Tainan




Special municipality in Southern Taiwan, Republic of China (Taiwan)






































































































Tainan


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臺南市

Special municipality
Tainan City

Clockwise from top: Downtown Tainan, Statue of Yoichi Hatta, THSR Tainan Station, Dan zai noodles, Fort Provintia, Beehive firework in Yanshui.
Clockwise from top: Downtown Tainan, Statue of Yoichi Hatta, THSR Tainan Station, Dan zai noodles, Fort Provintia, Beehive firework in Yanshui.





Flag of Tainan
Flag

Official logo of Tainan

Etymology: pinyin: Táinán; literally: "Taiwan south"
Nickname(s): 
The Phoenix City (鳳凰城),[1] The Prefecture City (府城)

Location of Tainan
Country
 Republic of China (Taiwan)
Region Southern Taiwan
Seat
Anping District and Xinying District[2]
Districts
Government

 • Type Tainan City Government
 • Mayor

Huang Wei-cher (DPP)
Area

[3][4]

 • Special municipality

2,191.65 km2 (846.20 sq mi)
 • Urban

259 km2 (100 sq mi)
Area rank 7 out of 22
Population
(2016)[5]

 • Special municipality
1,885,252
 • Rank 6 of 22
 • Density 860/km2 (2,200/sq mi)
 • Urban
[6]

1,170,000
 • Urban density 4,500/km2 (12,000/sq mi)
Time zone
UTC+8 (National Standard Time)
Postal code
700-745
Area code(s) (0)6
ISO 3166 code TW-TNN
Bird Pheasant-tailed jacana
Flower Phalaenopsis
Tree Delonix regia
Website
www.tainan.gov.tw/tainanE (in English)





























Tainan City
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 臺南市 or 台南市
Simplified Chinese 台南市













































Japanese name
Kanji 台南市
Kana たいなんし
Kyūjitai 臺南市








Tainan (Hokkien POJ: Tâi-lâm), officially Tainan City, is a special municipality of Taiwan, facing the Formosan Strait or Taiwan Strait in the west and south. Tainan is the oldest city on the island of Taiwan and also commonly known as the "Capital City" (Chinese: 府城; pinyin: Fǔchéng; POJ: Hú-siâⁿ) for its over 200 years of history as the capital of Taiwan under Koxinga and later Qing dynasty rule. Tainan's complex history of comebacks, redefinitions and renewals inspired its popular nickname "the Phoenix City".[7]


As Taiwan's oldest urban area, Tainan was initially established by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) as a ruling and trading base called Fort Zeelandia during the period of Dutch rule on the island. After Dutch colonists were defeated by Koxinga in 1661, Tainan remained as the capital of the Tungning Kingdom until 1683 and afterwards the capital of Taiwan Prefecture under Qing Dynasty rule until 1887, when the new provincial capital was moved to Taipei. Tainan has been historically regarded as one of the oldest cities in Taiwan, and its former name, Tayouan, has been claimed to be the origin of the name "Taiwan". It is also one of Taiwan's cultural capitals, for its rich folk cultures including the famous local street food and traditional cuisine, extensively preserved Taoist rites and other living local traditions covering everything from child birth to funerals. The city houses the first Confucian school–temple in Taiwan, built in 1665,[8] the remains of the Eastern and Southern gates of the old city, and countless other historical monuments. Tainan claims more Buddhist and Taoist temples than any other city in Taiwan.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Early history


    • 1.2 Dutch colony


    • 1.3 Kingdom of Tungning


    • 1.4 Qing dynasty


    • 1.5 Japanese rule


    • 1.6 Post-war




  • 2 Culture


    • 2.1 Folk cultures


    • 2.2 Tainan cuisine


    • 2.3 Temples


    • 2.4 Music


    • 2.5 Museums and parks




  • 3 Tourism


    • 3.1 Taiwan Confucian Temple


    • 3.2 National Museum of Taiwan History


    • 3.3 National Museum of Taiwan Literature


    • 3.4 National Cheng Kung University Museum


    • 3.5 Fort Provintia


    • 3.6 Shopping and recreation


    • 3.7 Beehives




  • 4 Climate


  • 5 Cityscape


    • 5.1 The Great Cross Street


    • 5.2 Japanese Redevelopment Program


    • 5.3 Three Ring Belts


    • 5.4 The River South Region


    • 5.5 The River North Region




  • 6 Government and politics


    • 6.1 City mayor


    • 6.2 Presidential elections


      • 6.2.1 1996 Presidential election


      • 6.2.2 2000 Presidential election


      • 6.2.3 2004 Presidential election


      • 6.2.4 2008 Presidential election


      • 6.2.5 2012 Presidential election






  • 7 Administrative districts


  • 8 Economy


    • 8.1 Industry


    • 8.2 Agriculture


    • 8.3 Tourism


    • 8.4 Retail




  • 9 Transportation


    • 9.1 Rail


    • 9.2 Public transport


    • 9.3 Road


    • 9.4 Air




  • 10 Education


    • 10.1 Senior high schools




  • 11 Notable natives


  • 12 Sports


  • 13 International relations


    • 13.1 Twin towns — Sister cities


      • 13.1.1 Friendship cities


      • 13.1.2 Domestic






  • 14 Relative location


  • 15 See also


  • 16 References


  • 17 External links





History



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Historical affiliations


Dutch Formosa 1624-1662


  • Kingdom of Tungning 1662-1684


  •  Qing Empire 1684-1895


  •  Republic of Formosa 1895


  •  Empire of Japan 1895–1945


  •  Republic of China 1945–present





Early history


Archaeological excavations in the township of Zuozhen suggest that the Tainan region has been inhabited for at least 20,000 to 31,000 years. The indigenous Siraya tribe dominated the region by the 16th century. The Sakam people of the Sinkan sub-tribe inhabited the area of the present-day city.[9] Other Sirayan sub-tribes, including the Soelangh, Mattauw and Baccloangh inhabited the surrounding area.


By the late 16th century, Chinese merchants and fishermen had set up several bases along the west coast of the island, including a sandbar across the Taikang Inner Sea (Chinese: 臺江內海; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-kang lāi-hái) off the bay of Sakam village (modern-day Fort Provintia). The Chinese adopted Taioan [zh] (modern-day Anping) as the name of the sandbar.[9][10][11] Slightly north of Taioan, along the shoreline near Bassemboy (北線尾; Pak-siàn-bóe), Japanese traders established bases for trade with China.[10] The early Chinese and Japanese also traded with the Sirayan people. Salt and food was exchanged for deer hides and dried deer meat. The Siraya people were influenced by both Chinese and Japanese cultures and lifestyles. They started to use Chinese words in their language, use Japanese tantō in ritual events, and also migrated inland due to the influx of newcomers. By the time the Europeans arrived, the influence of Chinese and Japanese traders and fishermen was already prominent.[10][12]



Dutch colony




Anping Fort (site of the Fort Zeelandia)



Early Dutch colonists had attempted but failed to control Macau and the Penghu islands. In July 1622, the Dutch East India Company textile merchant Cornelis Reyersz sailed to Taiwan in search of a suitable location to build a trading post. In 1624 he established a small fort named 'Orange' on the sandy peninsula they called Tayouan (modern-day Anping). The fort was then expanded and renamed Fort Zeelandia. The settlement was initially designed as a base to attack their Spanish rivals and as a trading post between China and Batavia in Indonesia. Later the post became the center of Dutch trade between China, Japan and Europe.[10][12] During the governorship of Pieter Nuyts (1627–29), there was hostility between the Dutch and Japanese merchants, leading at one point to Nuyts being held hostage by a Japanese trader, Hamada Yahee.[11][12]


The Dutch pacification campaign on Formosa was a series of military actions and diplomatic moves undertaken in 1635 and 1636. They aimed at subduing hostile aboriginal villages in the south-western region of the island. In 1642 the Dutch seized the Spanish garrison at Santisima Trinidad in Keelung. The Dutch East India Company became the first authority to claim control of the whole of Formosa, with Fort Zeelandia as the seat of government.[13]


Tensions arose between the Dutch and the Chinese inhabitants of Taiwan due to heavy Dutch taxation and Dutch participation in plunder during the collapse of the Ming dynasty. Eventually, this led to the brief, but bloody, Guo Huaiyi Rebellion in 1652.[12] The Dutch crushed the revolt only with the help of the local Sinkanese.


