BEIJING — As China staged live-fire military drills around Taiwan featuring aircraft, warships and rocket launches, the Chinese foreign minister reiterated Beijing's aim to achieve '' complete reunification '' with the island it claims as its own.
Taipei pushes back against those sovereignty claims. Taiwan, it says, never belonged to China in its current constitutional and political form — and has never been ruled by the Chinese Communist Party.
Taiwan's history is one that includes myriad phases, rulers and squabbles. Here are some key periods and dates in the contested island's history:
1600s to 1885: Colonization and Chinese rule
In the 1600s, Dutch and Spanish colonizers compete for control of the subtropical island known then as Formosa, home to Indigenous populations as well as some Han Chinese migrants. The Dutch East India Company establishes a base in southern Taiwan, near today's city of Tainan, while Spanish colonizers set up forts in the north.
The Dutch eventually expel the Spanish before being defeated in 1662 by Koxinga, a military leader loyal to China's Ming dynasty.
In 1684, the Qing dynasty, newly in power, incorporates the island as part of China's Fujian province. In 1885, Taiwan is declared a stand-alone Chinese province under the control of Han Chinese governors.
1895: Japanese takeover