Chiayi
View on WikipediaKey Information
| Chiayi City | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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"Chiayi" in Traditional (top) and Simplified (bottom) Chinese characters | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 嘉義市 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 嘉义市 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hokkien POJ | Ka-gī-chhī | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kanji | 嘉義市 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hiragana | かぎし | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Katakana | カギシ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chiayi (/ˈdʒjɑːˈiː/),[3] officially known as Chiayi City,[I] 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.
The Hoanya people inhabited present-day Chiayi under its historical name of Tirosen prior to the arrival of Han Chinese in Taiwan and was ruled by the Dutch and the 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 Kagee in 1787. The city was renamed Kagi during the Japanese era but an earthquake in 1906 destroyed much of the town. Kagi was administered as part of Tainan Prefecture from 1920 onwards. Following the surrender of Japan in 1945, the Republic of China, who deposed the Qing in 1911, took control of the city (renamed Chiayi City) and administered it as a provincial city of Taiwan Province before being integrated into Chiayi County in 1950 as a county-administered city. The city was restored to its status as a provincial city in 1982. In 1998, Taiwan Province was streamlined and Chiayi City has been governed directly since then 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
[edit]Like the county, Chiayi City's former Chinese placename was Tsu-lo-san[4] (Chinese: 諸羅山; pinyin: Zhūluóshān; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chu-lô-san), 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 (嘉義; lit. 'commended righteousness') by the Qianlong Emperor to acknowledge the citizens' loyalty during the Lin Shuangwen rebellion.[5]
History
[edit]Early history
[edit]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 (Chinese: 諸羅山; pinyin: Zhūluóshān; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chu-lô-san) 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, Yan Siqi, who came from Zhangzhou, Fujian Province, first led his people to cultivate this land after they landed at Ponkan (modern-day Beigang).
Dutch Formosa
[edit]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.[6] The place was north of Mattau (modern-day Madou, Tainan) and south of Favorlang (Huwei, Yunlin).
Kingdom of Tungning
[edit]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, Cheng-Tien-Fu, and two counties, Tien-Hsing and Wan-Nien, demarcated by the Hsin-Kang River (Chinese: 新港溪, now the Yanshui River). Chiayi was under the jurisdiction of the Tien-Hsing County.
Qing dynasty
[edit]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" (襟山) for East, "Tai Hai" (帶海) for West, "Chung Yang" (崇陽) for South, and "Kung Chen" (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 (嘉義; lit. 'commended righteousness') to praise the citizens' loyalty.
In the mid-1800s, a custom of annual riotous mass stoning developed in the city.[7][better source needed]
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
[edit]
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.[8]
The Great Kagi earthquake (later also known as the 1906 Meishan earthquake) struck the city in mid March 1906.[9]
In looking over some of my more recent Notes, it seems impossible to make the foregoing references to Ka-gi without adding a few words about that dreadful earthquake which devastated the region in March 1906. I was there soon after, and had a profound feeling of sadness on seeing whole streets covered with fallen beams and other debris; on seeing, too, so many traces of the awful suffering on every side. Within Ka-gi city, and a limited area around, 1,216 persons were suddenly thrust out into the eternal world. Not fewer than 2,306 persons were seriously injured, and 13,259 houses were laid low. The great mysterious Power then tore the earth into deep, open chasms in several places. Many of the narrow escapes and calamities were very affecting; particularly that of our blind evangelist Toa-un, who ran out of doors with his wife as the shaking began. The demented mother, however, could not bear the thought of her two helpless young children being left behind, and she darted in to rescue them, when my poor blind pupil became childless and a widower in an instant of time. No sooner had the Governor-General at Tai-pak received telegraphic information of the magnitude of the calamity, than instructions were issued for a large company of surgeons, nurses, and assistants to proceed at once to Ka-gi. Wide hospital-sheds were erected without delay, and the work of relief was carried on with a rare amount of self-denial and promptitude. Even already, the city has lost much of its most desolate appearance, and the projected improvements give promise that it will have a more attractive look than ever. – William Campbell, 1915
In 1907, the construction of Alishan Forest Railway to Mount Ali was begun. In 1920, the city became an autonomous group as Kagi Town (嘉義街), 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
[edit]
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.[10]
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.[11] There were over 300 casualties.[12] On 12 March 1947, negotiators for peace, including Tan Teng-pho and Phuan Bok-tsi, were arrested after arriving at the airport and were executed on 25 March. The Kuomintang also executed many civilians in Chiayi.[13]
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.[14] On 6 October 1990, the East District and West District were established.[15]
Geography
[edit]


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 15.8 km (9.8 mi) and from north to south is 10.5 km (6.5 mi) with a total area of 60.0256 km2 (23.1760 sq mi). 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
[edit]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.
| Climate data for Chiayi (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1968–present) | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
| Record high °C (°F) | 31.7 (89.1) |
33.0 (91.4) |
34.1 (93.4) |
34.2 (93.6) |
37.2 (99.0) |
37.0 (98.6) |
37.2 (99.0) |
36.6 (97.9) |
36.7 (98.1) |
36.5 (97.7) |
33.6 (92.5) |
32.5 (90.5) |
37.2 (99.0) |
| Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 22.5 (72.5) |
23.0 (73.4) |
25.4 (77.7) |
28.4 (83.1) |
30.9 (87.6) |
32.8 (91.0) |
33.4 (92.1) |
32.8 (91.0) |
32.1 (89.8) |
30.1 (86.2) |
27.6 (81.7) |
23.9 (75.0) |
28.6 (83.4) |
| Daily mean °C (°F) | 16.8 (62.2) |
17.7 (63.9) |
20.2 (68.4) |
23.5 (74.3) |
26.3 (79.3) |
28.3 (82.9) |
28.9 (84.0) |
28.4 (83.1) |
27.4 (81.3) |
24.9 (76.8) |
22.0 (71.6) |
18.4 (65.1) |
23.6 (74.4) |
| Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 12.9 (55.2) |
14.1 (57.4) |
16.2 (61.2) |
19.5 (67.1) |
22.6 (72.7) |
24.7 (76.5) |
25.4 (77.7) |
25.2 (77.4) |
24.0 (75.2) |
21.1 (70.0) |
18.0 (64.4) |
14.2 (57.6) |
19.8 (67.6) |
| Record low °C (°F) | 1.8 (35.2) |
2.6 (36.7) |
2.7 (36.9) |
8.2 (46.8) |
13.9 (57.0) |
17.5 (63.5) |
21.7 (71.1) |
19.7 (67.5) |
17.6 (63.7) |
11.5 (52.7) |
6.7 (44.1) |
0.4 (32.7) |
0.4 (32.7) |
| Average precipitation mm (inches) | 27.5 (1.08) |
44.9 (1.77) |
53.0 (2.09) |
86.6 (3.41) |
170.0 (6.69) |
318.6 (12.54) |
387.4 (15.25) |
443.8 (17.47) |
212.3 (8.36) |
30.2 (1.19) |
21.5 (0.85) |
25.8 (1.02) |
1,821.6 (71.72) |
| Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) | 5.1 | 5.5 | 6.8 | 8.1 | 10.4 | 13.8 | 15.3 | 17.9 | 9.4 | 2.9 | 3.3 | 4.1 | 102.6 |
| Average relative humidity (%) | 77.9 | 79.3 | 79.3 | 79.8 | 79.9 | 77.5 | 77.2 | 80.1 | 80.1 | 78.9 | 78.7 | 76.8 | 78.8 |
| Mean monthly sunshine hours | 161.4 | 139.7 | 157.9 | 157.0 | 175.5 | 186.6 | 206.4 | 182.2 | 186.2 | 197.0 | 158.9 | 159.2 | 2,068 |
| Source: Central Weather Bureau[16][17][18][19][20] | |||||||||||||
Government
[edit]

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
[edit]Chiayi City is divided into two districts. East District is the city seat which houses the Chiayi City Government.
