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FORMOSA

This island, one of the largest in Asia, is situated between latitude 22 and 26: degrees N., and longitude 120 and 122 degrees E., and is separated from the coast of Fukien, China, by a channel about one hundred miles in width. It is a prolongation of the Japanese and Loochoo Archipelagoes, and in 1895 was incorporated in the Jap- anese Empire. Its name Formosa, signifying "beautiful island," was conferred by the Portuguese, the first Europeans to visit it, but it was called Taiwan (Great Bay) by the Chinese, to whom it belonged from 1661 to 1894. It is said that the Japanese endeavoured to form a colony in the island in 1620, but large numbers of Chinese were settled there prior to that date. The Dutch arrived in 1634, and founded several settlements, and traces of their occupation are still to be found in the island, but they were compelled in 1661 to retire by the Chinese pirate chief Koxinga, who then assumed the sovereignty of western Formosa. His grandson and successor, however, was induced, twenty-two years later, to resign the crown to the Emperor of China. By the Treaty of Shimonoseki, which terminated the war between China and Japan in 1895, the island was ceded to Japan as one of the conditions of peace, and on the 1st June, 1895, the formal surrender was made, the ceremony taking place on board ship outside Keelung. The resident Chinese officials, however, declared a republic, and offered resistance, and it was not until the end of October that the opposing forces were completely overcome, the last stand being made in the south by Liu Yang-fu, the Black Flag General, of Tonkin notoriety. Takow was bombarded and captured on 15th October, and Anping was peacefully occupied on the 21st of the same month, Liu Yung-fu having taken refuge in flight.

Formosa is about 260 miles in length, and from 60 to 70 miles broad in the widest part. It is intersected from north to south by a range of mountains, which forms a kind of backbone to the island, the loftiest peak of which, Mount Morrison (Niitakayama), is 13,880 feet high. On the western side of this range the slope is more gradual than on the eastern side, and broken by fertile valleys which lose themselves in the large undulating plain on which the Chinese are settled. The high land east of the dividing chain is peopled by an aboriginal race who acknowledged no allegiance to the Chinese Government and made frequent raids upon the outlying Chinese settle- ments, but as the island is being steadily opened up conditions are improving, and doubtless in course of time they will become emerged in the general population, although naturally a savage and warlike people, allied to the Malays and Polynesians, who lived principally by the chase.

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The population of Formosa in estimated to be as follows:- Natives (Chinese), 3,371,358; Japanese (excluding military), 164,266; Foreigners (mostly Chinese), 24,466; Savages, 95,149-total, 3,655,239. In addition to the foregoing, there are tribes of aborigines, described in the returns as savages." living within the administrative districts and under Government control aggregating approximately 48,000. ceusus was taken in the autumn of 1925, but too late for the inclusion of the figures in this year's (1926) report.

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The revenue, which down to 1904 averaged about Yen 20,000,000 annually, has since steadily increased, the figure for 1923-24 being Yen 130,500,000, and for 1922-23 Yen 111,097,561. The value of the exports to foreign countries in 1924 was Yen 42,575,953, and the imports from abroad totalled Yen 46,424,036, the previous year's returns being Yen 29,152,437, and Yen 39,207,867 respectively. The trade with Japan for the same period was --Exports, Yen 211,098,223, and Imports, Yen 86,573,972, as compared with Yen 169,442,365, and Yen 70,921,625 in 1923.

The products of Formosa are numerous, vegetation being everywhere most luxuriant, testifying to the richness of the soil. Tea, camphor, rice, sugar and bananas are largely cultivated, the three latter being extensively shipped to Japan. The fauna includes bears, monkeys, deer, wild boar, badgers, martens, the scaly ant-eater, and other smaller animals. Birds are not very numerous, and snakes not as common as might be expected where vegetation is so abundant. As regards minerals there are at present only two gold mines running (viz., those at Kinkosaki and Zuiho in the vicinity of Keelung). The total mineral products of the island during 1924, according to investigations made by the Mining Bureau are given as approximately Gold Yen 672,000, Silver Yen 22,783, Copper and Copper ores Yen

589,000, Coal Yen 9,373,000, Petroleum Yen 200,000, Sulphur Yen 34,000.

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