5 | 7 | Li Yuanzhi | 1730 |
8 | Gao Shan | 1730 | |||
1732 | Jueluobiaiyou (BR) | 6 | |||
9 | Lin Tianmu | 1733 | |||
1734 | Durtai (PY) | 7 | |||
10 | Yan Ruihong | 1735 | |||
1736 | Bai Qitu (PB) | 8 | |||
1737 | Romubu (PB) | 9 | 11 | Shan Demo | 1737 |
12 | Yang Erchou | 1739 | |||
1740 | Shuge (PW) | 10 | |||
13 | Zhang Mei | 1741 | |||
1742 | Shu Shan (BY) | 11 | |||
14 | Xiong Xuepeng | 1743 | |||
1744 | Liu Shiqi (BR) | 12 | |||
15 | Fan Xian | 1745 | |||
1747 | Yiling'a (BB) | 13 | 16 | Bai Ying | 1747 |
1749 | Shuchang (PY) | 14 | 17 | Yang Kaiding | 1749 |
1751 | Lizhu (BB) | 15 | 18 | Qian Qi | 1751 |
1756 | Guanbao (PY) | 16 | 19 | Li Youtang | 1756 |
1759 | Shilin (PW) | 17 | 20 | Tang Shichang | 1760 |
1763 | Yongtai (PR) | 18 | 21 | Li Yiqing | 1763 |
1767 | Mingshan (BY) | 19 | 22 | Zhu Pilie | 1767 |
1771 | Karchongyi (BW) | 20 | 23 | Wang Xianzeng | 1771 |
1777 | Tusiyi (BB) | 21 | 24 | Meng Shao | 1777 |
1781 | Sedai (PR) | 22 | 25 | Lei Lun | 1781 |
align=center style="background:#FEDE00;" colspan="8" | Great Qing Empire 【大清】 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:#FEDE00;" | No.! | Portrait | width=200 | Name ! | Ancestry | Original Post | Term of Office | Monarch |
align=center bgcolor=FEDE00 | 1 | Liu Mingchuan | Hefei, Anhui | Governor of Fukien | 12 October 1885 | 4 June 1891 | Guangxu Emperor 光緒皇帝 | |
align=center bgcolor=FEDE00 | — | Shen Yingkui[3] | Pinghu, Zhejiang | Civil Affairs Minister, Fukien Province | 4 June 1891 | 25 November 1891 | ||
align=center bgcolor=FEDE00 | 2 | Shao Youlian | Yuyao, Zhejiang | Governor of Hunan | 9 May 1891 | 13 October 1894 | ||
align=center bgcolor=FEDE00 | 3 | Tang Jingsong | Guanyang, Guangxi | Civil Affairs Minister, Fukien-Taiwan Province | 13 October 1894 | 20 May 1895 |
See main article: Republic of Formosa. The Republic of Formosa was a short-lived republic that existed on the island of Taiwan in 1895 between the formal cession of Taiwan by the Qing dynasty of China to the Empire of Japan by the Treaty of Shimonoseki and its being taken over by Japanese troops. The Republic was proclaimed on 23 May 1895 and extinguished on 21 October, when the Republican capital Tainan was taken over by the Japanese.
align=center style="background:#28537F; color:white;" colspan="7" | Republic of Formosa【臺灣民主國】 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:#28537F; color:white;" | No. | Portrait | Name | Place of Birth | Term of Office | Days | ||
align=center style="background:#28537F; color:white;" | 1 | Tang Ching-sung | Guilin, Guangxi, | 25 May 1895 | 5 June 1895 | |||
align=center style="background:#28537F; color:white;" | 2 | Liu Yung-fu | Qinzhou, Guangxi, | 5 June 1895 | 21 October 1895 |
See main article: Taiwan under Japanese rule and Government-General of Taiwan. After the First Sino-Japanese War and establishing control over the island through the Treaty of Shimonoseki, the Japanese Empire used the French Empire model of an occupying force and were instrumental in the industrialization of the island; they built railroads, a sanitation system and a public school educational system, among other things. Around 1935, the Japanese began an island-wide assimilation project to bind the island more firmly to the empire.
