Chiayi Explained

Chiayi City
Official Name:Chiayi City
Other Name:Ka-gi, Kagi, Chiai, Chia-i
Settlement Type:City
Seal Type:Logo
Nickname:Peach City (Chinese: 桃城) or Jia City (Chinese: 嘉市)
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1: (de facto dissolved)
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Southwestern Taiwan
Established Title:First mentioned
Established Date:1787
Established Title1:Renamed to Kagi
Established Date1:17 April 1895
Established Title2:Autonomous city
Established Date2:1930
Established Title3:Provincial city
Established Date3:25 October 1945
Established Title4:Downgraded to county-administered city
Established Date4:16 August 1950
Established Title5:Provincial city status restored
Established Date5:1 July 1982
Seat:East District
Parts Type:Districts
Parts:2 districts
P1:East
P2:West
Government Type:Chiayi City Government
Leader Party:KMT
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Huang Min-hui
Iso Code:TW-CYI
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:60.03
Area Rank:21 out of 22
Elevation M:69
Population Total:263188
Population As Of:January 2023
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Rank:18 of 22
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:National Standard Time
Utc Offset:+8
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:600
Area Code:05
Blank1 Name Sec2:Flower
Blank2 Name Sec2:Tree
Blank2 Info Sec2:Hong Kong orchid tree
Chiayi City
Piccap:"Chiayi" in Traditional (top) and Simplified (bottom) Chinese characters
Picupright:0.55
Hp:Jiāyì Shì
Bpmf:ㄐㄧㄚ   ㄧˋ   ㄕˋ
Tp:Jiayì Shìh
Gr:Jiayih Shyh
W:Chia1-i4 Shih4
Mps:Jiāyì Shr̀
Myr:Jyāyì Shr̀
J:gaa1 ji6 si5
Y:Gāyih Síh
Phfs:Kâ-ngi-sṳ
Poj:Ka-gī-chhī
Tl:Ka-gī-tshī
Showflag:ppoj
Kanji:嘉義市
Hiragana:かぎし
Katakana:カギシ
Revhep:Kagi-shi
Kunrei:Kagi-si

Chiayi (Taigi POJ: Ka-gī;), officially known as Chiayi City, is a city located in Chianan Plain in southwestern Taiwan, surrounded by Chiayi County with a population of 263,188 inhabitants as of January 2023.

Hoanya people inhabited present-day Chiayi under its historical name Tirosen prior to the arrival of Han Chinese in Taiwan and was ruled by the Dutch and Kingdom of Tungning under various names. During the Qing dynasty, Tirosen was governed as part of Taiwan Prefecture in Fujian under Zhuluo County and the city was renamed to Kagee in 1787. The city was once again named Kagi during the Japanese era but the earthquake destroyed much of the town. Kagi became administered as part of Tainan Prefecture from 1920. Following the surrender of Japan, the Republic of China, who deposed the Qing in 1911, took control of the city in 1945 as Chiayi City and became administered as a provincial city of Taiwan Province before being integrated in Chiayi County in 1950 as a county-administered city and later restored its status as provincial city in 1982. In 1998, Taiwan Province became streamlined and Chiayi City became governed directly by the Executive Yuan.

The city is known for Alishan National Scenic Area and warm humid subtropical climate in the summer months. Left with the landmarks of Japanese colonial rule, Chiayi City has the round-island railway system and Alishan Forest Railway where the city is the starting point along with various Japanese temples.

Name

Like the county, Chiayi City's former Chinese placename was Tsu-lo-san[3], a representation of the original Formosan-language name Tirosen. A shortened version, Tsulo, was then used to name Tsulo County, which originally covered the underdeveloped northern two-thirds of the island. In 1704, the county seat was moved to Tsulosan, the site of modern-day Chiayi City. Following the 1723 Zhu Yigui rebellion, the county was reduced in size. In 1787, the county and city were renamed Chiayi (;) by the Qianlong Emperor to acknowledge the citizens' loyalty during the Lin Shuangwen rebellion.[4]

History

Early history

First inhabited by the Hoanya aborigines, the region was named Tirosen (variants Tirocen, Tiracen). With the arrival of Han Chinese immigrants in southwestern Taiwan, the name evolved to become Tsulosan in Hokkien. Eventually, Tsulosan was shortened to simply Tsulo. Because of the choice of the characters, it has been mistakenly suggested that the origin of the name came from the expression "mountains surrounding the east". "Peach City" is another name for Chiayi City due to its peach-shaped territory in ancient times. The tip of the peach is around Central Fountain and was called "Peach-tip" by citizens.