| Map | Name | Chinese | Taiwanese | Hakka | Population (2016) | Area (km2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| East | 東區 | Tang | Tûng | 122,877 | 29.1195 | ||
| West | 西區 | Se | Sî | 147,396 | 30.9061 | ||
Politics
[edit]
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.[21] In the 2022 Taiwanese local elections, Chiayi City re-elected Huang Min-hui of Kuomintang to be the mayor.
Demographics
[edit]| Year | Pop. | ±% |
|---|---|---|
| 1985 | 253,573 | — |
| 1990 | 257,597 | +1.6% |
| 1995 | 261,391 | +1.5% |
| 2000 | 266,183 | +1.8% |
| 2005 | 272,364 | +2.3% |
| 2010 | 272,390 | +0.0% |
| 2015 | 270,366 | −0.7% |
| 2020 | 266,005 | −1.6% |
| Source:"Populations by City and Country in Taiwan" (in Chinese). Ministry of the Interior Population Census. May 2018. | ||
Education
[edit]Energy
[edit]Green energy
[edit]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.[22]
Tourist attractions
[edit]


- Alishan Forest Railway & Railway Park
- Art Site of Chiayi Railway Warehouse
- Chia-Le-Fu Night Market
- Chiayi Art Museum
- Chiayi Botanical Garden
- Chiayi Cheng Huang Temple
- Chiayi City Municipal Baseball Stadium
- Chiayi Cultural and Creative Industries Park
- Chiayi Jen Wu Temple
- Chiayi Municipal Museum
- Chiayi Park
- Chiayi Prison Museum
- Hinoki Village
- Lantan Lake
- Museum of Old Taiwan Tiles
- St. John's Cathedral
- Taiwan Hinoki Museum
- Water Source Water Meter Room
- Wenhua Road Night Market
- Historic Archives Building of Chiayi City (史蹟資料館)
- 228 Memorial Park
- National 228 Memorial Park
- Chung Cheng Park[23]
- Chiayi International Band Festival
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.[24]
Sports
[edit]Major sporting events held by Chiayi include:
Notable residents/natives
[edit]- Tan Ting-pho (1895–1947), Taiwan famous painter.
- Sow-Hsin Chen (1935–2021), American physicist, Professor.
- Vincent Siew (1939), Taiwanese politician, Vice President of the Republic of China (2008–2012), Vice-Chairman of the Kuomintang.
- Sam Liao (1976), Taiwanese singer-songwriter.
- Huang Min-hui (1959), former mayor of Chiayi City, vice chairperson of Kuomintang, a member of the Legislative Yuan (1999 and 2005).
- Lo Chen-Jung (1961), Taiwanese left-handed baseball pitcher.
- Wu Bai (1968), Taiwanese rock singer.
Twin towns – sister cities
[edit]Chiayi is twinned with:
East Orange, New Jersey, United States (1972)
Jackson, Mississippi, United States (1972)
Juneau, Alaska, United States (1977)
Murray, Utah, United States (1977)
Bulacan Province, Philippines (1980)
Martinsburg, West Virginia, United States (1988)
Syracuse, New York, United States (1995)
Hsinchu City, Taiwan (2002)
Transportation
[edit]
Rail
[edit]Chiayi City is served by Chiayi Station and Jiabei Station of Taiwan Railway. Chiayi Station is the starting point for the Alishan Forest Railway. The city is also accessible from THSR Chiayi Station in Chiayi County.
Bus
[edit]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
[edit]Chiayi City is served by Chiayi Airport in the neighboring Shuishang Township.
In popular culture
[edit]Chiayi City and its street foods, including the famous Chiayi turkey rice, were featured on the Netflix TV series, Street Food, in season 1.[25]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ In local languages:
- Traditional Chinese script: 嘉義市
- Mandarin Pinyin: Jiāyì Shì
- Hokkien: Ka-gī-tshī
References
[edit]- ^ "Xiàn shì zhòngyào tǒngjì zhǐbiāo cháxún xìtǒng wǎng" 縣市重要統計指標查詢系統網. Zhōnghuá mínguó tǒngjì zīxùn wǎng 中華民國統計資訊網 (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 12 June 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
- ^ Minzheng chu (2016-07-01). "Jiāyì Shì 105 nián 6 yuèfèn rénkǒu tǒngjì zīliào" 嘉義市105年6月份人口統計資料 [Population Statistics of Chiayi City for June 2016]. Jiāyì Shì zhèngfǔ 嘉義市政府 (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
- ^ "Chia-i". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. OCLC 1032680871.
- ^ Campbell, William (1903). "Explanatory Notes". Formosa under the Dutch: described from contemporary records, with explanatory notes and a bibliography of the island. London: Kegan Paul. p. 549. ISBN 9789576380839. OCLC 644323041.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ "Taiwan in Time: Rebels of heaven and earth - Taipei Times". 17 April 2016.
- ^ Campbell, M. W. (1903). "Explanatory Notes". Formosa Under the Dutch: Described from Contemporary Records, with Explanatory Notes and a Bibliography of the Island. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. p. 549. ISBN 9789576380839. OCLC 644323041.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Campbell, W. (1915). Sketches from Formosa. London: Marshall Brothers. pp. 79–81.