The settlements near to Fort Zeelandia expanded as a result of the Dutch trading post in the area. In 1653, the Dutch built a new fort, Fort Provintia, in the Sakam area as a center for an agricultural colony. The Dutch encouraged Chinese farmers to migrate to Taiwan to grow rice and sugar cane. The Dutch settlement in southern Taiwan was so successful that, by the 1650s, it had overtaken Batavia.[10]



Kingdom of Tungning




Statue of Koxinga in Koxinga's Shrine



Koxinga (also known as Zheng Chenggong) was a Ming loyalist and chief commander of the Ming troops on the maritime front for the later emperors of the withering dynasty. In 1661, Koxinga attacked the Dutch colonists in Taiwan. After a nine-month siege, the Dutch Governor of Taiwan, Frederik Coyett, surrendered Fort Zeelandia to Koxinga on 1 February 1662.[10] This effectively ended 38 years of Dutch rule on Taiwan. Koxinga then devoted himself to transforming Taiwan into a military base for loyalists who wanted to restore the Ming Dynasty.


Koxinga set about making Taiwan a base for the Ming loyalist movement. Fort Provintia was renamed Tungtu, and Fort Zeelandia became Anping. Koxinga set up military colonies on the surrounding plains to help feed his forces.[14] Many suburbs surrounding Tainan City today include in their names "Ying", "Jia", and "Tian", all derived from this event. After the death of Koxinga in 1662, his son, Zheng Jing, changed the name of Dongdu to Dong Ning. His chief minister, Chen Yonghua [zh], introduced Chinese bureaucracy, built the first Confucius temple on the island, and introduced the method of salt production to coastal areas. The British were invited to set up a trading post in Anping to continue trade between Taiwan, Japan, and South East Asia. This helped to maintain the region as a center of trade.



Qing dynasty




Jieguanting (接官亭) in Go-tiau-kang, Tainan gateway to the sea during Qing dynasty



The death of Zheng Jing in 1681 was followed by a struggle for succession. Seizing the advantage presented by the infighting, on July 17, 1683, Qing naval commander Shi Lang defeated the Tungning fleet in the Battle of Penghu. Two days later, Qing troops landed at Tungning and encountered little resistance. In 1684 the kingdom was incorporated into the Qing Empire as part of Fujian province, ending two decades of rule by the Zheng family.[12]Taiwan Prefecture was established, with its prefectural seat Taiwan-fu at modern-day Tainan.


In 1721, Chinese peasants and indigenous tribes rose in rebellion against Qing misrule. The rebels, led by Zhu Yigui, captured Tainan without a fight. Turmoil ensued as the rebels soon fought amongst themselves. It was only after a Qing army was dispatched from mainland China that order was restored. Zhu was captured and executed. As Qing law prohibited the building of city walls in Taiwan, Qing authorities decided to create a defensive boundary around the city by growing bamboo around the perimeter. After several further uprisings across the island, work on a city wall began in the late 1780s.[9]


A flood in 1823 brought rich silt from nearby rivers, which formed a widespread new fertile plain across the Taijiang bay area between Tainan and Anping. A canal system called Go-tiau-kang (五條港; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gō͘-tiâu-káng) was built to keep the port in Tainan functioning but prevented large ships from entering the bay.[9]


After 174 years of restrictions on trade with the Europeans, the Qing reopened Anping port as part of the Tianjin treaty following the Second Opium War in 1858. The Anping Customs house was established in 1864. Western merchants built trading posts near the remains of Fort Zeelandia.


Following the murder of 54 Japanese sailors by Paiwan aborigines near the southwestern tip of Taiwan in 1871, the punitive Japanese Expedition of 1874 to Taiwan revealed the fragility of the Qing dynasty's hold on Taiwan. As a result, the Qing sent the imperial commissioner Shen Baozhen to Taiwan to strengthen its defense. In Tainan, Shen made several efforts to modernize the defenses including inviting French engineers to design the Eternal Golden Castle in Erkunshen. He also recommended setting up a telegraph cable link between Tainan and Amoy.[9][12] Some parts of the castle were built using bricks taken from Fort Zeelandia.[15]


After over 200 years of development, Tainan, known as Taiwan-fu, had become the largest city in Taiwan and a Chinese city with foreign influence. The following is a description of the city by the Scottish missionary William Campbell upon his first arrival to the island in 1871:


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As to Taiwan-fu itself, I may say that the brick wall which surrounds it is about fifteen feet in thickness, twenty-five in height, and some five miles in circumference. Lofty watch-towers are built over the four main gateways, and large spaces within the city are given to the principal temples and yamens—or quarters occupied by the civil and military mandarins. There is much need in Taiwan-fu for the carrying out of a City Improvement Scheme. Pleasant walks, no doubt, there are, and some of the shops have an appearance which is decidedly attractive; but, as a rule, the streets are narrow, winding, ill-paved, and odorous.[16]


In 1885, the Qing government commenced work to develop the island into Taiwan Province. The capital of the island, or "Taiwan-fu", was moved to Toatun (modern-day Taichung), and therefore the old Taiwan-fu was renamed to the name it bears today – Tainan(-fu), the seat of Tainan Prefecture.



Japanese rule




Tainan Butokuden (Martial Arts Hall)




Tainan Prefecture


As a consequence of the Chinese losing the First Sino-Japanese War in 1895, Taiwan and the Penghu Islands were ceded to Japan by the Treaty of Shimonoseki. The Republic of Formosa was proclaimed in Tainan in May 1895, in an effort to pre-empt the Japanese occupation. A Japanese army arrived at Tainan in October 1895. Liu Yongfu and the other Republican leaders fled, leaving the city in disarray. A Scottish missionary, Thomas Barclay, was chosen by local elites and foreign merchants to negotiate the Japanese entry into the city. As a result, Tainan was taken without resistance. Under Japanese rule, Tainan was initially administered under Tainan Ken (臺南縣).[9] With a population of about 50,000 in 1904, Tainan was Taiwan's most populous city.[17]


The anti-Japanese uprising known as the Tapani Incident began in Ta-pa-ni (modern-day Yujing) on April 9, 1915. The revolt, led by Yu Qingfang [zh], spread quickly across the whole island and was supported by both Chinese and indigenous Taiwanese. The Japanese crushed the uprising. Many villages were destroyed and thousands of people were killed during the repression which followed. Yu Qingfang was captured on August 22, 1915. More than 800 people were sentenced to death in Tainan. Over 100 of them were executed while the rest were pardoned by the new Taishō Emperor. The place where the rebellion began, Xilai Temple in Tainan (臺南西來庵), was demolished.[9] The event marked a turning point in Japanese policy, from forced pacification to modernisation and integration of Taiwan into the Japanese Empire.


