Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Did Daming ever directly rule Taiwan Province Province?

Did Daming ever directly rule Taiwan Province Province?

No, it's an answer from Zhihu netizen sapereaude.

This netizen may be from Taiwan Province province, and they are all traditional Chinese characters.

Yes, at the end of Zhu Ming's life, this island, now called Taiwan Province Province, was any of the 38th largest islands in the world.

They were not under the jurisdiction of the Zhu Ming court, nor were they ruled by the Zhu Ming dynasty or any previous dynasty.

Besides, even Zhu Ming is not a "vassal state" or a "foreign vassal state".

Before 1624, or before1661-kloc-0/662, or before 1683- 1684, this island is now called Taiwan Province Province.

No part of the world's 38th largest island is subject to the integration or control of any foreign political forces.

At that time, and before, the island was still a tribal society, and there were countless tribes (later called "she" in Chinese).

Or at most a large political organization composed of a regional social organization alliance. Not integrated.

【 Even when treaty of shimonoseki was ceded in 1895, the influence of the Qing government had not reached the whole island.

Especially in the eastern and central mountainous areas).

/kloc-at the end of 0/6th century, after Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified Japan, he was triumphant, supercilious, and intended to expand outward. He sent letters everywhere, asking all countries in the world to pay tribute to him (as far as possible, he also sent letters to the governor of the Portuguese Empire stationed on the west coast of India). 1593, he sent a man named Harada Sun Qilang to this island with that kind of letter and gave it to the king of "Gaoshan country" (at that time, Japan called this island Gaosha or Gaoshan country, Gaosha country). As a result, no one can be found and no king can be handed over. The original still exists in Japan. Looking for the king, looking for the Lord, there were countless lords and kings on the island at that time! That's because Toyotomi Hideyoshi, as the Japanese ruler, knew nothing about the island and was blinded by his arrogance, which made such a joke.

But at that time, Japanese maritime merchants, or pirates (like Fujian and Guangdong maritime merchants, or pirates-in that dangerous era, maritime merchants were sometimes inseparable from pirates), because they would pass by on their way to and from Nanyang and stop to replenish drinking water, and so on, there were also some places on the island that were suitable for berthing and trading with Chinese maritime merchants, so they were not too strange to some places on the island.

At the end of Zhu's life, the people on this island, countless tribes, countless societies, and the imperial courts of the then and former emperors of China,

No tribute, no communication. Of course, even a "foreign vassal" or "vassal state" can't be called, let alone ruled by which dynasty.

I have answered many questions about the history of Taiwan Province Province and the past of Taiwan Province Province, one of which is

My more detailed answer is more directly related to the current topic, so I attach a link.

As a supplement/appendix to the above contents-