It was on a later occasion I arrived in Ka-gi to find the people engaged in their absurd periodic custom of stonethrowing.
- ^ Takekoshi, Yosaburō (1907). "Chapter XIII: Population and Future Development of the Island Resources". Japanese Rule in Formosa. Translated by Braithwaite, George. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. p. 200. OCLC 753129. OL 6986981M.
- ^ Campbell, W. (1915). Sketches from Formosa. London: Marshall Brothers. pp. 82–83.
- ^ "臺灣建制市的市轄區變遷". www.aiplus.idv.tw. Retrieved 2022-03-20.
- ^ 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
- ^ 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". www.storm.mg (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2022-03-20.
- ^ Yang, Bi-chuan (7 March 2019). "The 228 Massacre in Chiayi: "The Airport and Train Station Were Washed with Blood"". The Taiwan Gazette. Translated by Harrison Chen. Retrieved 2022-03-20.
- ^ "Rezoning Taiwan". Taiwan Today. 1 February 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- ^ "History". East District Office, Chiayi City. Archived from the original on 2017-03-14. Retrieved 2016-01-06.
- ^ "Monthly Mean". Central Weather Bureau. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "氣象站各月份最高氣溫統計" (PDF) (in Chinese). Central Weather Bureau. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "氣象站各月份最高氣溫統計(續)" (PDF) (in Chinese). Central Weather Bureau. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "氣象站各月份最低氣溫統計" (PDF) (in Chinese). Central Weather Bureau. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "氣象站各月份最低氣溫統計(續)" (PDF) (in Chinese). Central Weather Bureau. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "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". 天下雜誌 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-03-20.
- ^ Chiang, Chun-liang; Hou, Elaine (2015-12-17). "Chiayi City Launches Solar Power System Program". Focus Taiwan News Channel. Central News Agency. Archived from the original on 2015-12-18. Retrieved 2015-12-18.
- ^ "Chung Cheng Park". Travel in Chiayi. Archived from the original on 2015-06-10. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
- ^ "The Sound of Wind Music: 2008 Chiayi City International Band Festival". Culture.tw. 2009-01-17. Archived from the original on 2009-02-03. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
- ^ Brown, Joshua Samuel (22 May 2019). "Taiwan Culture and Cuisine Shine on New Netflix Series "Street Food"". CommonWealth Magazine. Medium. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
External links
[edit]- Official website

- Chiayi City/County tourism official website
- Chiayi City Police Bureau official website
Chiayi travel guide from Wikivoyage
Geographic data related to Chiayi at OpenStreetMap- National Chung Cheng University official website
Chiayi
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Linguistic origins and historical names
The name of Chiayi derives from the community designation used by the Hoanya indigenous people inhabiting the plains region, which early European records transliterated as Tirosen, with variants including Tirocen and Tiracen.[1] This term referred to the settlement area prior to significant Han Chinese settlement. Dutch colonial documents from the 17th century adopted Tirosen to denote the locale, reflecting phonetic approximation of the Hoanya language without established translation of its precise semantic content in surviving records.[1] During Qing dynasty administration, the surrounding region fell under Zhuluo County (諸羅縣), established in 1684 and encompassing much of southwestern Taiwan, including the underdeveloped interior where present-day Chiayi developed.[7] In 1787, following the suppression of the Lin Shuangwen rebellion—during which local defenders resisted for ten months—Emperor Qianlong renamed the area Jiayi (嘉義), literally denoting "admirable righteousness" or praise for the loyalty exhibited by inhabitants against the uprising.[8][7] This administrative redesignation marked a shift from indigenous and early settler nomenclature to one honoring imperial commendation, as recorded in Qing gazetteers. Under Japanese rule from 1895 to 1945, the characters 嘉義 were retained but pronounced as Kagi (嘉義) in Japanese, appearing thus in official maps and prefectural divisions such as Tainan Prefecture.[9] After Taiwan's retrocession to the Republic of China in 1945, the name standardized to Chiayi in Mandarin-based Romanization, aligning with national phonetic conventions while preserving the Qing-era characters.[9] This form has persisted in official usage, reflecting continuity in written nomenclature amid shifts in linguistic administration.History
Pre-colonial indigenous era
The Chiayi region, encompassing the fertile western plains of central Taiwan, was inhabited by the Hoanya, a Formosan Austronesian group classified among the plains indigenous peoples. Their territory, referred to in early records as Tirosen, centered on riverine and coastal settlements that facilitated agriculture and resource exploitation. Villages consisted of clustered thatched dwellings organized around kinship groups, with land use patterns emphasizing slash-and-burn cultivation of millet, taro, and early rice varieties, as corroborated by carbonized plant remains from Neolithic sites in the broader Chianan Plain dating to around 3000–1000 BCE.[10][11] Hoanya social structures were tribal, featuring matrilineal descent and hereditary chieftains responsible for governance, dispute resolution, and coordination of communal labor for farming and defense. Economic activities extended beyond agriculture to include deer hunting for hides and venison, fishing in estuarine waters, and limited inter-tribal exchange of goods like salt and tools with adjacent groups such as the Siraya to the south.[12] Ethnographic reconstructions from linguistic and oral traditions indicate a population distributed in small, autonomous communities, with densities supported by the region's alluvial soils but constrained by periodic floods and inter-group conflicts. Archaeological assemblages from nearby Taichung and Changhua basins yield Formosan red-slipped pottery and stone adzes attributable to plains cultures, reflecting technological continuity into the period preceding widespread Han incursion.[11] No precise pre-contact population figures exist due to the absence of written records, though extrapolations from Dutch-era surveys of central plains groups suggest several thousand Hoanya individuals across their range, inclusive of Chiayi.[13]Dutch and early colonial periods