The Japanese renamed the city to Tainan Chō (臺南廳) in 1901, and then Tainan Shū (臺南州) in 1920. Tainan Prefecture included modern-day Yunlin, Chiayi, and the wider region of Tainan. Tainan served as the capital city. The Japanese transformed Tainan by building modern infrastructure, including schools, a courthouse, city hall, new telecommunication facilities, an extensive freight and passenger rail network, a new Anping canal replacing the Go-tiau-kang, an airport, and an irrigation system across the Tainan and Chiayi regions. Modern urban designs were introduced; old narrow streets and city walls were demolished and replaced with wide streets that form the cityscape of the modern-day Tainan city center.[11] They also introduced much needed sanitary reforms.[18]



Post-war




Tainan City in 1945-2010


The Republic of China (ROC) took over Taiwan on 25 October 1945 after World War II. Tainan City and Tainan County were established and became separate local entities under Taiwan Province in 1946. There was civil unrest in Tainan as part of the February 28 Incident in 1947. Tang De-Jhang, a Japanese descent and Japanese educated lawyer, was a member of government which set up "The February 28 Incident Commission" and a popular candidate for city mayor, was accused of being a separatist and arrested by the ROC army on March 11. He was tortured and executed the next day in the park in front of Tainan City Hall (now named Tang De-jhang Memorial Park [zh]). Tang was posthumously pronounced not guilty by court later in March.[19] Like other regions in Taiwan, many people in Tainan suffered for their real or perceived opposition to the Kuomintang (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party) during the autocratic era.


The city held its first councilor and mayoral elections in 1950. In the 1960s, Tainan was overtaken by Kaohsiung as the economic center of southern Taiwan due to the redevelopment of Kaohsiung port. While Tainan City struggled through the second half of twentieth century, the county, especially the river south region, benefited from national priority development programmes. The completion of the National Highway No. 1 was followed by the building of many industrial parks and other road improvements. As a result, the city sprawled inland into North, East and then the Yongkang and Rende districts.


In 1992, a redevelopment plan in the West district, to widen Haian Rd and build an underground plaza proved a failure as lack of geological surveying and overall planning meant that the works ran into a layer of groundwater. The development destroyed part of the historic Go-tiau-kang area. As a consequence, the Zhongzheng Road district, previously the most popular shopping precinct in Tainan since Japanese rule, went into decline due to the poor quality of the environment. By the mid-1990s, there was a growing awareness of the need to protect Tainan's historical and cultural treasures. Since then, the government and civil societies have worked to protect Tainan's heritage. It is an ongoing issue for Tainan to protect its past while reviving its old business center.


Following the establishment of the Southern Taiwan Science Park in 1995, the outskirt of the city saw a rapid growth in population through the 2000s. The city became more prosperous after the completion of several major transport infrastructure plans. The city center shifted eastward in the mid-1990s, closer to the densely populated Yongkang, East and North districts. There are several redevelopment plans to transform these districts into the new business centers of the city.


On March 19, 2004, President Chen Shui-bian was shot whilst campaigning for re-election in Tainan. The city has been a major center for the pro-independent movement since the end of Japanese rule. On October 21, 2008, Chinese ARATS Vice President Zhang Mingqing was injured when he encountered protesters in Tainan Confucius Temple.[20]


On 25 December 2010, Tainan County and Tainan City merged to become Tainan special municipality.


On February 6, 2016, the area was hit by a 6.4 magnitude earthquake, causing 116 fatalities[21] and major damage, including building collapses (see 2016 Kaohsiung earthquake).



Culture




Ritual adulthood celebration for all 16-year-olds





Ba-wan served with sweet sauce




Datianhou Gong, built in 1664


Tainan claims its name as one of the Taiwanese cultural capitals for its abundant historic monument and citizen lifestyle. The city is dotted by Taoist temples, Buddhist temples and churches. Many of them are among the oldest in Taiwan. The city also has its own unique traditions and cuisines developed by Chinese frontiers over its long history.



Folk cultures


The lives of Tainan citizens are closely related to many Chinese gods and temples. Parents bring their children to the "Weaving Maid goddess" (Chinese: 七娘媽; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chhit-niû-má), the children’s goddess, to wish for good will. Traditionally Chinese people step into adulthood when they are 16. In Tainan, there is a large ritual celebration for all 16-year-olds on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, the goddess's birthday. This extended celebration is unique to Tainan: In the past, families with children working in the harbor took the advantage of this ceremony to show the employers that their children should be paid in adult rate after this day.


Before any form of exam people visit a temple of Wenchangdijun, the literacy god, to pray for good luck. One of the Wenchang temples is on the top floor of the Fort Provintia. Many final year high school students preparing for university exams visit the temple in June, before the exam. Those asking for marriage visit Yuelao, the god for marriages. People also visit temples for many reasons, from simply praying for good luck to celebrating god’s birthday to even consulting with the other world.[22]


A wedding ceremony in Tainan is a series of complex processes that are very exact and detailed. Both groom and bride need to prepare 12 specific gifts representing different meanings during their engagement ceremony with more to come in the wedding. People believe this complexity is a sign of being civilized.[22]


Anping residents use a special symbol called Sword Lion to keep bad spirits away. During Zheng’s regime, Anping was one of Koxinga's main naval stations. When returning home from military drills, soldiers would put lion-face shields on the main gates of their houses and insert their swords crosswise in the lion’s mouth. Locals incorporate this symbol into the design of their houses as a symbol of security.[23]



Tainan cuisine


Many well-known Taiwanese food dishes originated in Tainan. Since Tainan was a center of sugar production, Tainan cuisine tends to be sweeter than other Taiwanese cuisines. For example, eel noodle soup has a distinctive sweet and sour taste. Milkfish dishes are very popular in Tainan, where locals also call it "Koxinga's fish" (Chinese: 國姓魚; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: kok-sèng-hî). People believe the Chinese name of the fish (虱目魚; sat-ba̍k-hî) was given by Koxinga, and this name has been loaned into Japanese as sabahī (サバヒー). The fish are bred in farms located in the coastal outskirts of the city. Many Tainan restaurants and snack stands have histories that trace back to the Qing or Japanese eras.[22]


On Guo Hua Street (國華街), a lot of restaurants and street vendors sell local cuisine, including such dishes as "savory rich pudding" (碗粿), oyster omelette, gua bao, and popiah. Local people tend to have these dishes either in the morning or at noon.[citation needed]



Temples




Zhuxi Temple


Tainan is famous for its diversity and density of temples and shrines. Some of them are the only of its kind on Taiwan Island. In all, there are officially listed seven Buddhist temples and eight Taoist shrines (七寺八廟).[9] As of 2015[update], Tainan has the most numbers of registered temples among other municipalities, cities or counties in Taiwan, reaching 1,613 temples.[24]


The seven Buddhist temples are:



  • Kaiyuen Temple, originally the royal gardens of the Tungning Kingdom, became a Buddhist temple in 1690.

  • Zhuxi Temple, founded in the Tungning Kingdom period.

  • Fahua Temple, founded in the Tungning Kingdom period.

  • Mituo Temple, founded in the Tungning Kingdom period.


  • Longshan Temple, founded in the Qing Dynasty.

  • Chongqing Temple, founded in the Qing Dynasty.

  • Huangbo Temple, founded in the Qing Dynasty but demolished by the Japanese. The worshiped statues were migrated to the Altar of Heaven temple.


The eight Taoist shrines are:




  • Grand Matsu Temple (大天后宮), in honor of the sea goddess Mazu. Originally the residence of the King Ningjing of the Tungning Kingdom.


  • Sidian Wumiao (祀典武廟), the Official God of War temple, built in 1665.

  • Dongyue Dian (東嶽殿), the God of Hell temple, built in 1673.

  • Fuchenghuang Miao (府城隍廟), the temple of the Prefecture City God, built in 1669.

  • Longwang Miao (龍王廟), the shrine of the East Sea Dragon God, built in 1716 but demolished by the Japanese.

  • Fengshen Miao (風神廟), the Wind God temple, built in 1739. It is the only Wind God temple on Taiwan Island.[9]

  • Yaowang Miao (藥王廟), the Medicine God temple, built in 1685.

  • Shuixian Gong (水仙宮), the Water Gods temple, built in Qing Dynasty after Go-tiau-kang was constructed.