Tsulosan was once the foothold to which people from the mainland immigrated. In 1621,, who came from Zhangzhou, Fujian Province, first led his people to cultivate this land after they landed at Ponkan (modern-day Beigang).

Dutch Formosa

Records from the Dutch era, beginning in 1624, show Tirosen as the usual form of the name; it also occurred as Tirassen, Tirozen, Tilocen, Tilossen, Tilocen, and Thilocen.[5] The place was north of Mattau (modern-day Madou, Tainan) and south of Favorlang (Huwei, Yunlin).

Kingdom of Tungning

In 1661 (the 15th year of Yung-Li, Ming dynasty), Koxinga defeated the Dutch based in Taiwan and founded the Kingdom of Tungning. He established one province,, and two counties, and, demarcated by the Hsin-Kang River (now the Yanshui River). Chiayi was under the jurisdiction of the Tien-Hsing County.

Qing dynasty

In 1683, when Qing rule began, the island was governed as Taiwan Prefecture under the administration of Fujian Province. In 1684, Tsulo County was established and initially encompassed the underdeveloped northern two-thirds of Taiwan. (Taiwan and Hongsoa counties were divided from Wan-Nien County during the Kingdom of Tungning, which was changed from Tien-Hsing County.) In 1704, the county seat was moved to Tsulosan, the site of modern-day Chiayi City, and had wooden city walls.

In 1727, the county magistrate, Liu Liang-Bi rebuilt the gatehouses and set a gun platform for each gatehouse. The four gatehouses were named: "Chin Shan" (Korean: 襟山) for East, "Tai Hai" (Chinese: 帶海) for West, "Chung Yang" (Chinese: 崇陽) for South, and "Kung Chen" (Chinese: 拱辰) for North. In 1734 (the 12th year of Yongzheng), magistrate Lu-Hung built piercing-bamboo to better protect the city.

In 1786, the Lin Shuangwen rebellion was an attempt to siege Tsulosan but failed to overcome the defense of the inhabitants. Consequently, on November 3 of the next year, the Qing Emperor conferred the name Kagee (;) to praise the citizens' loyalty.

In the mid-1800s, a custom of annual riotous mass stoning developed in the city.[6]

In 1887, a separate Taiwan Province was declared and the island was administratively divided into four prefectures; the city of Kagee belonged to Tainan Prefecture.

Japanese rule

In 1895, Taiwan was ceded to Japan in the Treaty of Shimonoseki. The 1906 Meishan earthquake devastated the entire city wall except the Eastern Gate. The Japanese authorities reconstructed the city. Industries and trades started to flourish. According to the census taken in 1904, Kagi was the fourth most populous city in Taiwan, with a population of over twenty thousand.[7]

The Great Kagi earthquake (later also known as the 1906 Meishan earthquake) struck the city in mid March 1906.[8]

In 1907, the construction of Alishan Forest Railway to Mount Ali was begun. In 1920, the city became an autonomous group as, Kagi District, within Tainan Prefecture, which included modern-day Tainan City, Chiayi County and Yunlin County. In 1930, the town was upgraded to an autonomous city under the same prefecture.

Republic of China

After the handover of Taiwan from Japan to the Republic of China in October 1945, Chiayi City was established as a provincial city of Taiwan Province. The city consisted of 8 districts, which were Bajiang, Beimen, Beizhen, Nanmen, Tungmen, Tungshan, Ximen and Zhuwei Districts. In 1946, the districts was reorganized to 6 districts in which Bajiang and Nanmen were merged to become Xinnan, Beimen and Beizhen were merged to become Xinbei, Tungmen and Tungshan were merged to become Xindong, Ximen and Zhuwei were merged to become Xinxi District and there were 2 addition of districts from Tainan County which were Shuishang and Taibao Districts.[9]

Chiayi saw some of the most violent events during the 228 Incident. In early March, local militas surrounded the Shueishang Airport and fought against the KMT military.[10] There were over 300 casualties.[11] On 12 March 1947, negotiators for peace, including Tan Teng-pho and, were arrested after arriving at the airport and were executed on 25 March. The Kuomintang also executed many civilians in Chiayi.[12]

On 16 August 1950, because of the re-allocation of administrative areas in which Taiwan was divided into 16 counties, five provincial cities and a special bureau, Chiayi City was downgraded to a county-administered city and merged with Chiayi County to be the county seat. As a result, a shortage of capital hindered its development.

