DATA SOURCES: BBC, BRITANNICA, LANGUAGES OF THE WORLD, JUNE TSAI, LANGUAGE GULPER,
FOX NEWS, ABOUT WORLD LANGUAGES, INDIGENOUS WELLNESS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
THE FORMOSAN LANGUAGES:
A SNAPSHOT175,000
speakers (approx.)
23
languagesOver 42
dialectstaiwan timeline
ȑ Early Austronesians
live in Taiwan and nearby
south China
ȑ The Formosan
languages are spoken
widely across Taiwanȑ Austronesians migrate
to Southeast Asia and as
far as Polynesiaȑ Chinese settlers arrive
and intermarry. Mandarin
displaces Formosanȑ Formosan languages
are officially recognised
in Taiwan, with laws to
preserve and revive themaround 50th
century bcearound 20th
century bcearound 40th
century bce17th century 2017The distribution of Formosan
languages in Taiwan before
Chinese colonisation as described
by Austronesian linguist Robert Blust
Austronesian
Language Groups
across Taiwan
7
vulnerable7
endangered9
extinctDATA SOURCES: ROBERT BLUST (1999),
UNESCO ATLAS OF THE WORLD’S LANGUAGES IN DANGERSIRAIYATAIVOANHOANYABABUZAPAZEHTHAO TAKITUDOTAKITUDORUKAIPYUMAISHBUKUNTAOKAS SAISIYATTAKOPULAN
KANAKANBU
SAAROATFUEADUHTUTAPANGUTROBIAWANNATAORANQANQANTTS’OLETS’OLETS’OLETAAITUNGHOTS’OLETS’OLETS’OLETAROKOTAYALBASAYKETANGALANKAVALANLUIYANGPAPORASOUTHERN AMISSOUTHERN AMISSOUTHERNCENTRALBUNUNAMISTAVALONG-VATA’ANSOUTHERN AMISSOUTHERN AMISKULUNEXISTING LANGUAGE
EXTINCT LANGUAGE
DIALECTLEGEND
East Formosan
Western Plains
Northern Formosan
Atayalic
Bunun
Tsouic
Rukai
Pyuma
Paiwan
Malayo-PolynesianPAIWANTSOU