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・ 2274 Ehrsson
・ 22740 Rayleigh
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・ 227th (Sudbury-Manitoulin-Algoma) Battalion (Men o' the North), CEF
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・ 227th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom)
・ 227th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)
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・ 228 BC
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228 Peace Memorial Park
・ 2282 Andrés Bello
・ 22838 Darcyhampton
・ 22846 Fredwhitaker
・ 2285 Ron Helin
・ 228th
・ 228th Battalion (Northern Fusiliers), CEF
・ 228th Combat Communications Squadron
・ 228th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom)
・ 228th Mixed Brigade
・ 229
・ 229 (number)
・ 229 Adelinda
・ 229 BC
・ 229 West 43rd Street


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228 Peace Memorial Park : ウィキペディア英語版
228 Peace Memorial Park


The 228 Peace Memorial Park is a historic site and municipal park located at 3 Ketagalan Boulevard, Zhongzheng District, Taipei, Taiwan. The park contains memorials to victims of the February 28 Incident of 1947, including the Taipei 228 Memorial that stands at the center of the park and the Taipei 228 Memorial Museum, housed at the site of a former radio station that operated under Japanese and Kuomintang rule. The National Taiwan Museum stands at the park's north entrance. The park also has a bandshell and exercise areas.
==History==
The park was originally established in 1900 as Taihoku Park () during the Japanese colonial period, on former temple grounds. It was the first European-style urban park in Taiwan, placed on the grounds of the Colonial Governor's Office (today's Presidential Office Building).
In 1930, Taiwan's Japanese authorities established a radio station at the site. The station initially housed the Taipei Broadcasting Bureau, an arm of the Government-General Propaganda Bureau's Information Office. The following year, the Taiwan Broadcast Association was formed to handle island-wide broadcasts. The Taihoku Park radio station became the center of broadcast activity for the Association.
The park was renamed Taipei New Park in 1945 by the Kuomintang authorities who replaced the Japanese after World War II in 1945. They renamed the broadcasting agency the Taiwan Broadcasting Company.〔 The station became the primary broadcast organ of the Kuomintang government and military.
In 1947, a group of protesters, angry over a brutal police action against Taiwanese civilians, took over the station and used it to broadcast accusations against the Kuomintang government. The action formed part of a chain of events now referred to as the February 28 Incident. A subsequent, more severe crackdown by the Nationalist government restored the station to Kuomintang control and ushered in Taiwan's period of White Terror. Two years later, the Kuomintang lost ground in the Chinese Civil War and its leaders retreated to Taiwan. Trying to establish themselves as China's true national government in exile, they renamed the bureau the Broadcasting Corporation of China (BCC).
The Taipei City government took over operation of the radio station building when the BCC moved in 1972. City officials made it the site of the Taipei City Government Parks and Street Lights Office.〔
As Taiwan entered its modern democracy period in the 1990s, President Lee Teng-hui offered an official apology in 1995 and invited free discussion of Taiwan's past. For the first time the February 28 Incident of 1947 was officially acknowledged and its significance openly debated. In 1996, the Taipei City Government designated the former radio station building a historical site. Two years later, the building was made the home of the Taipei 228 Memorial Museum and the park was rededicated as 228 Peace Memorial Park.〔
The 228 Massacre Monument was designed by Taiwanese architect Cheng Tsu-tsai (, aka Deh Tzu-tsai or TT Deh), who was convicted of attempted murder in 1971 following a 1970 assassination attempt on Chiang Ching-kuo. After serving his sentence, he was imprisoned for illegal entry to Taiwan in 1991 and filed his design entry from prison. The Monument is inscribed with an exhortation for peace and unity.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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