There are many other well-known temples and shrines not on this list, such as Anping District's Tianhou Temple (supposedly the oldest on Taiwan proper), the Altar of Heaven temple (天壇), and the re-built Xilai temple (西來庵) etc. They are all the centers of religion in Tainan.


Due to its abundant numbers of temples and shrines, the traditional temple decoration crafters and their business flourishes in Tainan. There are masters still passing their knowledge to maintain the temples in the traditional way.[22]



Music




Taijiang National Park, Sicao green tunnel of Manggroves


Nanyin and Shisanyin were the first types of Chinese music introduced to Tainan; Nanyin is performed mostly for entertainment while Shisanyin is performed in the Confucius worship ceremony. There are two Nanyin clubs in Tainan: Zhenshengshe, a 200-year-old club once dissolved in the 1980s for ten years which then returned with the support from younger generation musicians and Nanshengshe, a 95-year-old club performing globally.[22]


Music performance is being promoted in Tainan. Tainan City has its own Chinese orchestra[25] and symphony orchestra. There are also private performance groups such as Chimei Mandolin Performance Group, Chimei Philharmonic Orchestra[26] and Chang Jung Christianity University Symphony Orchestra.[27]


Ten Drum Art Percussion Group (十鼓擊樂團) is a percussion performance group established in the year 2000. The group is dedicated in producing percussion performances that highlights the history, the culture and the image of Taiwan. The group first performed internationally in the festivals during the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games. Following this event, the group has performed in many occasions both internationally and domestically. The group has its own campus located in an old sugar factory in Rende District. The campus provides education on percussion performances at all levels and regular performances to general public.[28]



Museums and parks


On top of its plentiful living culture, Tainan host several museums and parks. The National Museum of Taiwan Literature is in the former city hall; National Museum of Taiwan History is in the Annan district; Chimei Museum is in the Rende district; Taijiang National Park follows the coast; Anping Historic Scenic Park includes the entire old Anping town and the north ward of Anping harbor; and Siraya National Scenic Area includes the Wusanto Reservoir built by Yoichi Hatta. In the city center, many historic monuments from Zheng’s regime, Qing dynasty, and the Japanese colonial era are preserved including the Confucius temple, two major city gates and former city hall.



Tourism


Tainan has a tangible sense of history and is the site of several spectacular religious festivals. As well as its string of forts, the first capital of Taiwan has some 300 ancient sanctuaries, from the island's first Confucian temple to its first Taoist temple.




Tainan's Taiwan Confucian Temple




National Museum of Taiwan Literature




Fort Provintia is located at West Central District.




Bee hives shoot out rapidly in the downtown of Yanshui District.



Taiwan Confucian Temple


The Taiwan Confucian Temple (or the Scholarly Temple) was built in 1665 by Cheng Ching, son of Koxinga, to offer lectures and cultivate intellectuals. It was the first learning institute for children when Taiwan was ruled by the Qing Dynasty. As a result, it is also called the First Academy of Taiwan.


The temple is a popular tourist attraction and preserves ancient Confucian ceremonies, which are conducted regularly. The grounds include storerooms for the ritual implements and musical instruments that are used in these ceremonies.



National Museum of Taiwan History


The National Museum of Taiwan History is located in the Annan District. The construction of the Exhibition and Education Building began in 2005, and opened on 29 October 2011.The main objectives of this museum include collection, categorization, preservation, research, exhibition, education and promotion of artifacts related to Taiwan's history and culture for both locals and visitors.



National Museum of Taiwan Literature


The National Museum of Taiwan Literature researches, catalogs, preserves, and exhibits local literary artifacts as part of its multilingual, multi-ethnic focus. The museum is housed in the former Tainan City Hall, constructed in 1916 and famous for its historical significance.



National Cheng Kung University Museum


The National Cheng Kung University Museum is located at the National Cheng Kung University. One of the youngest museums in Tainan. Exhibits important objects from the history of education in southern Taiwan. The museum is ICOM member since 2016.



Fort Provintia


Fort Provintia was built in 1653 by the Dutch during their colonization of Taiwan and was eventually surrendered to Koxinga. Since 1945, the site has been known as "Chihkan Tower", a phonetic derivation from "Sakam" (also spelled "Chakam" or "Sakkam").
In addition to the site's architectural and artistic significance, its library of dictionaries and business transactions documents the Siraya language spoken by the native inhabitants of the region during Dutch rule.



Shopping and recreation


As Tainan is the one of the larger metropolitan areas in Taiwan, it has many department stores, shopping malls abeend prestigious boutiques. Several of the best-known luxury brands have branches or counters in Tainan.
Flower Night Market is a good place to enjoy the Taiwanese lifestyle. It is one of the most famous night markets and it is often considered to be the largest night market of Taiwan; however, unlike the others, this night market is open for business three days a week - Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday.



Beehives


In Yanshui District, the most important and prominent fireworks in Lantern Festival are the so-called "beehives", essentially multiple launchers of bottle rockets. These rocket forts are actually thousands of bottle rockets arranged row atop row in an iron-and-wooden framework. The set-up looks like a beehive full of unleashed gunpowder. When the contraption is ignited, rockets shoot out rapidly in all directions. Dazzling explosives whiz and whirl across the sky and often into the crowd itself, both thrilling and intimidating the spectators.[citation needed]



Climate


Tainan has a humid subtropical climate, closely bordering a tropical wet-dry sub-climate.[29] The city is characterized by year-round high relative humidity and temperatures (although temperatures do dip somewhat in the winter months), with a rainy season (April to September) and a dry season (October to March).







































































































































































Cityscape




Map of Tainan during Qing Dynasty




Tainan city center during WWII




Downtown Tainan




A typical scene of River North Region



The Great Cross Street


The earliest plan of the city was designed by Dutch colonist, Cornelis Jansz. Plockhoy, the designer of this new settlement, laid a 25-30m wide main street (on today’s Minquan Rd Sec. 2) across the settlement and radial roads than ran deep into agricultural developments .[10] The Han Chinese settlement “Heliaogang Jie” (today’s Zhongyi Rd) later crossed the main street of Provintia and formed the so-called Shizi Dajie (十字大街) or The Great Cross Street.[9] With the fall of the Ming dynasty, new migrants flooded into the settlement. Chinese population boomed from 5,000 to 35,000 between 1640 and 1661. As a result, farmers, deer hunters, traders and craftsmen each formed a colony on the cross street.[31]


Due to the Chinese tradition where different trades and regions worship different Taoist gods, the city later developed into neighborhoods, each with own center temple.[31] Now, after 300 years of Chinese migration, the city has become a showcase of both Taoist and Chinese Buddhist temples. Although the city has transformed dramatically since the late 19th century, the temples remain because of their importance to the locals. Some of the early administration centers have also been transformed into temples for political and social reasons. An administrative building of the Tungning Kingdom became temple of the sea goddess, and the location where Tungning Kingdom performed annual ceremonies of prayer to Heaven is now the Altar of Heaven Temple. Castle Provintia, one of two Dutch forts in Tainan, now has a sea god temple and a literacy god temple built on top of it, creating East-West fusion architecture. Many Han Chinese religious and historic monuments can be found near the old cross street centered by the Castle Provintia.



Japanese Redevelopment Program


The cityscape of modern Tainan was founded under the urban redevelopment programs carried out by Japanese colonial government. The city center adopted a Baroque design similar to the Paris renovation in mid 19th century, the plan connected major facilities via a system of wide streets and five square-roundabouts. Among the five squares, Taishō Park (大正公園, modern-day Tang De-jhang Memorial Park) at the center is the most important crossing point. The square is surrounded by the city hall, the fire brigade and the weather bureau. It is connected by a number of avenues heading towards the train station, the airport, military bases and the dock at the end of the Anping cannel. With the police station and the court nearby, this area demonstrated the power of the colonial government within the city.[31] The financial district was located in Shirokanechō (白金町) and Ōmiyachō (大宮町) between Taishō park and Anping cannel along Ginzadōri (銀座通り),[11] the modern day Zhongzheng Rd. It was the busiest street of the city from Japanese rule to the mid-1990s. Many Colonial Baroque style historic buildings from Japanese era can be found in this part of the city.