The region of modern Chiayi, inhabited by the Hoanya indigenous people and known historically as Tirosen, fell under Dutch influence following the establishment of Dutch Formosa in 1624. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) focused on southwestern Taiwan's coastal plains, including areas north toward Chiayi, to secure trade commodities such as deer hides and sugar. Indigenous groups, allied through treaties and tribute systems, supplied deer products hunted in the interior plains, which were exported to Japan via VOC networks, while Chinese migrant laborers—encouraged by the Dutch through land grants and tax incentives—expanded sugarcane cultivation on cleared indigenous lands, yielding over 1,000 metric tons annually by the 1650s.[14][15] The Dutch administered the Chiayi vicinity as part of the northern "Landdag" district, integrating it into their island-wide governance without major fortifications there, relying instead on alliances with local tribes like the Hoanya and Siraya to maintain control and facilitate inland extraction.[1] In 1661–1662, Ming loyalist Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga) invaded Taiwan, besieging and capturing Fort Zeelandia in Tainan after a nine-month campaign, expelling the Dutch by February 1662. Koxinga established the Kingdom of Tungning as a base for resisting Qing conquest of China, with its capital at Tainan but extending authority over the southwestern plains, including Chiayi. Under Tungning rule (1662–1683), Han Chinese immigration surged to approximately 100,000–200,000 settlers, who intensified rice and sugarcane farming through military-agricultural colonies, where soldiers doubled as farmers to secure food supplies and revenue from exports. This shifted the economy toward large-scale Han-dominated agriculture, further eroding indigenous land autonomy in fertile areas like Chiayi, though Koxinga's regime maintained some alliances with local tribes for labor and defense.[16] The kingdom ended in 1683 when Qing admiral Shi Lang defeated Tungning forces at the Battle of Penghu on July 20, prompting the surrender of Zheng Keshuang on August 17 and the formal incorporation of Taiwan into Fujian province by October. This transition marked the cessation of European and Ming loyalist governance, imposing Qing suzerainty and accelerating Han settlement, which by the late 17th century outnumbered indigenous populations in the plains, effectively concluding eras of relative indigenous-majority control in the region.[17][18]Qing dynasty administration
The region of modern Chiayi fell under Zhuluo County upon its establishment in 1684 as one of three counties in the newly formed Taiwan Prefecture, subordinate to Fujian Province.[19] This structure reflected the Qing's initial cautious approach to Taiwan governance, emphasizing military garrisons alongside civil administration to manage Han settler influx and indigenous interactions. Administrative subdivisions evolved incrementally; following the 1721 Zhu Yigui rebellion in Zhuluo County, which exposed vulnerabilities in central control, the Qing split the county in 1723, creating Changhua County to the north while retaining southern territories including the Chiayi area under Zhuluo for tighter oversight of rice-producing lowlands.[17] In response to the Lin Shuangwen rebellion of 1786–1788, which originated in the Zhuluo hinterlands near modern Chiayi and mobilized Heaven and Earth Society networks against perceived corruption and taxation burdens, the Qing restructured the area into Jiayi County in 1786, naming it after a local mountain to symbolize stability.[7] This elevation to county status introduced dedicated magistracies focused on land reclamation and irrigation maintenance, facilitating Han population growth through expanded wet-rice paddies; by the Tongzhi era (1862–1874), Jiayi County encompassed 36 administrative districts and 936 villages, indicative of demographic expansion driven by mainland migration amid mainland famines.[7] Local initiatives repaired Dutch-era canals and dug wells, though systematic drainage remained limited compared to later eras, prioritizing taxable surplus from staple crops over flood-prone expansion.[16] Qing records document recurrent unrest underscoring administrative strains, including echoes of mainland upheavals like the Taiping Rebellion (1850–1864), which indirectly fueled Triad-inspired agrarian protests in Taiwan's plains through refugee networks and anti-Qing rhetoric, though contained by reinforced garrisons.[20] Census tallies reflected these shifts, with Taiwan Prefecture's registered households rising from approximately 50,000 in the early 18th century to over 700,000 by the 1810s, bolstering Jiayi's role as a revenue hub via salt and rice levies despite periodic banditry.[21] Such data, derived from ding tax registers, highlight the Qing's reliance on empirical enumeration for resource allocation, though undercounts of unregistered migrants likely understated true densities in fertile zones like Chiayi.[22]Japanese colonial rule
Following Japan's victory in the First Sino-Japanese War, Taiwan was ceded to the empire under the Treaty of Shimonoseki on April 17, 1895, with Chiayi reorganized as Kagi District (嘉義廳, Kagi-chō) in the colonial administrative structure to centralize governance and facilitate resource oversight.[1] The administration focused on extracting natural resources, particularly timber from the Alishan highlands, where vast stands of Taiwan cypress (Chamaecyparis formosana) were identified for commercial logging starting around 1899.[23] To enable this, the Alishan Forest Railway was constructed beginning in 1906, reaching operational status for timber transport by 1912, with extensions to Zhaoping Station completed in 1913; this narrow-gauge line connected Chiayi's processing facilities to remote logging sites, boosting lumber output and establishing the city as a key hub for wood export to Japan.[24] [25] Infrastructure investments underscored the extractive priorities, including the Chiayi Sawmill (嘉義木材工場), completed in 1913 as the largest state-run timber facility in colonial Taiwan, which processed hinoki and cypress logs into railway sleepers, construction materials, and ships' masts to support Japan's imperial needs.[25] Complementary developments encompassed railway extensions linking Kagi to the island's main trunk line for efficient commodity movement, alongside public schools and administrative buildings designed to assimilate the populace and train a compliant labor force, though enrollment favored Japanese-language instruction and imperial ideology over local traditions.[26] Agricultural policies shifted Chiayi's fertile plains toward intensive rice monoculture via land reclamation, irrigation dams, and high-yield varieties, increasing output from approximately 1.5 million koku annually across Taiwan by the 1910s to supply Japan's domestic shortages, prioritizing caloric export efficiency despite ecological strains like soil depletion.[27] To enforce these measures, Japanese authorities conducted military campaigns against indigenous groups in the Chiayi hinterlands, including the Tsou and other highland peoples resisting logging encroachments, as part of a broader suppression phase from 1895 to 1915 that neutralized armed opposition through fortified garrisons and forced relocations, securing resource access but eroding traditional land stewardship.[28] Urban planning in Kagi emphasized grid layouts, sanitation systems, and commercial districts to accommodate growing administrative and industrial populations, reflecting a utilitarian approach that modernized the locale for colonial throughput rather than equitable local benefit.[29] By the late 1930s, these efforts had transformed Kagi into a nodal point for Taiwan's forestry and agrarian economies, with timber and rice forming the bulk of regional exports under metrics tracked by the Governor-General's office.[30]Post-1945 development under Republic of China
Following Taiwan's retrocession to the Republic of China on 25 October 1945, Chiayi came under the governance of Taiwan Province, marking the end of Japanese colonial administration and the onset of ROC rule.[31] In October 1950, Taiwan's administrative divisions were reorganized into 16 counties and several cities, during which Chiayi City was incorporated into the newly established Chiayi County as a county-administered city and designated as the county seat.[32] Under martial law from 1949 to 1987, land reforms—including a 1949 rent reduction capping payments at 37.5% of annual yield and the 1953 "land-to-the-tiller" program that redistributed tenanted land to cultivators—dramatically enhanced agricultural productivity in Chiayi, a major center for rice and sugarcane cultivation, by incentivizing investment and multiple cropping practices.[33][34] Chiayi City was elevated to provincial city status on 1 July 1982, underscoring its expanding urban role amid broader economic liberalization.[35] Urbanization intensified in the 2000s, with the population reaching about 268,000 by 2018.[36] Around 2010, proposals emerged to consolidate Chiayi City and County—or potentially with Yunlin County—into a special municipality to streamline governance and spur development, but these initiatives failed to materialize, maintaining the distinct city-county structure.[37][38] In the 2020s, the city's population has stabilized near 265,000–268,000 despite national declines, buoyed by a post-pandemic tourism surge that increased visitors by over 1,700% in recent years relative to earlier baselines.[39][40]Geography
