Governorate of Formosa | |||||||||||||
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1624–1668 | |||||||||||||
Flag of the Dutch East India Company
Emblem of the Dutch East India Company
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Status | Dutch colony | ||||||||||||
Capital | Zeelandia (now Anping, Tainan) | ||||||||||||
Official languages | Dutch | ||||||||||||
Common languages | East Formosan languages • Hokkien | ||||||||||||
Religion | Dutch Reformed, native animistic religion, Chinese folk religion | ||||||||||||
Government | Governorate | ||||||||||||
Governor | |||||||||||||
• 1624–1625 | Martinus Sonck | ||||||||||||
• 1656–1662 | Frederick Coyett | ||||||||||||
Historical era | Age of Discovery | ||||||||||||
• Established | 1624 | ||||||||||||
1661–1662 | |||||||||||||
• Abandonment of Keelung | 1668 | ||||||||||||
Currency | Dutch guilder | ||||||||||||
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Today part of | Republic of China (Taiwan) |
The island of Taiwan, also commonly known as Formosa, was partly under colonial rule by the Dutch Republic from 1624 to 1662 and from 1664 to 1668. In the context of the Age of Discovery, the Dutch East India Company established its presence on Formosa to trade with the Ming Empire in neighbouring China and Tokugawa shogunate in Japan, and to interdict Portuguese and Spanish trade and colonial activities in East Asia.
The Dutch were not universally welcomed, and uprisings by both aborigines and recent Han arrivals were quelled by the Dutch military on more than one occasion. With the rise of the Qing dynasty in the early 17th century, the Dutch East India Company cut ties with the Ming dynasty and allied with the Qing instead, in exchange for the right to unfettered access to their trade and shipping routes. The colonial period was brought to an end after the 1662 siege of Fort Zeelandia by Koxinga's army who promptly dismantled the Dutch colony, expelled the Dutch and established the Ming loyalist, anti-Qing Kingdom of Tungning.