Three Ring Belts


A three-belt system was adopted by the provincial city official:[32] the green boulevard ring, the blue belt Anping cannel and the Zhonghua road system. The green boulevard ring and Zhonghua road system first appeared on the 1937 city redevelopment plan proposed by the Japanese colonial government.


The green boulevard was a Japanese response to the garden city trend of early 20th century urban planning.[31] This system connects the Shuipingwen Park to the west, Tainan Park to the north, NCKU to the east and the Athletic park complex to the south. Zhonghua Rd system is an arterial road system, the system now connects major new development areas surrounding old city center. The Anping cannel blue belt was created after the completion of the Fifth redevelopment area. The project of Fifth redevelopment area filled the floodplain of old Taijiang lagoon and extended the Japanese Anping cannel into Kunshen lagoon to form an artificial island, this area is also known as New Anping. In contrast to the low rise old city center, many high rise buildings are built along these three rings.



The River South Region


Beyond the city center, Tainan city can be divided into two: the River South Region and the River North Region, bounded by the Zengwen River.


River South Region belongs to the Tainan metropolitan area. Satellite towns spread across the region in a radial pattern from the city center. Southern Taiwan Science Park Tainan campus is located at the north of the region. According to the Council for Economic Planning and Development, this region is designated to grow further into suburban sprawl.[33]



The River North Region


This region is one of the major agricultural centers in Taiwan. There are several regional centers; some of them are as old as Tainan city. These centers are: Xinying, Yujing, Jiali and Madou.


Xinying was the seat of the former Tainan County Government and currently serves as the administration center for the region. Yujing is a regional center for the hilly districts east of the city; it is famous for its mango and was the scene of the Tapani incident. Jiali is the regional center of the coastal Tainan. It was the base of the Soelangh sub-tribe. Near the bank of the Zengwen River, Madou is the regional center of the lower plain area that bears the name of the river. The town was home to the Mattauw sub-tribe.



Government and politics




Tainan City is a special municipality, which is the highest level local government under Local Government Law of Republic of China. Technically it is at the same level as Province, although Province is being streamlined. The city is led by the elected city mayor and supervised by the city council. Its subdivisions qu or districts do not have the autonomy power, instead they are administration units only. Further to the citywide election, there are urban villages (里 li) and neighborhood (鄰 lin) functioning as primary local autonomy entity.


Currently there are two administration centers, one in Anping District and another in Xinying District. They are former Provincial Tainan city government and Tainan county government respectively. Administration centers manages citywide affairs and developments such as education and city planning. Apart from administration centers, there are district offices functioning as local access point to the governmental services.


The city has generally been seen as a powerbase for the Democratic Progressive Party, especially in nationwide elections. Although before the merger, the Kuomintang (KMT) have always had more seats in the provincial Tainan city council and KMT won the presidential elections (2008) by a narrow margin in the city. On the other hand, Democratic Progressive Party always dominated former Tainan county. In the first municipal election, after the merger, DPP dominated the political demographics of the city. William Lai, a former member of the Legislative Yuan from the DPP won the first mayoral election in 2010.












Tainan City Government - Yonghua Civic Center






Tainan City Government - Minjhih Civic Center






Tainan City Council





Tainan District Court





Taiwan High Court Tainan Branch Court




City mayor





Huang Wei-cher, the incumbent Mayor of Tainan.


In 2001, Hsu Tain-Tsair of the Democratic Progressive Party was elected with 43% of the vote. His closest rival was Kuomintang legislator Chen Rong-sheng, who garnered 37%. In 2005. Mayor Hsu was re-elected, polling 46% to Chen Rong-sheng's 41%. In 2010, William Lai of the DPP was elected mayor. However, after Lai's appointment as Premier of the Republic of China in September 2017, the mayor position was filled by Li Meng-yen as acting mayor.



Presidential elections


A majority of city residents have voted for the winning candidates in many presidential elections since the position was first chosen by popular vote in 1996.



1996 Presidential election



In common with every other city and county in the Republic of China, with the exception of Nantou, a majority of Tainan residents voted for eventual winner Lee Teng-hui and vice-president Lien Chan.



2000 Presidential election























































Party
Candidate
Votes
Percentage

President

Vice president

Independent

James Soong

Chang Chau-hsiung
114,299
27.53%


Kuomintang

Lien Chan

Vincent Siew
107,679
25.93%


New Party

Li Ao

Elmer Fung
580
0.14%

Independent

Hsu Hsin-liang

Josephine Chu
1,408
0.34%


Democratic Progressive Party

Chen Shui-bian

Annette Lu

191,261

45.06%



2004 Presidential election































Party
Candidate
Votes
Percentage

President

Vice president


Democratic Progressive Party

Chen Shui-bian

Annette Lu

251,397

57.77%


Kuomintang

Lien Chan

James Soong
183,786
42.23%



2008 Presidential election































Party
Candidate
Votes
Percentage

President

Vice president


Democratic Progressive Party

Frank Hsieh

Su Tseng-chang
216,815
49.29%


Kuomintang

Ma Ying-jeou

Vincent Siew

223,034

50.71%



2012 Presidential election







































Party
Candidate
Votes
Percentage

President

Vice president


Kuomintang

Ma Ying-jeou

Wu Den-yih
435,274
39.80%


Democratic Progressive Party

Tsai Ing-wen

Su Jia-chyuan
631,232
57.72%


People First

James Soong Chu-yu

Lin Ruey-shiung
8,090
2.48%



Administrative districts













































Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1985 1,640,669 —    
1990 1,710,234 +4.2%
1995 1,788,612 +4.6%
2000 1,842,337 +3.0%
2005 1,866,727 +1.3%
2010 1,873,794 +0.4%
2015 1,885,541 +0.6%
Source:"Populations by city and country in Taiwan". Ministry of the Interior Population Census..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}



Tainan City with its districts before merger with Tainan County in 2010





Population density map of Tainan.


Tainan has a total of 37 districts, the second most districts after Kaohsiung City.


























































































































































































































































































































Map of Tainan


Tainan districts colored.svg
Anding

Annan

Anping

Baihe

Beimen

Danei

Dongshan

East

Guanmiao

Guantian

Guiren

Houbi

Jiali

Jiangjun

Liujia

Liuying

Longqi

Madou

Nanhua

Nanxi

North

Qigu

Rende

Shanhua

Shanshang

South

West

Cen.

Xiaying

Xigang

Xinhua

Xinshi

Xinying

Xuejia

Yanshui

Yongkang

Yujing

Zuozhen

Chiayi County

Chiayi
City

Kaohsiung City

Pingtung County


Region Name Chinese Taiwanese Hakka Population (2016) Area (km2)

Inner
Tainan

West Central 中西區 Tiong-se Chûng-sî
77,472 6.2600
East 東區 Tang Tûng
188,797 14.4281
South 南區 Lâm Nàm
125,734 27.2681
North 北區 Pak Pet
132,713 10.4340
Anping 安平區 An-pêng An-phìn
65,430 11.0663
Annan 安南區 An-lâm An-nàm
189,724 107.2016

