Han Taiwanese


Han Taiwanese or Taiwanese Hans are a Taiwanese ethnic group, most of whom are of full or partial Han Chinese descent. According to the Executive Yuan of the Republic of China, they comprise 95 to 97 percent of the Taiwanese population, which also includes Austronesians and other non-Han people. Major waves of Han Chinese immigration occurred since the 17th century to the end of Chinese Civil War in 1949, with the exception of the Japanese colonial period. Han Taiwanese mainly speak three languages of Chinese: Mandarin, Hokkien and Hakka.

Definition

There is no simple uniform definition of Han Taiwanese, which are estimated to comprise 95 to 98 percent of the Taiwanese population. To determine if a Taiwanese is Han, common criteria include immigration background, using a Han language as the mother tongue, and observance of traditional Han festivals. Sometimes a negative definition is employed, where Hans are those who are not certain non-Han people.
Taiwanese Hans can be classified according to the times of migration or places of origin. They include the Taiwanese Minnan and Hakka people that arrived in Taiwan before World War II and the post-World War II Han immigrants. From the view that Taiwan is one of the "provinces" of Republic of China, the former, along with the Austronesians, are sometimes called benshengren, while the latter, along with the contemporaneous non-Han immigrants, are called waishengren. These two terms and distinctions are now less important due to intermarriages between different sub-populations of Taiwan and the rise of the Taiwanese identity. In addition, there are Han Taiwanese that do not fall into the above categories, including the Puxian-speaking Hans in Wuqiu Township, Kinmen County, the Mindong-speaking in Matzu, and various recent Han immigrants from mainland China.

Immigration history and demographics

Architecture

There were two major waves of Han immigration: from the Ching Empire in the 18th and 19th centuries and from what was then the Republic of China's continental territory, which is now ruled by the People's Republic of China, after World War II in the final years of the Chinese Civil War.

Before the Japanese Empire rule

Taiwan's southwest was home to a Chinese population numbering close to 1,500 before 1623 when the Dutch first came.
During Dutch Formosa rule 1624 to 1662 The Dutch began to encourage large-scale Han immigration to the island for labour, mainly from the south of Hokkien.
From 1683 to around 1760, the Qing government limited immigration to Taiwan. Such restriction was relaxed following the 1760s and by 1811 there were more than two million Chinese immigrants on Taiwan.
YearPopulation
1684120,000
1764666,210
1782912,920
18111,944,737
18402,500,000
19022,686,356
19264,168,000
19446,269,949
19569,367,661

The 1926 census counted 3,116,400 and 586,300 Hans originating from the Hok-kien and Kwang-tung provinces of Ching Empire or Ming Empire.

After the Second World War

Around 800,000 people, the vast majority being Han, immigrated to Taiwan after the end of the Second World War, when Republic of China took over Taiwan, with the biggest wave taking place around the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949.
Since the mid-1990s, there has been a small amount of Chinese Han immigration into Taiwan. These mainly consist of two categories: brides of businessmen who work in China; and women who have married rural Taiwanese, mostly through a marriage broker.
Around 20% or 34,000 of the Vietnamese people in Taiwan are Hoa people, people of Chinese origin that are mostly Han.

Interactions among Han immigrants

Qing Dynasty

Conflicts

There were violent ethnic conflicts, which played a major role in determining the distribution of different groups of Han peoples in Taiwan. Most conflicts were between people of Chang-chow and Chin-chew origins which includes acts where Quanzhounese fought against Hakka peasants from the southwestern hills of Fujian throughout the period. and between people of Hokkien and Hakkas origins where Hoklo people united to fight against the Hakkas who largely came from Guangdong and a minority from Fujian, is called.
Trying to be a mediator, Ten Iong-sek, the first Taiwanese to achieve the highest degree, jinshi or “Doctor”, in the imperial examination of the Qing Dynasty, wrote an article On Reconciliation. Similar literary works on conflicts between different ethnic subgroups include Hái-Im Poems by Lâu Ka-Bôo and To the Min and Yue people by Nâ Tíng-Guân.

