Tainan City
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City Flag |
![]() City Seal |
| Abbreviation | Southern City 南市 |
| Nickname | The Phoenix City[1], The Prefecture City 府城 |
| Capital | Anping District (安平區) |
| Region | Southwestern Taiwan |
| Mayor | Hsu Tain-tsair (許添財) |
| Area | 175.6456 km² (Ranked 17 of 25) |
| Population (Nov, 2007) | |
| - Population | 764,147 (Ranked 11 of 25) |
| - Density | 4,350.50 /km² |
| Districts | 6 |
| Website | English Trad. Chinese |
| Symbols | |
| - Bird | Black-billed magpie [1] |
| - Flower | Royal Poinciana (Delonix regia) |
| - Tree | Royal Poinciana (Delonix regia) |
Tainan City (traditional Chinese: 臺南; Hanyu Pinyin: Táinán; Wade-Giles: T'ai-nan; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-lâm; literally "Southern Taiwan") is the fourth largest city in Taiwan after Taipei, Kaohsiung, and Taichung. It is officially administrated as a provincial city of Taiwan Province in the Republic of China.
Tainan was established as the capital of Taiwan in 1661 and remained capital until 1887 during the Qing Dynasty. In fact, "Taiwan" is the old name of Tainan and became the name of island later. The city is famous for its abundant historic buildings and delicious snack food.
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Tainan was established as Tungtu (traditional Chinese: 東都; literally "East Capital"), and was made the capital of Taiwan in 1661 by Koxinga after he took over the island from Dutch colonial rule. In 1684, the Qing Dynasty conquered Taiwan and established "Taiwan Fu" (Taiwan Government) as the first official local government in Taiwan. This was later renamed to "Tainan Fu" in 1885 when Taiwan was established as a province. Because it was formerly the capital of Taiwan, Tainan is also called Fu-cheng (traditional Chinese: 府城; literally "Government City"). Tainan also served as the capital of the Republic of Formosa.
Tainan, historically regarded as one of the oldest cities in Taiwan, began with the establishment of the Dutch port at Tayoan City (source of the name Taiwan and now called An-ping) in 1624. It is also one of Taiwan's cultural capitals, as it houses the First Confucian School/Temple built 1665 on the island, the remains of the Northern and Southern gates of the old city, and countless other historical monuments.
Tainan claims more Buddhist and Taoist temples than any city in Taiwan. Tainan City (台南市) is administratively a municipality of Taiwan Province of the Republic of China. It is surrounded by Tainan County to the north and east and the South China Sea to the west and south. Tainan's complex history of comebacks, redefinitions and renewals inspired its popular nickname "City of the Phoenix."[2]
Tainan City currently has 6 districts: Anping, Annan, East, West-Central, South, and North districts.
Annan district was originally the An-Shun township of Tainan County, and was merged into Tainan City in 1946. In 2004, Central District and West District were merged into the new West-Central district.
The following places are sister cities to Tainan City:
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Tainan City also celebrates friendly relationships with two other locations, although they are not considered official sister cities.
Penghu County, Republic of China(Taiwan)
Sendai, Japan
- National Cheng Kung University, one of the leading universities Taiwan, is located in the East District. In 1931, NCKU was established as Tainan Technical College, located on the present Cheng-Kung Campus, with 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. Today, National Cheng Kung University serves nearly 21,000 students through 9 colleges, 39 departments, and 49 graduate institutes.
- Tainan Theological College and Seminary (台南神學院) was established in 1867 by Thomas Barclay.
- 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 Technology, 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 (台南科技大學) is a private university founded in 1964. The university offers graduate degrees in music, visual art, and applied sciences. The main campus actually sits in Tainan County just outside the official city limits.
Public
- National Tainan First Senior High School
- National Tainan Second Senior High School
- National Tainan Girls' Senior High School
- National Chia-Chi Girls' Senior High School
- National Tainan Commercial 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 Girls' High School
- Kuang Hua Girls' Senior High School
- Tainan Liuhsin Senior High School
- Kuen-Shan Senior High School
- Ying-Hai High School
- 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
- Chien-Ming Wang (王建民), MLB pitcher for the New York Yankees
- Hong-Chih Kuo (郭泓志), MLB pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers
- Chin-Lung Hu (胡金龍), MLB infielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers
- Ang Lee (Chinese: 李安; pinyin: Lǐ Ān) (born October 23, 1954) is an Academy Award–winning film director from Tainan
Tainan is home to the Uni-President Lions, who play their home games at the Tainan Municipal Baseball Stadium. It is also the birthplace of Chien-Ming Wang, Hong-Chih Kuo, Taigen kaku, En-Yu Lin, and many other prominent Taiwanese baseball players.
| This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters. |
- Political divisions of the Republic of China
- Township (Taiwan)
- List of cities in the Republic of China (Taiwan)
- List of mayors of Tainan
- Republic of China
- ^ =http://www.tut.edu.tw/webmaster/w1secret/%BE%C7%AE%D5%C2%B2%A4%B6/English/e-01.htm Tainan University of Technology official site
- ^ =http://www.tut.edu.tw/webmaster/w1secret/%BE%C7%AE%D5%C2%B2%A4%B6/English/e-01.htm Tainan University of Technology official site
| Find more information on Tainan by searching Wikipedia's sister projects | |
|---|---|
| Dictionary definitions from Wiktionary | |
| Textbooks from Wikibooks | |
| Quotations from Wikiquote | |
| Source texts from Wikisource | |
| Images and media from Commons | |
| News stories from Wikinews | |
| Learning resources from Wikiversity | |
- Tainan travel guide from Wikitravel
- Tainan City Government Official Website (English)
- Tainan City Travel Information
- Tainan City Dynamic Bus Information System
- The Confucian temple in Tainan
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| Provinces (streamlined) | Taiwan Province · Fuchien Province | |
| Central Municipalities | Taipei City · Kaohsiung City | |
| Counties (Taiwan Province) | Taipei County · Taoyuan County · Hsinchu County · Miaoli County · Taichung County · Changhua County · Nantou County · Yunlin County · Chiayi County · Tainan County · Kaohsiung County · Pingtung County · Yilan County · Hualien County · Taitung County · Penghu County | |
| Counties (Fuchien Province) | Kinmen County · Lienchiang County | |
| Provincial Cities (Taiwan Province) | Keelung City · Hsinchu City · Taichung City · Chiayi City · Tainan City | |