River
South
Region

Yongkang 永康區 Éng-khong Yún-không
230,957 40.275
Gueiren (Guiren)
歸仁區 Kui-jîn Kûi-yìn
67,922 55.7913
Sinhua (Xinhua)
新化區 Sin-hòa Sîn-fa
43,830 62.0579
Zuojhen (Zuozhen)
左鎮區 Chó-tìn Tsó-tsṳ́n
5,065 74.9025
Yujing 玉井區 Gio̍k-chéⁿ Ngiu̍k-tsiáng
14,387 76.366
Nansi (Nanxi)
楠西區 Lâm-se Nàm-sî
10,020 109.6316
Nanhua 南化區 Lâm-hòa Nàm-fa
8,881 171.5198
Rende 仁德區 Jîn-tek Yìn-tet
73,951 50.7664
Guanmiao 關廟區 Koan-biō Kûan-meu
34,693 53.6413
Longci (Longqi)
龍崎區 Liông-kiā Liùng-khì
4,195 64.0814
Shanhua 善化區 Siān-hòa San-fa
46,931 55.309
Shanshang 山上區 San-siōng Sân-song
7,422 27.8780
Sinshih (Xinshi)
新市區 Sin-chhī Sîn-sṳ
35,883 47.8096
Anding 安定區 An-tēng Ôn-thin
30,327 31.2700

Coastal
Tainan

Jiali 佳里區 Ka-lí Kâ-lî
59,544 38.9422
Sigang (Xigang)
西港區 Sai-káng Sî-kóng
24,898 33.7666
Cigu (Qigu)
七股區 Chhit-kó͘ Tshit-kú
23,378 110.1492
Jiangjyun (Jiangjun)
將軍區 Chiong-kun Tsiông-kiûn
20,286 41.9796
Syuejia (Xuejia)
學甲區 Ha̍k-kah Ho̍k-kap
26,621 53.9919
Beimen 北門區 Pak-mn̂g Pet-mùn
11,517 44.1003

River
North
Region

Guantian 官田區 Koaⁿ-tiān Kôn-thièn
21,659 70.7953
Madou 麻豆區 Môa-tāu Mà-theu
44,963 53.9744
Sinying (Xinying)
新營區 Sin-iâⁿ Sîn-yàng
78,185 38.5386
Houbi 後壁區 Āu-piah Heu-piak
24,279 71.2189
Baihe 白河區 Pe̍h-hô Pha̍k-hò
29,236 126.4046
Dongshan 東山區 Tong-san Tûng-sân
21,568 124.91
Lioujia (Liujia)
六甲區 La̍k-kah Liuk-kap
22,582 64.5471
Siaying (Xiaying)
下營區 Ē-iâⁿ Ha-yàng
24,755 33.5291
Liouying (Liuying)
柳營區 Liú-iâⁿ Liú-yàng
21,601 61.2929
Yanshuei (Yanshui)
鹽水區 Kiâm-chúi Yàm-súi
26,087 52.2455
Danei 大內區 Tōa-lāi Thai-nui
10,057 70.3125


  • Annan District was originally the An-Shun township of Tainan County, but was merged into Tainan City in 1946. In 2004, Central District and West District were merged into the new West Central district.


Economy




TSMC in Tainan Science Park



Industry


Once reliant on traditional manufacturing industries, the region became a major high-tech industrial hub after the establishment of Southern Taiwan Science Park in 1995. Optoelectronics, integrated circuits, green energy and biotechnology are the park's dominant industries. Prominent companies are Chimei-Innolux, United Microelectronics and TSMC. With the establishment of Tainan Technology Park, Shugu (Tree Valley) LCD Park and Yonkang Technology Park, the city became a major center for the optoelectronics industry in Taiwan with a complete supply chain.[34]


Tainan still plays an important role in auto parts, food processing, textiles, plastics and other traditional manufacturing. Notable companies include Uni-President, Chi Mei and Tainan Spinning, which have headquarters in the city. Overall, industrial production accounted for 62.6% of the gross city product in 2010.[35]



Agriculture


Agriculture is important to the city, especially the River North Region. While fisheries and fish farming signify the coastal districts, rice and fruit farms shaped the landscape of the inland agriculture region. The city is famous for its milkfish, oyster, rice, mango, sugar cane, pomelo (文旦), pineapple and lotus seed. A state-funded agricultural research center was established in Xinhua District to ensure the market competitiveness of the crop.[36] The headquarters of the World Vegetable Center, an NPO that aims to improve crop quality in poorer countries, is in Shanhua District.[37]


Once dominant industries, salt and sugar production are declining to almost non-existence. Taiyen (Taiwan salt) co. and Taiwan Sugar Corp., both headquartered in Tainan, transformed to businesses in biotechnology, quality agriculture, retail and tourism.


Orchid growing is one of the most symbolic agriculture industry for its well-known brand name in the floristry world. A nationally founded special plantation district with R&D resources is established in Houbi District.[38]



Tourism


Tourism is an industry with increasing importance. As the first capital of Taiwan, the wealth resource of cultural heritage and its potential is under exploration. In the first half of 2013, there were over 7 million tourist visited attractions in the city.[39] There are high-end hotels in the city, including the Shangri-la Hotel near Tainan train station.



Retail


Retail and services is the largest employment sector in Tainan, margined at 52% in 2010.[35] The city center hosts five department stores including two Shin Kong-Mitsukoshi, two FE21s and Focus square. Apart from the city center, there are shopping precincts around the city, with the strongest presence in East, North and Yongkang districts. 'Dream Mall' is a joint development project between Uni-President Corp. and Tainan Spinning Ltd. It was the largest shopping center in the city when it opened Feb 12, 2015 and the precinct will host the new headquarters of Tainan Spinning and a new five-star hotel. The precinct is in the designated East Tainan second CBD near the border of the East and Yongkang districts.



Transportation











THSR Tainan Station






TRA Tainan train station






Tainan Airport





Tainan Canal, Anping




Rail


Tainan Station is a major stop on the Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) Western Line, with direct connections to Taipei, Kaohsiung, Taichung, Hsinchu, and Keelung. There are also local trains to reach closer destinations.


Taiwan High Speed Rail Tainan Station is located just outside the city center, in Gueiren district. The service is accessible to the city center via TRA Shalun Line and two THSR Shuttle Bus Lines.[40] Using the High Speed Rail system passengers can reach Taipei in under ninety minutes.



Public transport


Original plan for Tainan MRT system is muted due to the construction cost and the question of insufficient ridership.[41] Upgrading current railway and buses are now considered as alternative citywide modern public transport options.


Tainan has three major bus operators. They are Singing Bus Co., Shinan Buses and Kaohsiung Buses, operating in river north region, intercity routes and metropolitan routes respectively. In 2012, the city government called to restructure Singing Bus and Shinan Buses route to form a Tainan City Bus System. This new system, which set to start operation in 2013, has six main routes connecting the city and eight main interchanges. From the main routes 66 branch routes then spread out to service local communities. City government hope this new system will boost the public transports ridership and progress into metro-bus system in the future.[42][43]


A project to transform the railway in the city center into an underground is underway as part of the National wide TRA Rapid Transit Systematization in the Metropolitan Areas Project. This project will help increase service frequency by eliminate potential disruption between road and rail traffic. Further to underground transformation, two new stations are planned to serve East district commuters.[44] Together with the Shalun HSR link, this section of TRA corridor will become the backbone of the rail transit system in Tainan.[43]



Road


National Highway Nos. 1 and 3 run close by and connect via local highways to the city itself. Tainan City has a total of 142.9 kilometres (88.8 mi) of highways, including national, local, and rural highways.[45]



Air


Tainan Airport (TNN) is located in the South District is close center city only six kilometers. As a regional airport, it currently operate both domestic and international flights to Hong Kong, Ho Chi Minh City, Kinmen, Magong and Osaka.[46] Previously there were also services to Taipei's Songshan Airport (TSA), but these were dropped in light of falling revenues (generally agreed to be a result of the High Speed Rail commencing operation in 2007).[47]



Education




Chengkung University




Campus of University of Tainan




National Tainan First Senior High School




  • National Cheng Kung University (國立成功大學), is famous for its engineering programs. Founded in the Japanese era in 1931 as Tainan Technical College, it has a total area of 183,000 square metres. As the number of colleges expanded, it was upgraded to a provincial university in 1956, then national university in 1971.[48] Today, National Cheng Kung University serves nearly 21,000 students through 9 colleges, 39 departments, and 49 graduate institutes.[49]


  • National University of Tainan (國立臺南大學) NUTN used to be the Institute of Teachers' In-service Education in 1988, promoted and renamed National Tainan Teachers College in 1991. In 2004, it was established as National University of Tainan until now. The motto of NUTN includes benevolence, intelligence, sincerity and uprightness.


