Jump to content

Chinese Taipei at the Asian Games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese Taipei at the
Asian Games
IOC codeTPE
NOCChinese Taipei Olympic Committee
Medals
Ranked 9th
Gold
118
Silver
164
Bronze
304
Total
586
Summer appearances
Winter appearances

Taiwan, officially the Republic of China (ROC), first competed at the Asian Games in 1954 and continued participating at the games under various names.[1] Due to political factors, the ROC delegation was refused to participate in the 1962 Asian Games by host Indonesian government.[2][3] In 1973, the People's Republic of China (PRC) applied for participation in the Asian Games.[4][5] The PRC's application was approved by the Asian Games Federation and the ROC was expelled.

After a settlement on the membership in the International Olympic Committee, Taiwan started competing as "Chinese Taipei" (TPE) at the Olympics. The membership of Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee was granted by the Olympic Council of Asia in 1986 and the Chinese Taipei delegation has been in the Asian Games since 1990.[6][7]

Asian Games

[edit]

Asian Para Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
2010 Guangzhou 8 8 7 11 26
2014 Incheon 14 4 10 24 38
2018 Jakarta 17 2 9 14 25
2022 Hangzhou 13 4 4 12 20
Total 15 18 30 61 109

Medals per sport

Sport Gold Silver Bronze Total

Athletics 1 3 10 14

Badminton 0 1 2 3

Judo 0 2 2 4

Para Dance Sport 0 2 2 4

Para Tenpin Bowling 5 9 10 24

Powerlifting 2 0 2 4

Swimming 6 3 3 12

Table Tennis 0 6 15 21

Wheelchair Tennis 0 0 3 3

Total 14 26 49 89

Medals per year

Year Gold Silver Bronze Total

2018 2 9 14 25

2014 4 10 24 38

2010 8 7 11 26

Total 14 26 49 89

Asian Beach Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
2008 Bali 11 2 2 3 7
2010 Muscat 18 0 1 4 5
2012 Haiyang 5 3 6 6 15
2014 Phuket 12 3 8 6 17
2016 Danang 18 2 4 10 16
Total 12 10 21 29 60

Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
Asian Indoor Games
2005 Bangkok 9 5 5 3 13
2007 Macau 10 4 2 6 12
2009 Hanoi 14 3 5 15 23
Asian Martial Arts Games
2009 Bangkok 9 4 5 11 20
Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games
2013 Incheon 7 3 5 12 20
2017 Ashgabat 12 9 7 12 28
Total 12 28 29 59 116

Asian Youth Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
2009 Singapore 12 1 2 7 10
2013 Nanjing 5 6 11 13 30
2021 Shantou Future event
Total 7 7 13 20 40

Asian Youth Para Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
2009 Tokyo 9 7 3 1 11
2013 Kuala Lumpur 14 4 5 2 11
2017 Dubai did not participate
Total 12 11 8 3 22

East Asian Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
1993 Shanghai 5 6 5 19 30
1997 Busan 5 8 22 19 49
2001 Osaka 5 6 16 31 53
2005 Macau 4 12 34 26 72
2009 Hong Kong 5 8 34 47 89
2013 Tianjin 4 17 28 46 91
Total 4 57 139 188 384

East Asian Youth Games

[edit]

Medals by Games

[edit]
Games Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
2019 Taichung cancelled
2023 Ulaanbaatar
Total

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "賽會". Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee (in Chinese). Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  2. ^ "Asia's Strangest Games". Taiwan Today. 1 September 1962. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Taiwan in Time: A dark day for Taiwanese diplomacy". Taipei Times. 19 August 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  4. ^ Huebner, Stefan (31 October 2016). "Iranian Great Power Ambitions and China's Return to the Olympic Movement, 1973–74". Wilson Center. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  5. ^ Hao, Yuxiang (2019). "The Asian Games Federation's Admission of the All-China Sports Federation and the People's Republic of China's Asian Games Debut: A History, 1972–1974". olympics.com. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  6. ^ "Asian Olympic Council Gives PLO a Role". Los Angeles Times. 27 September 1986. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  7. ^ "China, the Asian Games and Asian politics (1974–2006)" (PDF). The International Journal of the History of Sport. 29 (1): 98–112. 2012. doi:10.1080/09523367.2012.634986. S2CID 216149968.