Topography and location
Chiayi City occupies a position in southwestern Taiwan on the northern margin of the Chianan Plain, an extensive alluvial lowland formed by sediment deposition from rivers originating in the Central Mountain Range. The city spans approximately 60 square kilometers of predominantly flat terrain, with average elevations around 46 meters above sea level, facilitating expansive urban development but also exposing it to lowland vulnerabilities.[41][42] It is entirely encircled by Chiayi County, positioning it as a compact urban core amid surrounding rural expanses. To the east, Chiayi City abuts the foothills of the Alishan Range, part of the Yushan Mountain System, where elevations ascend rapidly to over 2,000 meters, creating a stark topographic contrast that channels drainage westward across the plain toward the Taiwan Strait roughly 30 kilometers away. This proximity influences local hydrology, as streams and rivers like the Gaoping River tributaries deposit alluvial soils, shaping the fertile but low-gradient landscape underlying the city's grid-like urban layout.[43] Taiwan's location astride the boundary between the Philippine Sea Plate and Eurasian Plate renders Chiayi seismically active, with the region featuring thrust and strike-slip faults beneath the plain, including the Meishan Fault responsible for the destructive 1906 earthquake that epicentered nearby and caused over 1,250 deaths. Recent seismic events, such as the magnitude 6.4 quake on January 20, 2025, near Chiayi, underscore ongoing tectonic hazards. Additionally, the flat topography exacerbates flood risks during typhoon seasons, as impeded drainage on the plain has historically led to inundation, compounded by the area's position in a subtropical zone prone to heavy rainfall.[44][45][46]Climate patterns and environmental features
Chiayi possesses a humid subtropical climate (Köppen classification Cfa), with average annual temperatures around 23°C, ranging from lows of approximately 13°C in winter to highs exceeding 33°C in summer.[47] Relative humidity consistently exceeds 80% year-round, peaking at 86% in August, contributing to muggy conditions and frequent fog.[48] Annual precipitation averages 2,963 mm, concentrated in a rainy season from May to September, which supports extensive irrigation but also heightens flood risks.[49] The region faces recurrent typhoon impacts, with Taiwan experiencing an average of three to four landfalling typhoons annually during July to October; Chiayi's coastal proximity and low-lying plains amplify exposure to storm surges and heavy rains exceeding 500 mm in a single event.[50] This climate fosters agricultural productivity, particularly for paddy rice, which thrives in the fertile alluvial soils and abundant water, alongside fruit crops such as wax apples and pineapples that benefit from the warm, humid conditions.[51] However, excessive groundwater extraction for irrigation has induced land subsidence rates up to several centimeters per year in parts of Chiayi, exacerbating vulnerability to sea-level rise and inundation.[51] Environmental management efforts include drainage infrastructure upgrades, such as the 2025 reconstruction of Fanzigou to enhance flood resilience and connect green spaces in urban areas like Huzinei.[52] Urban expansion has fragmented habitats, reducing biodiversity in agricultural landscapes through conversion of farmland to built environments, which diminishes ecosystem services like pollination and soil conservation.[53] Local studies indicate that such urbanization pressures, combined with climate variability, have led to declines in native wetland species and increased erosion in rural peripheries.[53] ![Lantan Reservoir in Chiayi, a key water body influencing local hydrology and flood mitigation][center][54]Economy
Agricultural foundations
The Chianan Plain, which forms the core of Chiayi's agricultural landscape, relies on extensive irrigation infrastructure originally developed during Japanese colonial rule to overcome historical limitations of drought, flooding, and salinity that constrained Qing-era farming expansions. The Chianan Canal, completed in 1930 after a decade of construction including the Wushantou Reservoir, irrigates approximately 133,741 hectares through a three-crop rotation system, enabling reliable production of water-intensive staples like rice and sugarcane across the plain's fertile alluvial soils.[16][55] In Chiayi's upland areas, such as Alishan, cooler elevations above 1,000 meters support oolong tea cultivation, leveraging misty conditions for high-quality, low-oxidation leaves prized in niche markets.[56] Under Japanese administration, agriculture emphasized monoculture exports, with sugarcane dominating Chiayi due to favorable soils and factories like Suantou (established 1906) and Nanjing processing local harvests that contributed up to 74% of Taiwan's foreign exchange from sugar. Post-1945, Republic of China land reforms from 1949 to 1953 redistributed tenancy-held fields to owner-farmers, reducing average plot sizes but incentivizing productivity gains and crop diversification beyond rice and cane to include fruits like wax apples (Syzygium samarangense), whose high-altitude variants from Chiayi yield premium, year-round harvests suitable for export. Rice remains central, with Chiayi County recording harvested areas exceeding 47,000 hectares in recent seasons and yields supporting Taiwan's overall paddy output of around 1.1 million metric tons annually.[57][58] Wax apple exports from Taiwan, including Chiayi-sourced premium grades, historically targeted mainland China but faced quality-based restrictions and bans since 2021, prompting diversification to markets like Japan, which overtook China as the top fruit importer by value in 2022. Despite these adaptations, Chiayi's flatland farming exposes it to climatic risks, particularly typhoons; for instance, Typhoon Danas in July 2025 caused agricultural damages exceeding US$20 million in Chiayi County alone, primarily to rice, sugarcane, and fruit orchards through flooding and wind, underscoring ongoing vulnerabilities despite irrigation resilience.[59][60][61]Industrial and technological sectors
