1993 in Taiwan
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| See also: | Other events of 1993 History of Taiwan • Timeline • Years | ||||
Events from the year 1993 in Taiwan. This year is numbered Minguo 82 according to the official Republic of China calendar.
Incumbents
[edit]- President – Lee Teng-hui
- Vice President – Lien Chan
- Premier – Hau Pei-tsun, Lien Chan
- Vice Premier – Shih Chi-yang, Hsu Li-teh
Events
[edit]March
[edit]- 7 March – The establishment of Civil Party.
September
[edit]- 28 September – The launch of TVBS.
October
[edit]- 15 October – The establishment of Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats in Taipei.
- 16 October – The inauguration of Institute of Yilan County History in Yilan County.
Births
[edit]- 3 January – Candy Chen, dancer, actress, host, singer and model
- 24 February – Shuai Pei-ling, badminton player
- 12 May – Ming Jie, actor and singer
- 20 May – Lin Shih-chia, archer[1]
- 30 June – Lin Chia-yu, badminton player
- 1 August – Chen Szu-yu, table tennis player
- 12 August – Hannah Quinlivan, actress and model
- 29 August – Oceana Wu, actress
- 19 September – Chan Hao-ching, tennis player
- 26 September – Huang Wei-chieh, baseball player
- 7 November – Tan Ya-ting, archer[2]
Deaths
[edit]- 7 March – Yang Chi-tseng, 94, politician and engineer, Minister of Economic Affairs (1955–1965).
- 11 May – Chen Chi-chuan, 94, Mayor of Kaohsiung (1960–1968).
- 21 May – Liu Kuo-tsai, 81–82, politician, President of the Legislative Yuan (1988–1990), Vice President of the Legislative Yuan (1972–1988).
- 20 June – Yu Yu-hsien, 58, economist, Minister of Council of Agriculture of the Republic of China (1988–1992).
- 11 December – Ku Cheng-kang, 91, politician and anti-communist activist.
- 24 December – Yen Chia-kan, 88, President of the Republic of China (1975–1978), Vice President (1966–1975), Premier (1963–1972).
References
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1993 in Taiwan.
- ^ "Shih-Chia LIN - Olympic | Chinese Taipei". International Olympic Committee. 11 April 2017. Retrieved 11 April 2019.
- ^ "Ya-Ting TAN - Olympic Archery | Chinese Taipei". International Olympic Committee. 20 November 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2019.