On 1 July 1982, Chiayi City was elevated again to a provincial city as a result of pressure from local elites.[13] On 6 October 1990, the East District and West District were established.[14]

Geography

Chiayi City is located on the north side of Chianan Plain, south west of Taiwan Island. On the east side is the Mount Ali, on the west side is the Chiayi Airport, on the north side is the Puzi River and on the south side is the Bazhang River. The distance from east to west of Chiayi City is 15.8km (09.8miles) and from north to south is 10.5km (06.5miles) with a total area of 60.0256km2. Chiayi City is completely surrounded by Chiayi County. Most of Chiayi City land is broad flat fertile plains. The terrain slowly rises from west to east. Chiayi is also one of the closest Taiwanese cities to the Tropic of Cancer, with the latitudinal line lying just south of the city.

Climate

Chiayi City has a warm humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa) that closely borders a true tropical climate. Northeasterly winds during fall and winter mean that rainfall is depressed during that time, while southwesterly winds during summer and the later portion of spring bring most of the year's rainfall, with more than 60% falling from June to August. Humidity is high year-round, even during winter.

Government

Chiayi City is a provincial city of Taiwan Province of the Republic of China. The city is governed by the Chiayi City Government, while the residence is represented in the Chiayi City Council. The current Mayor of Chiayi City is Huang Min-hui of the Kuomintang.

Administrative divisions

Chiayi City is divided into two districts. East District is the city seat which houses the Chiayi City Government.

MapNameChineseTaiwaneseHakkaPopulation (2016)Area (km2)
EastTangTûng122,87729.1195
WestSe147,39630.9061

Politics

Chiayi City voted one Democratic Progressive Party legislator to be in the Legislative Yuan during the 2020 Taiwanese legislative election. It has historically been a very pan-Green city. During the martial law era, most people of Chiayi supported tangwai politicians. However, the voting gap between the DPP and the KMT has narrowed in recent years.[15] And in 2022 Taiwanese local elections, Chiayi City re-elected Huang Min-hui of Kuomintang to be the mayor.

Education

Energy

Green energy

On 17 December 2015, Chiayi City Government launched a program to set up solar panels at schools and offices in the city to reduce green house gases. The program is expected to produce 3.55 million kWh of electricity annually and to help reducing carbon emission by 1,700 tonnes.[16]

Tourist attractions

Chiayi is the city of wind music in Taiwan. The wind music festival started as a local event in 1988, when it was more like a joint performance by local wind music bands. Over the years the festival has become the most anticipated annual event in Chiayi.[18]

Sports

Major sporting events held by Chiayi include:

Notable residents/natives

International relations

See main article: List of twin towns and sister cities in Taiwan.

Twin towns — sister cities

Chiayi is twinned with:

Transportation

Rail

Chiayi City is served by Chiayi Station and Jiabei Station of the Taiwan Railways Administration. Chiayi Station is the starting point for the Alishan Forest Railway. The city is also accessible from THSR Chiayi Station in Chiayi County.

Bus

Chiayi Bus Rapid Transit connects Chiayi City to Chiayi HSR station in the neighboring Taibao City. Chiayi City Bus serves the urban areas of Chiayi City.

Air

Chiayi City is served by Chiayi Airport in the neighboring Shuishang Township.