Chiayi's industrial base historically centered on lumber processing tied to Alishan cypress forests, with the Chiayi Lumber Mill—established in 1914 under Japanese colonial administration—serving as the largest government-run wood processing facility in Taiwan at the time, handling timber transported via the Alishan Forest Railway and fueling the city's prosperity as a "lumber city."[62] [63] Logging and milling operations peaked during the early 20th century, supporting export-oriented wood products until resource depletion and policy shifts curtailed the sector post-World War II.[64] In the postwar era, Chiayi transitioned toward light manufacturing, particularly food processing, leveraging agricultural inputs for value-added products; firms like Chen Hsiang Foods, founded in 1959, specialize in frozen foods with ISO 22000 and HACCP certifications, exporting to global markets including the US and Southeast Asia.[65] Other processors, such as Chia Nan Food Industrial Co., established in 2004, focus on items like konjac products, contributing to a cluster of approximately 426 operating factories citywide as of 2015, though the sector remains secondary to emerging high-tech activities.[66] [67] The city's technological sector has accelerated since the development of Chiayi Science Park, approved in 2024 to host semiconductor operations amid Taiwan's southward industry relocation; Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) initiated construction of two integrated circuit (IC) assembly and advanced packaging plants in March 2024, employing Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate (CoWoS) technology for AI chip production, with mass production targeted for 2028 and an estimated monthly capacity expansion to support high-performance computing demands.[68] [69] [70] Construction faced a brief suspension in June 2024 due to archaeological ruins, but TSMC denied rumors of halting the second phase in September 2025, confirming ongoing progress despite US expansion pressures and typhoon disruptions.[71] [72] [73] Complementing hardware growth, Chiayi has advanced smart city frameworks since 2018, integrating digital services in healthcare, mobility, and public safety; initiatives include AI-enabled policing, electric vehicle battery-swapping stations operational 24/7, and urban data platforms for energy and air quality monitoring, with recent expansions like all-electric recycling fleets and old-house revitalization projects recognized in 2025 awards.[2] [74] [75] These efforts align with national AI promotion, positioning Chiayi within Taiwan's semiconductor corridor while fostering local innovation hubs.[76]Tourism and service industries
The tourism sector in Chiayi City has demonstrated robust post-pandemic recovery, with hotel revenue exceeding NT$2.5 billion in 2023, reflecting a 16% year-over-year increase attributable to heightened visitor demand.[77] This growth coincided with 2.14 million hotel guests in the same year, underscoring the role of domestic and regional travel in revitalizing accommodation services.[78] Total tourist visits to the city surpassed 26 million during this period, exceeding Taiwan's national population and signaling sustained momentum in leisure and experiential travel.[79] The broader service industries, which account for approximately 95% of Chiayi City's economic activity—including wholesale, retail, transportation, warehousing, and food services—have benefited from this tourism uptick, with hospitality subsectors experiencing expanded capacity and occupancy.[80] Local events further amplify service sector dynamics; for instance, the 2025 Chiayi Youth Festival, held from September 27 to October 5 at Central Plaza, emphasized youth-led creative exhibitions and performances, drawing participants and spectators to stimulate short-term hospitality and event-related spending.[81] Such initiatives align with ongoing youth-driven revitalization efforts, which have correlated with population inflows and enhanced the city's appeal to younger demographics, indirectly supporting service industry expansion through increased residential and transient demand.[39]Government and Politics
Administrative structure
Chiayi City functions as a provincial-level municipality under the Republic of China (Taiwan), directly subordinate to the central government rather than Taiwan Province following administrative streamlining. It is divided into two districts: East District, which serves as the administrative center housing the city government offices, and West District. Each district is managed by a district chief appointed by the mayor, handling local matters such as civil affairs, sanitation, and community development.[82] The governance structure follows a mayor-council system, with the mayor as the head of the executive branch, elected directly by residents for a four-year term and responsible for policy implementation, budget execution, and departmental oversight including urban planning and public works. The Chiayi City Council acts as the legislative body, consisting of 24 councilors elected every four years from district-based and at-large constituencies, empowered to pass ordinances, approve budgets, and conduct inquiries into executive actions.[83][5] Chiayi City is partially surrounded by Chiayi County, necessitating intergovernmental coordination for regional infrastructure and environmental management, with city budgets allocated annually for urban renewal projects emphasizing sustainable development in both districts. Under Republic of China legislation, such as the Local Government Act, mechanisms exist for indigenous representation in local bodies where population thresholds are met, though Chiayi City's indigenous residents, primarily of plains indigenous descent, constitute a small proportion and are integrated through general electoral processes rather than reserved seats.[83]Electoral history and political dynamics
In the 2018 Chiayi City mayoral election, Kuomintang (KMT) candidate Huang Min-hui defeated the incumbent Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) mayor Twu Shiing-jer, securing 52.4% of the vote to become the first KMT mayor since the city's direct elections began in the 1990s.[84] This victory reflected a broader KMT resurgence in local elections, capturing 15 of 22 mayoral and magisterial seats nationwide amid dissatisfaction with DPP central government policies.[85] Huang Min-hui was re-elected in a delayed 2022 by-election on December 18, following the death of an independent candidate during the original November polling; she garnered 57.6% against DPP challenger Lee Chun-yi, outperforming her 2018 margin.[86] [87] The result aligned with the KMT's sweep of 13 of 21 local executive positions in the 2022 elections, signaling persistent local support for KMT governance in Chiayi despite national DPP dominance.[88] Chiayi's electoral patterns demonstrate a conservative tilt, with KMT candidates consistently appealing to voters prioritizing stability and cross-strait economic ties over DPP's emphasis on Taiwan sovereignty, as evidenced by the city's agricultural base favoring pragmatic policies.[89] Local dynamics often mirror national referendums on governance efficacy rather than ideological purity, with indigenous communities in surrounding areas exhibiting empirical KMT leanings rooted in historical patronage rather than policy alignment.[90] Political competition remains bipartite, with council seats split between KMT majorities and DPP minorities, underscoring de facto self-governance insulated from Beijing's influence yet attuned to voter demands for autonomy in daily affairs.[91]Demographics
Population statistics and trends