In 1941, the Pacific War broke out when the Japanese Empire attacked the U.S. naval port of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. By 1945, desperate plans were in place to incorporate popular representation of Taiwan into the Imperial Diet to end colonial rule of the island and transfer occupying troops to the front lines to fight the Allies. The names listed here are the Japanese governor-generals:
See main article: Governor-General of Taiwan.
align=center style="background:white; color:red;" colspan="9" | Empire of Japan 「大日本帝國」 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:white; color:red;" | Portrait | Name | Origin | Occupation | Affiliation | Term of Office | Monarch | |
1 | Kabayama Sukenori 樺山資紀 | Kagoshima | Admiral (Imperial Japanese Navy) (Viscount) | Military | 10 May 1895 | 2 June 1896 | Emperor Meiji 明治天皇 | |
2 | Katsura Tarō 桂太郎 | Yamaguchi | Lieutenant General (Imperial Japanese Army) (Viscount) | Military | 2 June 1896 | 14 October 1896 | ||
3 | Nogi Maresuke 乃木希典 | Yamaguchi | Lieutenant General (Imperial Japanese Army) (Baron) | Military | 14 October 1896 | 26 February 1898 | ||
4 | Kodama Gentarō 兒玉源太郎 | Yamaguchi | Lieutenant General (Imperial Japanese Army) (Baron) | Military | 26 February 1898 | 11 April 1906 | ||
5 | Sakuma Samata 佐久間左馬太 | Yamaguchi | General (Imperial Japanese Army) (Viscount) | Military | 11 April 1906 | 1 May 1915 | ||
Emperor Taishō 大正天皇 | ||||||||
6 | Andō Teibi 安東貞美 | Nagano | General (Imperial Japanese Army) (Baron) | Military | 1 May 1915 | 6 June 1918 | ||
7 | Akashi Motojiro 明石元二郎 | Fukuoka | Lieutenant General (Imperial Japanese Army) | Military | 6 June 1918 | 24 October 1919 | ||
8 | Den Kenjirō 田健治郎 | Hyōgo | Member of Terauchi Cabinet (Baron) | Seiyūkai | 29 October 1919 | 6 September 1923 | ||
9 | Uchida Kakichi 內田嘉吉 | Tokyo | Member of House of Peers | 6 September 1923 | 1 September 1924 | |||
10 | Izawa Takio 伊澤多喜男 | Nagano | Member of House of Peers | 1 September 1924 | 16 July 1926 | |||
11 | Kamiyama Mitsunoshin 上山滿之進 | Yamaguchi | literary figure | 16 July 1926 | 16 June 1928 | |||
Emperor Shōwa 昭和天皇 | ||||||||
12 | Kawamura Takeji 川村竹治 | Akita | Member of House of Peers | 16 June 1928 | 30 July 1929 | |||
13 | Ishizuka Eizō 石塚英藏 | Fukushima | Member of House of Peers | 30 July 1929 | 16 January 1931 | |||
14 | Ōta Masahiro 太田政弘 | Yamagata | Director of Kwantung Leased Territory | 16 January 1931 | 2 March 1932 | |||
15 | Minami Hiroshi 南弘 | Toyama | Member of House of Peers | 2 March 1932 | 26 May 1932 | |||
16 | Nakagawa Kenzō 中川健蔵 | Niigata | Undersecretary of Education | 26 May 1932 | 2 September 1936 | |||
17 | Kobayashi Seizō 小林躋造 | Hiroshima | Admiral (Imperial Japanese Navy) | Military | 2 September 1936 | 27 November 1940 | ||
18 | Hasegawa Kiyoshi 長谷川清 | Fukui | Admiral (Imperial Japanese Navy) | Military | 27 November 1940 | 30 December 1944 | ||
19 | Andō Rikichi 安藤利吉 | Miyagi | General (Imperial Japanese Army) | Military | 30 December 1944 | 25 October 1945 |
See main article: History of Taiwan (1945–present) and Government of the Republic of China. Following the end of World War II in 1945, under the terms of the Instrument of Surrender of Japan, the control of Taiwan was to be transferred to the Republic of China (ROC). ROC troops were authorized to come to Taiwan to accept the surrender of Japanese military forces and occupy Taiwan[4] on behalf of the Allied Powers in General Order No. 1, issued by Douglas MacArthur, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, on 2 September 1945. ROC troops were later transported to Keelung by the U.S. Navy, and Japanese handed the control of Taiwan to the ROC on 25 October 1945, which began a period of military occupation.
