The ownership of the two Chiang Diary was officially transferred from the Hoover Research Institute in the United States to the Taiwan National History Museum, and this week has returned to Taiwan.The curator of the Hoover Archives Wei on Saturday (September 16) said that in the future, copying will continue to be provided for external review.
The Hoover Research Institute of Stanford University on Saturday issued a press release on Saturday that the handwriting diary of the late President Chiang Kai -shek and his son Jiang Jingguo was stored in the Hoover Research Institute for nearly 20 years, and he returned to Taiwan this week.
The Institute of Hoover said that Chiang Kai -shek's diary is the historical material with the largest number of times in the museum.And expanding the understanding of modern China, the Cold War, and global history.
The Hoover Institute said that such achievements have not been achieved in the past.In the future, the copy of the handwriting diary will continue to provide academic research for free, "including the unblocked collection of some before."
The time range covered by Jiang Jingguo's diary was from the end of Jiang Jingguo's 1937 to return to Taiwan in the Soviet Union, to 1979 one year after he took office.The United States ended diplomatic relations with Taiwan and established diplomatic relations with Beijing.Diary revealed that during the severe period of Chiang Kai -shek, Jiang Jingguo became the actual ruler and decision maker in Taiwan, and let the outside world understand the inner world of Jiang Jingguo.
Jiang Jingguo's daughter -in -law Jiang Fangzhiyi lent 51 boxes of documents such as the two Jiang Diary to the American Hoover Institute in 2005, and authorized the Institute to provide a copy of the document to interested researchers, but Jiang Youguo Jiang Youmei, the granddaughter of Jiang JingguoWaiting for people, the diary ownership should be shared by Jiang Jingguo's heirs and preserved in the family, resulting in controversy in the ownership of file ownership.In September 2013, the Hoover Research Institute sued all the people who might claim the ownership of the diary.
After 10 years of lawsuits, the Court of Federal Federal District Court of California in the United States decided on July 11 this year, and the ownership of 51 boxes of documents, including the two Jiang diary, belonged to the Taiwan National History Museum.