As of January 2023, Chiayi City had a population of 263,188 residents according to household registration data, reflecting a slight increase of over 500 individuals from the previous year—the first such uptick since 2014 after years of steady decline driven by low fertility rates and net out-migration to larger urban centers like Taipei and Kaohsiung.[39][92] This modest reversal has been linked to local government initiatives, including youth-oriented revitalization projects and tourism promotion, which have encouraged some return migration and retention of younger demographics amid Taiwan's broader population shrinkage.[39][93] The city's population density is approximately 4,380 inhabitants per square kilometer, based on its fixed land area of 60.03 km², though earlier 2020 census figures yielded 4,199 per km² amid ongoing urban-rural shifts where peripheral rural areas depopulate faster than the core urban zones.[92] Aging demographics exacerbate these trends, with Chiayi City having transitioned to an aged society (over 14% of residents aged 65 or older) earlier than the national average, prompting policies to counter super-aging projections by 2025 through incentives for family formation and economic diversification.[74][94] Historical growth patterns trace back to post-1945 developments, when influxes of migrants from mainland China following the Republic of China's retreat, combined with internal rural-to-urban movements tied to agricultural modernization, bolstered the city's population base from wartime lows, though precise quantification for Chiayi remains tied to aggregate Taiwan-wide vital statistics rather than localized censuses.[92] These migrations contributed to a mid-20th-century expansion, contrasting with contemporary declines influenced by structural economic factors and policy responses favoring retention over expansion.[36]Ethnic and cultural composition
The ethnic composition of Chiayi City is overwhelmingly Han Chinese, comprising the vast majority of residents, with Hoklo (Southern Min) forming the predominant subgroup in this southwestern Taiwanese locale. This aligns with broader Taiwanese patterns where Han Chinese account for 95-97% of the population, reflecting centuries of migration and assimilation in the Chianan Plains. Indigenous peoples represent a minimal share, estimated below 1% based on linguistic indicators, as indigenous language speakers number fewer than 600 in the surrounding county per census-derived data.[95] Descendants of the Hoanya, a historically Plains Indigenous group native to the Chiayi region, persist culturally despite widespread sinicization, blending into the Han majority without forming distinct official tribal populations today. Their pre-colonial presence underscores indigenous roots in local folklore and place names, though formal recognition under Taiwan's 16 recognized tribes is limited here compared to eastern or mountainous areas. Linguistic evidence supports this assimilation: primary languages spoken are Mandarin Chinese (official and near-universal) and Taiwanese Hokkien (spoken by the Hoklo majority), with indigenous tongues nearly absent in daily use.[96] Foreign immigration exerts negligible influence on Chiayi's ethnic makeup, with foreign residents comprising under 3% nationwide and even less in provincial cities like Chiayi, lacking the concentrations seen in Taipei or industrial hubs. This insularity preserves a homogeneous Han-Hoklo cultural fabric, uninterrupted by significant Southeast Asian or mainland Chinese inflows beyond familial new immigrants.[95][97]Culture and Society
Traditional festivals and customs
Chiayi's traditional festivals incorporate Han Chinese rituals alongside remnants of Hoanya Plains Indigenous customs, stemming from the area's pre-colonial indigenous communities whose name transliterated to the region's modern designation.[1] Harvest-related observances, adapted from indigenous practices, emphasize gratitude for agricultural yields, with contemporary events reviving elements like communal dances and offerings amid Han-dominated pageantry.[98] The Urban Indigenous Harvest Festival, held annually in Chiayi City, showcases Plains Indigenous traditions through ceremonies invoking ancestral spirits, traditional attire woven from local fibers, and performances of rhythmic dances symbolizing fertility and community bonds; participants number in the thousands, preserving rites originally tied to Hoanya agricultural cycles despite historical assimilation pressures.[98] These events integrate Han influences, such as incense offerings and lion dances, reflecting syncretic evolution since the 17th-century influx of Fujianese settlers. Mazu pilgrimages represent a prominent Han custom in the region, with the annual Dajia procession—spanning over 300 kilometers and culminating at Xingang's Fengtian Temple in Chiayi County—drawing up to a million devotees for barefoot marches, palanquin processions, and rituals seeking blessings for safety and prosperity; the 2025 iteration, starting April 4, incorporated stops at multiple Chiayi-area sites, underscoring the goddess's role in maritime and agrarian communities.[99] Local adaptations include night vigils and communal feasts, blending devotion with social cohesion. Urbanization has prompted preservation initiatives, such as government-sponsored revivals of indigenous crafts and festivals, countering demographic shifts where Han populations exceed 95% and indigenous groups comprise under 1%; these efforts, documented in official records, maintain ceremonial authenticity through elder-led training and public demonstrations, ensuring continuity of practices like Hoanya-derived storytelling and ritual chants.[98] Japanese colonial influences (1895–1945), including Shinto shrine constructions like the Chiayi Shrine, left architectural imprints occasionally echoed in modern parade floats, though post-war decolonization prioritized Han and indigenous revival over direct retention of imperial-era customs.[100]Local cuisine and culinary traditions
Chiayi's local cuisine emphasizes simple, hearty dishes rooted in its agricultural abundance on the Chianan Plain, where rice cultivation has historically dominated since the Japanese colonial period, producing high-quality grains integral to everyday meals. The signature dish, turkey rice (huǒjī ròu fàn), features steamed rice cooked in turkey broth or drizzled with shallot-infused turkey oil, topped with tender shredded or sliced turkey meat, often accompanied by pickled cucumbers and a savory sauce blending soy, sugar, and sesame oil. Originating in Chiayi during the mid-20th century as an affordable alternative to pork rice amid post-war resource scarcity, it reflects the region's adaptation of imported turkey farming—introduced by Japanese settlers—to local tastes, with over 100 specialized shops in the city claiming variations in meat texture and seasoning intensity.[101][102] Other staples include casserole fish head (guō tóu yú), a slow-simmered freshwater fish preparation with ginger, scallions, and medicinal herbs, drawing from Chiayi's inland fishing traditions and emphasizing collagen-rich broths for purported health benefits like joint support. Medicinal goat hot pot (yào niú ròu huǒ guō) incorporates mutton stewed with Chinese herbs such as angelica and goji berries, tied to the area's rural herding practices and seasonal availability. These dishes, often prepared in family-run street stalls, evolved from Qing-era wet markets like East Market, established in the 19th century, where vendors adapted Hakka and Hoklo influences to local produce, fostering a culture of communal eating with minimal waste.[103][104] Agricultural ties extend to sweets and beverages, with rice-based confections like mochi variants and fruit preserves from seasonal crops such as wax apples and pineapples, processed into jams or vinegars for preservation. Alishan oolong tea, grown in Chiayi County's highlands at elevations of 1,000–2,500 meters, imparts floral notes from misty terroir, historically exported since the 19th century and used in local pairings with greasy dishes to cut richness. Night markets like Wenhua Road, peaking in the 1980s with post-industrial migration, showcase these elements through stalls offering douhua (silky tofu pudding) topped with syrups from sugarcane—abundant in the plain's 20,000+ hectares under cultivation—and grilled items, maintaining traditions amid urbanization with annual sales exceeding NT$100 million in peak seasons.[105][106]Education system and institutions
