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Historical evolution of Chaozhou city
Chaozhou Town is located in Pingtung Plain in western Taiwan. The place name of Chaozhou was originally the name of Chaozhou Prefecture in Guangdong Province. In the early stage of development, there were many immigrants from Chaozhou, Guangdong Province. After opening up the new world, these immigrants transplanted the place names of their ancestral homes to this newly developed land because they missed the mountains, rivers, vegetation and customs here, and named it "Chao" Zhuang, referred to as "Chao" for short. Early ancestors gathered and lived in old streets, built Sanshanwang Temple to serve the temple, and developed the city streets of Chaozhou today.

After Zheng Chenggong ruled Taiwan Province in the late Ming Dynasty, Taiwan Province belonged to Wannian County (later Wannian Country). In the 23rd year of Kangxi in Qing Dynasty (1684), it was renamed Fengshan County. In the early days of Japanese occupation of Taiwan Province, Chaozhou District was established, belonging to the Chaozhou branch of the Monkey Hall. Later, it was changed to Zhuang, belonging to Chaozhou County, Kaohsiung. 194510125 October, after getting rid of the colonial rule of Japanese imperialism, it changed its town and belonged to Chaozhou District of Kaohsiung County. 1950 was changed to Pingtung county, where all residents spoke Taiwanese and did not understand Chaozhou dialect.

In the 21st year of Guangxu reign in Qing Dynasty (1895), Japanese imperialism launched the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 to invade China, forcing the Qing government to sign the treaty of shimonoseki, humiliating the country and occupying Taiwan Province Province and Penghu Islands in China. Lin Shaomao, a native of Ahou, Fengshan County (now Pingtung County), was angry at the atrocities committed by Japan in Taiwan Province Province. Hundreds of people gathered in Fengling, south of Fengshan, Tainan, to revolt against Japan. The team quickly grew to thousands of people and became the commander-in-chief of the insurgents in Fengshan, Ahou and Chaozhou, often attacking Japanese troops in Tainan. On February 27th, 1898, 1898, together with Chen Fa, more than 3,000 people held an "anti-Japanese military and civilian uprising" in the southern region to jointly besiege Chaoshan and defeat Japanese reinforcements in the central region. The insurgents killed a Japanese in Chaozhou, set fire to the Japanese gendarmerie station and office in Chaozhou, and exposed the body of the director of Chaozhou office in the street, which was very popular. Four days later, Chaozhou fell, and the rebels retreated to the spring area to continue their struggle. History is called "Chaozhou Incident".