  • Tainan National University of the Arts (國立臺南藝術大學) TNNUA exists to prepare talented individuals for careers in visual and performing arts, sound and image design, building arts, conservation arts, and art history and critique. The university emphasizes learning through individual attention and independent work creation. It is a public institution, established in 1996.


  • Tainan Theological College and Seminary (臺南神學院) was established in 1876 by Thomas Barclay.[50]


  • Chang Jung Christian University is a private university affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan. CJU offers masters and doctoral degree programs and aims to promote fraternity, justice and service for Taiwan. It is located south of the city, in Gueiren.


  • Southern Taiwan University of Science and Technology (南台科技大學), founded in 1969, is located near the northeastern border of Tainan City, within a 30-minute driving distance from the Tainan Airport.

  • The Tainan University of Technology (臺南應用科技大學) is a private university founded in 1964. The university offers graduate degrees in music, visual art, and applied sciences.



Senior high schools


Public



  • National Tainan First Senior High School

  • National Tainan Second Senior High School

  • National Tainan Girls' Senior High School

  • National Hsin Hua Senior High School

  • National Chia-Chi Girls' Senior High School

  • National Tainan Commercial Vocational School

  • National Tainan Industrial Vocational School

  • The Affiliated Senior Industrial Vocational Continuing Education High School of National Cheng Kung University

  • National Tainan Marine & Fishery Vocational School

  • Municipal Tainan Nan-Ning Senior High School

  • Municipal Tainan Tu-Cheng High School


Private



  • Feng-Ho Senior High School

  • Chang Jung High School

  • Sheng Kung Girls' High School

  • Nan Ying Vocational High School of Business & Technology

  • Salesian Technical School

  • Chang Jung Girls' Senior High School

  • Deguang Catholic High School [1]

  • Kuang Hua Girls' Senior High School

  • Tainan Liuhsin Senior High School

  • Kuen-Shan Senior High School

  • Ying-Hai High School



Notable natives




Koxinga Temple


Some famous people born, educated or prominent in Tainan, or otherwise associated with the city, include:




  • Shone An (安钧璨) (1983–2015), singer, actor and television host.


  • Momofuku Ando (安藤百福) (1910–2007), founder of Nissin Foods and inventor of instant noodles[51]


  • Thomas Barclay (1849–1935), Christian missionary, lived in the city from 1875 to 1935


  • William Campbell (1841–1921), Christian missionary, lived in the city from 1871 to 1917


  • George Chang (張燦鍙) (born 1936), politician, former mayor of Tainan (1997–2001)


  • Chin-Feng Chen (陳金鋒) (born 1977), first Taiwanese-born player to play Major League Baseball


  • Chen Wei-Ling (陳葦綾), 2008 Olympic bronze medal-winning weightlifter


  • Mao Gao-wen (毛高文) (born 1936), chemist, former president of National Tsinghua University (1981–1987) and Minister of Education (1987–1993)


  • Hsu Shih-Hsien (許世賢) (1908–1983), first female Taiwanese PhD


  • Chin-Lung Hu (胡金龍), MLB infielder for the New York Mets


  • Jutoupi (born 1966), recording artist


  • Kao Ching-yuen (高清愿) (born 1929), businessman, founder and chairman of Uni-president


  • Hong-Chih Kuo (郭泓志), MLB pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers


  • Tai-Yuan Kuo (郭泰源), retired pitcher for the Seibu Lions, foreign player with the most wins in Nippon Professional Baseball history


  • Ang Lee (李安) (born 1954), Academy Award–winning film director


  • Chen-Yuan Lee (李鎮源) (1915–2001), pharmacologist and political activist, famous for research on snake venom


  • Chou Tzu-yu (周子瑜) (born 1999), singer, member of Twice


  • Lien Heng (連橫) (1878–1936), historian, writer of The General History of Taiwan, grandfather of former presidential candidate Lien Chan


  • En-Yu Lin (林恩宇), baseball pitcher currently playing for Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles


  • Lin Hsin-i (林信義) (born 1946), businessman and politician, Minister of Economic Affairs (2000–2002), Vice Premier (2002–2004)


  • Lin Mosei (林茂生) (1887–1947?), first Taiwanese philosophy PhD, academic, educator and calligrapher thought to have been killed following the February 28 Incident.


  • Ong Iok-tek (王育德) (1924–1985), scholar and authority of the Taiwanese Hokkien dialects


  • Judy Ongg (翁倩玉) (born 1950), actress, singer, author and artist


  • Shi Wen-long (許文龍) (born 1928), businessman, founder of Chi Mei Corporation


  • Lisa Su (born 1969), Chief Executive Officer of Advanced Micro Devices


  • Su Nan-cheng (蘇南成) (born 1936), politician, former mayor of Tainan (1977–1985) and advisor to Chen Shui-bian


  • Szuyu Rachel Su (蘇思羽) (born 1998), pianist.


  • Robert Swinhoe (1836–1877), first British consul sent to Tainan 1861; ornithologist, highly regarded researcher writer on the natural history and zoology of Taiwan and China.


  • Shen Che-Tsai (沈哲哉) (1926-2017), oil painter


  • Chien-Ming Wang (王建民), MLB pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays


  • Wu Hui Ju (吳蕙如), archer and also a member of the team that won the bronze medal for Chinese Taipei in 2004 Summer Olympics in the women's team archery competition


  • Jacky Wu (吳宗憲) (born 1962), entertainer and talk-show host


  • Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) (born 1963), Chief Executive Officer of NVIDIA



Sports





Uni-President Lions have been playing their home games at Tainan Municipal Baseball Stadium since 1999.


Tainan is home to the Uni-President Lions, who play their home games at the Tainan Municipal Baseball Stadium.[52] It is also the birthplace of Chien-Ming Wang, Hong-Chih Kuo, Tai-Yuan Kuo, En-Yu Lin, and many other prominent Taiwanese baseball players.



International relations



Twin towns — Sister cities


The following municipalities are sister cities to Tainan City:[53]





  • Monterey, California, United States (1965)


  • Gwangju, South Korea (1968)[54]


  • San Jose, California United States (1977)


  • Kansas City, Missouri United States (1978)


  • Pasay City, Philippines (1980)


  • Cavite City, Philippines (1980)


  • Tagaytay City, Philippines (1980)


  • Trece Martires City, Philippines (1980)


  • Columbus, Ohio United States (1980)


  • Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia (1981)


  • Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa (1982)


  • Orlando, Florida United States (1982)


  • Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia (1982)


  • Fairbanks, Alaska United States (1983)


  • Laredo, Texas United States (1985)


  • Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States (1986)


  • Huntsville, Alabama United States(1986)


  • Carbondale, Illinois United States(1991)


  • Leuven, Belgium (1993)


  • Snohomish County, Washington United States (1998)


  • Ra'anana, Israel (1999)[55]


  • Zacapa, Guatemala (2003)


  • Elbląg, Poland (2004)[56][57]


  • Keçiören, Turkey (2005)


  • Cagayan de Oro, Philippines (2005)




Friendship cities


Tainan City also celebrates friendly relationships with four other municipalities, although they are not considered official sister cities.




