Xincheng Incident

1896 event in Shinjō, Japan
Xincheng Incident
DateNovember 1896
Location
Shinjō, Tainan Prefecture, Japanese Taiwan (modern-day Xincheng, Hualien County, Taiwan)
Result Truku's victory
Belligerents
Truku Tribe  Empire of Japan
Commanders and leaders
Haruq Nawi Empire of Japan Hiroshi Yuji
Strength
20 21
Casualties and losses
Unknown 13[1]
  • v
  • t
  • e
Taiwanese rebellions against Japanese rule
  • Xincheng Incident 1896
  • Hitome-no-seki Incident (人止關事件) 1902
  • Shimaigahara Incident (姊妹原事件) 1903
  • Wili Incident (威里事件) 1906
  • Beipu Uprising 1907
  • Truku War 1914
  • Kosempo Incident (甲仙埔事件) 1915
  • Tapani Incident 1915
  • Dahun Incident (大分事件) 1915-1933
  • Musha Incident 1930
  • Kobayashi Incident (小林事件) 1937

The Xincheng Incident (Chinese: 新城事件) is an event that took place in 1896 in the city of Shinjō (present-day Xincheng), Tainan Prefecture, Taiwan, Empire of Japan. The chief of the Truku tribe, Haruq Nawi, led 20 aboriginal warriors against the Japanese forces, killing 13 Japanese soldiers.[2]

Background and causes

Since the Japanese empire took over Taiwan in 1895, there had been a growing tension between the local aboriginal tribes trying to protect their villages and hunting grounds and the Japanese forces which aimed to take over control of aboriginals lands in order to exploit natural resources.

The Xincheng event was mostly caused by sexual abuses of aboriginal women by Japanese soldiers.[1]

Consequences

After the incident the Japanese forces launched a series of retaliatory attacks on the Truku, taking advantage of their terrain knowledge manage to resist hiding in the mountain villages. The Japanese were forced to withdraw and offered amnesty to the aboriginal who surrendered.

After different conflicts the Truku War ended in 1914 with the victory of the Japanese over the Truku people.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "新城事件歷史現場變遷" (PDF) (in Chinese). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b "太魯閣戰爭百年回顧" (PDF) (in Chinese). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 April 2015.