Following its defeat in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, Premier Yan Xishan proclaimed the ROC Government's relocation to Taiwan (where it exists until today), thus replacing the Provincial Chairperson as the highest-ranked executive official on Taiwan. This lasted until March 1950, when Chiang Kai-shek resumed his duties as President in Taipei. However, Japan relinquished sovereignty of Taiwan and Penghu in the Treaty of San Francisco on 28 April 1952, without specifying whom the sovereignty was ceded to. Because the ROC only held Taiwan, Penghu and other nearby islands, the regime remained the internationally recognized government of China with sovereignty throughout mainland China, Tibet Area, Sinkiang and Outer Mongolia until recognition shifted to the People's Republic of China by the United Nations in 1971 and the United States in 1979. After the constitutional amendments in 1991, the president is elected by popular vote among citizens of the Republic of China in the "Free Area of the Republic of China" (area under de facto Republic of China administration), instead of by the National Assembly.
See main article: Taiwan Province and Taiwan Provincial Government.
align=center style="background:; color:white;" colspan="6" | Republic of China (ROC)【中華民國】 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | No.! | Portrait | width=200px | Name ! | Term of Office | width=200 | Political Party | |
align=center colspan=6 | Chief Executive of Taiwan Province | |||||||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 1 | Chen Yi (1883-1950) | 29 August 1945 | 22 April 1947 | Kuomintang | |||
align=center colspan=6 | Chairperson of the Taiwan Provincial Government | |||||||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 1 | Wei Tao-ming (1899-1978) | 16 May 1947 | 5 January 1949 | Kuomintang | |||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 2 | Chen Cheng (1897–1965) | 5 January 1949 | 8 December 1949 | Kuomintang |
See main article: Premier of the Republic of China and List of premiers of the Republic of China.
align=center style="background:; color:white;" colspan="9" | Republic of China (ROC)【中華民國】- Taiwan | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | No. | Portrait | width=18% | Name | Term of office | Political party | |
30 | Yan Xishan 閻錫山 (1883–1960) | 8 December 1949 | 1 March 1950 | Kuomintang | |||
See main article: President of the Republic of China and List of presidents of the Republic of China.
align=center style="background:; color:white;" colspan="9" | Republic of China (ROC)【中華民國】- Taiwan | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | No.! | Portrait | width=200 | Name (Birth–Death)! | Term of office | Term | Elections | Political party | Vice President | |
Presidents elected by the National Assembly | ||||||||||
1 | align=center rowspan=5 | Chiang Kai-shek (1887–1975) | 1 March 1950 | 20 May 1954 | 1 | — | Kuomintang | Li Zongren Vacant | ||
20 May 1954 | 20 May 1960 | 2 | Chen Cheng | |||||||
20 May 1960 | 20 May 1966 | 3 | Chen Cheng Vacant | |||||||
20 May 1966 | 20 May 1972 | 4 | ||||||||
20 May 1972 | 5 April 1975 | 5 | ||||||||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 2 | Yen Chia-kan (1905–1993) | 6 April 1975 | 20 May 1978 | — | Kuomintang | Vacant | |||
3 | align=center rowspan=2 | Chiang Ching-kuo (1910–1988) | 20 May 1978 | 20 May 1984 | 6 | Kuomintang | ||||
20 May 1984 | 13 January 1988 | 7 | ||||||||
4 | align=center rowspan=2 | Lee Teng-hui (1923–2020) | 13 January 1988 | 20 May 1990 | — | Kuomintang | Vacant | |||
20 May 1990 | 20 May 1996 | 8 | ||||||||
Presidents elected by popular vote | ||||||||||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 4 | Lee Teng-hui (1923–2020) | 20 May 1996 | 20 May 2000 | 9 | Kuomintang | Lien Chan | |||
5 | align=center rowspan=2 | Chen Shui-bian (born 1950) | 20 May 2000 | 20 May 2004 | 10 | Democratic Progressive | Annette Lu | |||
20 May 2004 | 20 May 2008 | 11 | ||||||||
6 | align=center rowspan=2 | Ma Ying-jeou (born 1950) | 20 May 2008 | 20 May 2012 | 12 | Kuomintang | ||||
20 May 2012 | 20 May 2016 | 13 | ||||||||
7 | align=center rowspan=2 | Tsai Ing-wen (born 1956) | 20 May 2016 | 20 May 2020 | 14 | Democratic Progressive | Chen Chien-jen | |||
20 May 2020 | 20 May 2024 | 15 | Lai Ching-te | |||||||
align=center style="background:; color:white;" | 8 | Lai Ching-te (born 1959) | 20 May 2024 | Incumbent | 16 | Democratic Progressive | Hsiao Bi-khim |