  • Sendai, Japan (2006)


  • Nikkō, Tochigi, Japan (2009)


  • Almere, Netherlands (2009)



Domestic




  • Kinmen, Fujian (1981)


  • Penghu County, Taiwan (2004) (Friendship city)



Relative location




See also



  • List of cities in Taiwan


References





  1. ^ Tainan University of Technology official site[dead link]


  2. ^ 臺南市政府全球資訊網. Tainan.gov.tw. Archived from the original on January 18, 2013. Retrieved 2013-01-23.


  3. ^ 《中華民國統計資訊網》縣市重要統計指標查詢系統網 (in Chinese). Retrieved 13 June 2016.


  4. ^ "Demographia World Urban Areas PDF (April 2016)" (PDF). Demographia. Retrieved 13 June 2016.


  5. ^ "台南市統計月報" (PDF) (in Chinese). Retrieved 13 June 2016.


  6. ^ "Demographia World Urban Areas PDF (April 2016)" (PDF). Demographia. Retrieved 13 June 2016.


  7. ^ Chang, Winnie (April 1994). "Rise of the Phoenix?". Taiwan Today. Retrieved 2012-01-10.


  8. ^ "Tainan Confucian Temple". Council for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2008-08-19.


  9. ^ abcdefghij 蔡玉仙; et al., eds. (2007). 府城文史 (in Chinese). Tainan City Government. ISBN 9789860094343.


  10. ^ abcdefg Shih Shou-chien, ed. (2003). 福爾摩沙 : 十七世紀的臺灣、荷蘭與東亞 [Ilha Formosa: the Emergence of Taiwan on the World Scene in the 17th Century] (in Chinese). National Palace Museum. ISBN 9789575624415.


  11. ^ abcd Kato, Mitsutaka (2007) [1940]. 昨日府城 明星台南: 發現日治下的老臺南 (in Chinese). Translated by 黃秉珩. 臺南市文化資產保護協會. ISBN 9789572807996.


  12. ^ abcdef Rubinstein, Murry A., ed. (2007). Taiwan: A New History (expanded ed.). New York: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 9780765614940.


  13. ^ "Anping Harbor National Historical Park". Tainan City Government. Archived from the original on 2009-10-15. Retrieved 2010-03-31.


  14. ^ Shih (2003).


  15. ^ "Anping Harbor National Historical Park". Tainan City Government. Archived from the original on 2010-03-14. Retrieved 2010-03-25.


  16. ^ Campbell, William (1915). Sketches from Formosa. London: Marshall Brothers. pp. 16–17. OL 7051071M.


  17. ^ Takekoshi, Yosaburō (1907). "Chapter XIII: Population and future development of the island resources". Japanese rule in Formosa. London, New York, Bombay and Calcutta: Longmans, Green, and co. p. 200. OCLC 753129. OL 6986981M.


  18. ^ Chamberlain, B.; Mason, W.B. (1903). A Handbook for Travellers in Japan (7th ed.). London: J. Murray. p. 553. OL 25302448M.


  19. ^ "湯德章". Archived from the original on January 21, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-17.


  20. ^ 張銘清訪台遇襲事件 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2010-04-18.


  21. ^ Kuo-fang, Huang; Hsu, Elizabeth (13 February 2016). "Remains of last unaccounted-for quake victim found". Focus Taiwan. The Central News Agency. Retrieved 18 February 2016.


  22. ^ abcde "台南市文資導讀". Tainan City Government. Retrieved 2011-05-12.


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  24. ^ Lee Hsin-fang; Chung, Jake (15 Jul 2015). "Tainan has most of nation's 12,106 temples". Taipei Times. p. 5.


  25. ^ "Tainan Traditional Orchestra". Tainan Traditional Orchestra. Archived from the original on 6 September 2006. Retrieved 6 November 2011.


  26. ^ "Chimei Orchestra (Chinese)". Chimei Museum. Archived from the original on November 1, 2011. Retrieved 6 November 2011.


  27. ^ "Chang Jung University Orchestra". Chang Jung University. Archived from the original on December 27, 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2011.


  28. ^ "Ten Drum Official Website (Chinese)". Ten Drum Art Percussion Group. Ten Drum Art Percussion Group. Retrieved 6 November 2011.


  29. ^ "Gold Coast travel guide: Tainan". Retrieved 24 November 2018.


  30. ^ 中央氣象局 (in Chinese). Cwb.gov.tw. 2011-01-31. Retrieved 2014-01-22.


  31. ^ abcd 金山, 翁 (2002). 台南市都市設計規劃綱要之研究 1 都市空間的溯源與演化. 財團法人成大建築文教基金會.


  32. ^ "Green and blue belts reference" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 25, 2012. Retrieved 2011-11-02.


  33. ^ "CEPD". Archived from the original on 2012-04-07. Retrieved 2011-11-02.


  34. ^ "LCD manufacturing in Tainan". Tainan City Government. Archived from the original on May 20, 2009. Retrieved 20 November 2011.


  35. ^ ab "Report on the economic structure to CPED". Tainan City Government. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2011.


  36. ^ "Tainan District Agricultural Research & Extension Station, COA". COA. Archived from the original on March 6, 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2013.


  37. ^ "AVRDC". Retrieved 18 May 2013.


  38. ^ "Taiwan Orchid Plantation". Taiwan Orchid Plantation. Archived from the original on 2011-10-21. Retrieved 20 November 2011.


  39. ^ 臺南市觀光遊憩景點遊客人次統計(PDF). Tainan City Government Tourism Bureau Official Website. Tainan City Government Tourism Bureau. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-01-28. Retrieved 14 September 2013.


  40. ^ "Transfer Information". Taiwan High Speed Rail. Archived from the original on 2012-11-25. Retrieved 2012-12-06.


  41. ^ "MRT Plans" (in Chinese). Bureau of High Speed Rail. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  42. ^ "Tainan City Bus System". Archived from the original on 2 March 2013. Retrieved 24 March 2013.


  43. ^ ab "Tainan Public Transport Plan". Tainan City Government. Tainan City Government. Retrieved 23 March 2013.


  44. ^ "The Tainan Urban District Railway Underground Project". Retrieved 24 March 2013.


  45. ^ "2005 statistics" (PDF). Tainan City Government. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 10, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-19.


  46. ^ "Tainan Airport Departure Flight Status (Monthly)". TAINAN AIRPORT. Retrieved 2017-12-25.


  47. ^ Lin, Judy (1 Mar 2008). "FAT to sell investments to cover costs". Taipei Times. p. 12. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  48. ^ "Brief History". National Cheng Kung University. Archived from the original on 2008-09-13. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  49. ^ "Organization". National Cheng Kung University. Archived from the original on 2008-08-18. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  50. ^ "Introduction". Tainan Theological College and Seminary. Archived from the original on May 22, 2007. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  51. ^ "Inventor of the Week: Momofuku Ando". MIT. Archived from the original on August 3, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-19.


  52. ^ "Parking near the Municipal Stadium" (in Chinese). Uni-President Lions. Archived from the original on 2008-09-13. Retrieved 2008-08-20.


  53. ^ 姊妹市暨友誼市. Tainan City Government (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2013-07-01. Retrieved 2013-08-01.


  54. ^ Gwangju Sister Cities


  55. ^ "Ra'anana: Twin towns & Sister cities - Friends around the World". raanana.muni.il. Archived from the original on February 28, 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2010.


  56. ^ "Elbląg - Podstrony / Miasta partnerskie". Elbląski Dziennik Internetowy (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2011-03-15. Retrieved 2013-08-01.


  57. ^ "Elbląg - Miasta partnerskie". Elbląg.net (in Polish). Retrieved 2013-08-01.






External links





  • Tainan travel guide from Wikivoyage


  • Geographic data related to Tainan at OpenStreetMap

  • Tainan City Government Official Website

  • Tainan City Travel Information

  • Tainan City Dynamic Bus Information System

  • The Confucian temple in Tainan







Coordinates: 22°59′N 120°11′E / 22.983°N 120.183°E / 22.983; 120.183







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