Cultural assimilation

In some regions. where the majority of the population spoked another language, the minority group sometimes adopted the more dominant language and lost their original language. They are called "minnanized" Hakka people.

Hans with different surnames

There were also conflicts between people with different surnames, such as those between different clans in Yilan. While Hans in some other places were prohibited from marrying others with the same surname, Hans in Yilan were discouraged from marrying others with a different surname.

Republic of China

Unlike pre-World War II, when Han immigrants were predominantly of Hok-kien and Hakka origins, post-World War II Hans came from all over mainland China. Their different languages, habits, ideologies and relationships with the Republic of China government sometimes led to conflicts between these two groups.

Interactions with non-Han inhabitants

In Taiwan, the Hans came into contact with the Austronesians, Dutch, Spanish and Japanese.

Hans and Austronesians

The Amis term for Hans is payrag.
According to the historian Melissa J. Brown, within the Taiwanese Minnan community itself, differences in culture indicate the degree to which mixture with Austronesians took place, with most pure Hoklo Han in Northern Taiwan having almost no Austronesian admixture, which is limited to Hoklo Han in Southern Taiwan. Plains aborigines who were mixed and assimilated into the Hoklo Han population at different stages were differentiated between "short-route" and "long-route". The ethnic identity of assimilated Plains aboriginals in the immediate vicinity of Tainan was still known since a Taiwanese girl from an old elite Hoklo family was warned by her mother to stay away from them. The insulting name "fan" was used against plains aborigines by the Taiwanese, and the Hoklo Taiwanese speech was forced upon Aborigines like the Pazeh people. Hoklo Taiwanese has replaced Pazeh and driven it to near extinction. Aboriginal status has been requested by plains aboriginals.

Biological traits and relationships with other Taiwanese/Asian people

Genetic relationships

Part of the maximum-likelihood tree of 75 Asian populations:

Alcohol metabolism

In Taiwan, the prevalence of alcohol dependence among Hans is 10 times lower than that of Austronesians, which is related to genetic, physical, psychological, social, environmental, and cultural factors. An association study by researchers at the Academia Sinica found that genes in alcohol metabolism pathway, especially ADH1B and ALDH2, conferred the major genetic risk for alcohol dependence in Taiwanese Han men.

Languages

The languages used by Han Taiwanese include Mandarin, Hokkien, Hakka, Mindong, Puxian, and other Han languages spoken by some post-World War II immigrants or immigrants from mainland China since the 1990s. The writing systems used include Han characters, Han phonetic notations such as Mandarin Phonetic Symbols for Mandarin and Taiwanese Phonetic Symbols for Minnan and Hakka, and the Latin alphabet for various romanization systems, including Tongyong Pinyin, Wade–Giles, Gwoyeu Romatzyh and Mandarin Phonetic Symbols II for Mandarin, POJ and Taiwanese Minnan Romanization System for Minnan, and Hakka Romanization System for Hakka.
Significant numbers of Puxian Min, Fuzhounese, and Teochew speakers came to Taiwan proper, but they were eventually assimilated into the Hokkien speaking population.

Linguistic Diversity

The Taiwanese linguist Uijin Ang divided Taiwan into 7 linguistic regions, including one Austronesian, five Han and one mixed.
RegionLanguages includedAdministrative regions included
Hakkamajor: Hakka ; minor: Minnan Taoyuan, Hsinchu County, Miaoli County, Taichung, Nantou County, Kaohsiung, Pingtung County
North MinMinnan New Taipei, Taipei, Ilan County, Keelung, Taoyuan
Middle Minmajor: Minnan, Chang-chow; minor: Hakka, TsouHsinchu County, Miaoli County, Taichung, Changhua County, Yunlin County, Nantou
South Minmajor: Minnan ; minor: Hakka Chiayi County, Chiayi City, Tainan, Kaohsiung, Pingtung County
PenghuMinnan Penghu

