Imperial University (1928–1945) (1895–1945) During the
Japanese rule of Taiwan (1895–1945), the
Empire of Japan established the modern Taiwanese education system by installing educational institutions that used Western-style academic systems.
Den Kenjirō, the
Governor-General of Taiwan, proposed the establishment of a university in Taiwan in 1922 and Japanese prime minister
Tanaka Giichi presented a bill titled "Establishment of the Taiwan Imperial University" to the
Cabinet of Japan on February 25, 1928. It was planned to be located on the grounds of the Taihoku Senior School of Agriculture and Forestry in
Taihoku Prefecture. On March 16, 1928, National Taiwan University was founded as "Taihoku Imperial University" (; ), the seventh of the Japanese Empire's
Imperial Universities. The first
freshman class was inaugurated on April 30, 1928, with classes beginning on May 5. Of the 1931 graduating class, 41 students were Japanese and five were Taiwanese. The first faculties founded at Taihoku Imperial University were the Faculty of Literature and Politics and the Faculty of Science and Agriculture, totalling 59 students. Subsequently, the Faculty of Medicine was established in 1935 and the Faculty of Engineering was established in 1943. The Faculty of Science and Agriculture was divided in 1943 as two separate colleges: the Faculty of Science and the Faculty of Agriculture. Because the university was considered a part of expanding the
Japanese colonial empire in the
Pacific Ocean, it was supported by multiple Japanese scholars and received government
research grants for funding policy programs. Taiwanese students could not compete with Japanese students since the university prioritized Japanese enrollment. From 1928 to 1943, the university's student body was approximately 80 percent Japanese and 20 percent Taiwanese. Of its more than 300 faculty members in 1940, all professorships but one were held by Japanese scholars. Taihoku granted degrees after a minimum of six years of study. College classes consisted of "lectures" taught by professors, assistant professors, and other faculty. By 1945, it had five colleges with a total of 114 lectures.
National University (1945–present) visiting NTU in 1977 After the
Surrender of Japan in September 1945, the government of the
Republic of China (ROC) assumed control of the university and initiated
sinicization reforms. On August 15, 1945, the
Kuomintang government appointed
Lo Tsung-lo, a Japanese-educated academic, to oversee the transition of Taihoku's curriculum, teaching system, and faculties from its Japanese administration. At the time, the university had 1,614 faculty and staff members to teach 1,767 students, 351 of whom were Taiwanese. All Japanese students were later transferred back to Japan. Under the Kuomintang, the ROC government initiated a program of reforming all universities and colleges in accordance with Chinese models that incorporated American academics, administration, and organization, in addition to installing American curriculum and degree requirements. Reforms also had the goal of reversing the
Japanization that had influenced Taiwan during Japanese rule. Universities and colleges were opened to Taiwanese students without restrictions; Taihoku Imperial University was renamed "National Taiwan University" in November 1945 and it was reorganized and expanded to six faculties: Liberal Arts, Law, Science, Medicine, Engineering, and Agriculture. Up to 500 students could enroll in each faculty and the enrollment period was standardized to four years as opposed to the Japanese system of three to six years. Under governor
Chen Yi, however, the school received no government funding from 1945 to 1947, causing it to cease operations until Chinese historian
Fu Ssu-nien assumed the presidency. Fu oversaw the abolition of the
Japanese college-preparatory school system and, by the end of 1947, the university operated entirely on a Chinese higher education model. The university became the most prominent educational institution in the country, with more than 80 percent of all Taiwanese high school applicants listing the university as their preferred choice for college admission by 1977. In the following decades after World War II, National Taiwan University underwent rapid expansion. By 2009, NTU grew to 54 departments, 100 graduate institutes (which offered 100 master's programs and 91 doctoral programs in total), and 25 research centers, including the Center for Condensed Matter Sciences, the Center for Biotechnology, the Japanese Research Center, and others. == Campuses ==