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Taiwan . As early as the Sanguozhi and Suishu, the military and political exchanges between the mainland and Taiwan were recorded. In the Tang Dynasty, the exchanges became more frequent, and there were more mentions in poems and essays. In the Song Dynasty, there were "registered households" in Taiwan. In other words, Taiwan and Penghu had officially implemented the household registration management system of the Chinese central government at that time. Mr. Sun Yat-sen said: "China is a unified country, and this is firmly imprinted in our historical consciousness. It is this consciousness that enables us to be preserved as a country." In 1992, the ARATS and the Taiwan Straits Foundation were authorized to conduct consultations on the issue of adhering to the one-China principle in cross-strait affairs talks. After the Hong Kong talks in October 1992 and a series of correspondence and telegraphic exchanges thereafter, they reached a consensus that they verbally stated that "both sides of the strait adhere to the one-China principle", which was later summarized as the "92 Consensus." Its core meaning is that the mainland and Taiwan belong to the same China, and the two sides of the strait are not state-to-state relations, thus clearly defining the fundamental nature of cross-strait relations.

Reference List 朱树. 台湾是中国固有领土[J]. 团结,1997(03):47-48.