Influence of Non-Han Languages

Ever since the arrival of Han immigrants in Taiwan, their languages have undergone changes through interactions with other Han or non-Han languages. For example, one unit of land area used in Taiwanese Minnan is Kah, which comes from the Dutch word for "field", akker.
Source languagesHan charactersRomanizationMeaning
Austronesian languages馬不老ma pu laodrunk
Dutch石文sak vunsoap
Minnan 米粉炒bi hun tshafried rice vermicelli
Japanese幫浦phong phupump
Mandarin再見tsai kiangoodbye

, a scenic area in northern Taiwan. Its name came from the Castilian name given by the Spaniards, Punto Diablos, which means 'Cape Devils'.
.
Source languagesPlaceHan charactersNotes
DutchFort Zeelandia熱蘭遮城
DutchCape Hoek富貴角Dutch: hoek
CastilianCape San Diego三貂角Castilian: Santiago; Dutch: St. Jago
CastilianYehliu野柳 Diablos > 野柳
AtayalWulai烏來
BasayJinshan金山Kimpauri/Kimauri > 金包里 >
JapaneseKaohsiung高雄Takau > 打狗 > /Taka-O
JapaneseSongshan松山/Matsu-Yama
JapaneseGuansi關西鹹菜 甕 > /Kan-Sai > /Kan-Sai

Culture

Cuisine

Religions

The most popular religions of Han Taiwanese are Taoism and Buddhism. With 11,796 temples, Taiwan is the country with the highest density of temples in the world.

Surnames

Han surnames in Taiwan

In traditional Han society, children inherit the surname of the father. Population analyses of Han Taiwanese based on the short tandem repeat sequences on the Y chromosome, which is specific to males, shows high haplotype diversity in most surname groups. Except for rare ones, the origins of Han surnames in Taiwan are pretty heterogeneous.

Han surnames used by Austronesian Taiwanese

The naming customs of the Austronesian people in Taiwan have been greatly endangered by the dominant Han culture under the rule of Ching and Republic of China or Japanese culture during the Japanization period. Austronesians were often forced to have surnames in Han characters that, depending on the policies then, may or may not be related to their original surnames.

Villages

s formed an important part of the life of early Han immigrants. Famous temples include Taiwan Confucian Temple and Taipei Confucius Temple.

Written Records/Literature

One of the earliest written records of Taiwanese Hakka is A Tragic Ballad about Hakka Sailing to Taiwan, a work written in the Raoping dialect about the life and struggle of Hakka immigrants to Taiwan under the Ching rule.

Folk literature: Tales and Legends

One of the best known Han folktales in Taiwan is the Grandaunt Tiger.

Architecture

Taiwanese architecture refers to a style of buildings constructed by the Han people, and is a branch of Chinese architecture. The style is generally afforded to buildings constructed before the modernization under Japanese occupation, in the 1930s. Different groups of Han immigrants differ in their styles of architecture. Being far away from the center of political power of Beijing, buildings were constructed free of construction standards. This, coupled with inferior level of expertise of artisans and craftsmen, and the Japanese colonization, the architectural style diverged from the ones on the mainland. Many traditional houses have been designated national monuments by the Taiwanese government, such as the Lin Family Mansion and Garden and the House of Ten Long-Sek

Handicrafts

Hakka Taiwanese have long traditions of indigo dyeing.
The Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folkgame Festival exhibits collections of traditional Han Taiwanese toys.

Arts and Music

SubgroupCategoryNotable examplesNotable artists/groups
Minnan布袋戲 Pili , Legend of the Sacred Stone黃俊雄
Minnan歌仔戲 楊麗花, 明華園
Minnan陣頭 Electric-Techno Neon GodsChio-Tian Folk Drums & Arts Troupe
MinnanMusic南管 Lâm-im, 北管
Hakka客家戲 三腳採茶戲
post-World War II immigrants相聲 那一夜我們說相聲 吳兆南

SubgroupNotable examplesNotable placesNotable singers/composers
Minnan丟丟銅仔 Yilan
Minnan思想起 HengchunChen Da
Minnan望春風 Teng Yu-hsien
Hakka十八摸

Films

Other Taiwanese ethnic groups

Languages of Han Taiwanese

History of Han Taiwanese

Culture of Han Taiwanese