In popular culture

Chiayi City and its street foods, including the famous Chiayi turkey rice, were featured on the Netflix TV series, Street Food, in season 1.[19]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Xiàn shì zhòngyào tǒngjì zhǐbiāo cháxún xìtǒng wǎng . zh:縣市重要統計指標查詢系統網 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160612002357/http://statdb.dgbas.gov.tw/pxweb/Dialog/statfile9.asp . 12 June 2016 . 1 July 2016 . Zhōnghuá mínguó tǒngjì zīxùn wǎng . zh . zh:中華民國統計資訊網.
  2. Web site: Minzheng chu . 2016-07-01 . Jiāyì Shì 105 nián 6 yuèfèn rénkǒu tǒngjì zīliào . zh:嘉義市105年6月份人口統計資料 . Population Statistics of Chiayi City for June 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160916212034/http://www.chiayi.gov.tw/2015web/02_news/content.aspx?id=48363 . 16 September 2016 . 1 July 2016 . Jiāyì Shì zhèngfǔ . zh . zh:嘉義市政府.
  3. Book: Campbell . William . William Campbell (missionary) . Formosa under the Dutch: described from contemporary records, with explanatory notes and a bibliography of the island . 1903 . Kegan Paul . London . 644323041 . Explanatory Notes . https://archive.org/stream/formosaunderdut01campgoog#page/n554/mode/2up . 549. 9789576380839 .
  4. Web site: Taiwan in Time: Rebels of heaven and earth - Taipei Times . 17 April 2016 .
  5. Book: Campbell, M. W. . Formosa Under the Dutch: Described from Contemporary Records, with Explanatory Notes and a Bibliography of the Island . Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. . 1903 . London . 549 . en . Explanatory Notes . 9789576380839 . 644323041 . William Campbell (missionary) . https://archive.org/stream/formosaunderdut01campgoog#page/n554/mode/2up.
  6. Book: Campbell, W. . Sketches from Formosa . 1915 . Marshall Brothers . London . 79–81 . en . It was on a later occasion I arrived in Ka-gi to find the people engaged in their absurd periodic custom of stonethrowing..
  7. Book: Takekoshi, Yosaburō . Japanese Rule in Formosa . 1907 . Longmans, Green, and Co. . London . 200 . en . Braithwaite . George . Chapter XIII: Population and Future Development of the Island Resources . 753129 . 6986981M . Takekoshi Yosaburō.
  8. Book: Campbell, W. . Sketches from Formosa . 1915 . Marshall Brothers . London . 82–83 . en.
  9. Web site: 臺灣建制市的市轄區變遷 . 2022-03-20 . www.aiplus.idv.tw.
  10. 二二八民變-台灣與蔣介石,143-146;1947台灣二二八革命,166-185;責任歸屬研究報告,61-63
  11. Web site: Storm.mg . 2019-02-26 . 「要殺光嘉義市民!」菁英遭遊街槍決、民眾被掃射…二二八「民主聖地」挺身抗暴最慘烈-風傳媒 . 2022-03-20 . www.storm.mg . zh-TW.
  12. Web site: The 228 Massacre in Chiayi: "The Airport and Train Station Were Washed with Blood" . 2022-03-20 . The Taiwan Gazette . en-US.
  13. News: 1 February 2011 . Rezoning Taiwan . en . Taiwan Today . 9 December 2020.
  14. Web site: History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20170314190434/http://www.chiayi.gov.tw/web/east/english/index-e.asp . 2017-03-14 . 2016-01-06 . East District Office, Chiayi City . en.
  15. Web site: 大選關鍵區》嘉義市藍綠皆配角、派系也式微,誰抓得住民主聖地?|天下雜誌 . 2022-03-20 . 天下雜誌 . zh-Hant-TW.
  16. News: Chiang . Chun-liang . Hou . Elaine . 2015-12-17 . Chiayi City Launches Solar Power System Program . en . Focus Taiwan News Channel . Central News Agency . 2015-12-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151218050445/http://focustaiwan.tw/news/asoc/201512170020.aspx . 2015-12-18.
  17. Web site: Chung Cheng Park . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150610200721/http://travel.chiayi.gov.tw/EN/spotsContent.aspx?id=2&chk=7cb53cb1-2ca0-4bbc-bc8d-dd57671a09d4 . 2015-06-10 . 2013-11-16 . Travel in Chiayi . en.
  18. Web site: 2009-01-17 . The Sound of Wind Music: 2008 Chiayi City International Band Festival . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090203004146/http://www.culture.tw/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1080&Itemid=157 . 2009-02-03 . 2009-02-06 . Culture.tw . en.
  19. Web site: Brown . Joshua Samuel . 22 May 2019 . Taiwan Culture and Cuisine Shine on New Netflix Series "Street Food" . 26 July 2020 . CommonWealth Magazine . Medium . en.