Taiwan's education system in Chiayi aligns with the national framework, featuring compulsory education from ages 6 to 15 encompassing primary and junior high school levels, with gross enrollment ratios exceeding 99% at the primary level and around 98% at the junior secondary level as of recent national statistics.[107] Literacy rates for individuals aged 15 and over in Taiwan stand at 99.2%, reflecting high educational attainment influenced by post-World War II expansions in school infrastructure following Japanese colonial rule, during which foundational agricultural and vocational institutions were established.[108] In Chiayi, this legacy is evident in the reorganization of schools like the former Chiayi Agriculture and Forestry Public School into vocational entities post-1945, promoting widespread access to basic education.[109] Higher education in Chiayi emphasizes vocational and agricultural sciences, anchored by National Chiayi University (NCYU), formed in 2000 through the merger of the National Chiayi Institute of Technology—tracing origins to 1919—and the National Chiayi Teachers College.[110] NCYU enrolls approximately 8,745 students across programs in biology, chemistry, engineering, and agriculture, with a focus on agri-tech vocational training through its College of Agriculture and departments like Animal Science, which originated in 1952 as part of a vocational school emphasizing husbandry and care.[111][112] These institutions support Chiayi's agricultural economy by producing skilled graduates in farm management, horticulture, and related fields, aligning with national vocational incentives launched in 2017 to bolster rural expertise.[113] Recent advancements include integration of digital tools in Chiayi's schools, mirroring Taiwan's Ministry of Education initiatives such as the Digital Learning Enhancement Plan since 2022, which equips primary and secondary institutions with AI-driven curricula and online resources to enhance teaching in core subjects.[114] This has facilitated broader access to interactive learning platforms, though specific enrollment outcomes in Chiayi reflect national trends of stable participation amid declining birth rates leading to school consolidations elsewhere in Taiwan.[115]Infrastructure and Energy
Transportation networks
Chiayi is served by the Taiwan High Speed Rail (THSR) at Chiayi HSR Station in Taibao City, Chiayi County, which connects the region to northern Taiwan and other major cities along the west coast line, with operations from 06:00 to 23:45 daily.[116] The station facilitates transfers to local transport, including the Chiayi Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) linking to the city center. Complementing this, Chiayi Station of the Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) in central Chiayi City handles conventional rail services, serving as a key junction for regional and intercity travel.[117] Public bus networks enhance connectivity, particularly Chiayi County Bus routes operating direct services from both THSR Chiayi Station and TRA Chiayi Station to Alishan, with journeys taking approximately 2 hours and 9 minutes at fares of TWD 240 to 278 one-way.[118] These routes, including options via Fenqihu, support efficient access to mountainous areas and integrate with the Alishan Forest Railway at Chiayi Station.[119] Chiayi Airport handles primarily domestic flights, focusing on routes to Kinmen, Matsu, and Penghu, though passenger volumes have declined due to enhanced ground transport alternatives reducing business travel demand.[120] Road infrastructure expanded significantly post-1950s with the development of Taiwan's north-south highway system, including Provincial Highway 1 traversing the Chianan Plain, bolstering freight and passenger mobility in the agricultural heartland.[121] In 2025, Chiayi initiated drainage bank protection and aqueduct reconstruction projects, such as the Puzi River works completed in July, aimed at mitigating flood risks and enhancing infrastructure resilience, which indirectly supports logistics reliability by reducing disruptions in the low-lying plain.[122][123] These efforts address vulnerabilities in the region's canal-dependent transport and supply chains.[124]Energy production and green initiatives
Chiayi City and surrounding areas in Chiayi County primarily depend on the Taiwan Power Company (Taipower) national grid for electricity, which in 2024 derived approximately 47% from natural gas, 31% from coal, 4.7% from nuclear, and 12% from renewables including solar and wind. Local energy production is limited but emphasizes decentralized renewable sources as part of Taiwan's national target to achieve 20% renewable energy by 2025, with solar capacity projected at 20 GW nationwide. In Chiayi, this manifests through fishery-solar hybrid projects on coastal fish ponds, enabling dual agricultural and energy use while minimizing land competition. Prominent solar developments include Lightsource bp's 115 MWp Budai fishery-solar farm in Budai and Yizhu Townships, Chiayi County, financed in June 2025 with TWD 6 billion and expected to generate 3.6 billion kWh over 20 years, equivalent to powering 41,000 households annually. Another initiative is a 150 MW solar project in Budai by U.S. partners, announced in November 2024 with a $250 million investment, phasing construction starting December 2024 to bolster grid contributions from photovoltaics. The 70 MW Mingus Solar Project in Chiayi, operational since around 2019, exemplifies earlier efforts by Vena Energy to integrate ground-mounted solar with local infrastructure. These projects align with Taiwan's solar expansion but have faced criticism for potential impacts on fishing yields and rushed permitting, leading to economic disputes in some communities.[125][126][127][128][129] Waste-to-energy facilities represent another green thrust, with the Chiayi City Green Energy Sustainable Circulation Center, awarded to CTCI and affiliates in recent years, replacing an older plant to process municipal waste into electricity via incineration, reducing landfill reliance and fossil fuel imports. Educational institutions contribute modestly; National Chiayi University operates rooftop solar panels and wind turbines on its campuses, producing a portion of its needs and tracking renewable output ratios annually to promote sustainability awareness. No significant local hydro, wind beyond campus scale, or nuclear facilities exist, reflecting a policy preference for solar and biomass over centralized fossil or atomic sources amid Taiwan's import-dependent energy security challenges.[130][131]Tourism and Attractions
Historical and cultural sites
Remnants of Chiayi City's Qing dynasty fortifications, including sections of the original walls constructed in the 18th century for defense against rebellions such as the Lin Shuangwen uprising in 1786, persist near the Central Fountain in Chiayi Park. These structures, initially wooden palisades supplemented by watchtowers, represent early Qing efforts to secure the settlement known as Kagee.[132][133] The Chiayi Confucius Temple, originally founded in 1685 as the county school during early Qing administration, underwent rebuilding after damage in the 1786 rebellion, with significant reconstruction in 1812 and a major restoration in 1961 within Chiayi Park. The Dacheng Hall preserves traditional Confucian architecture and hosts ceremonies, underscoring the site's role in local education and ritual preservation.[134] Established during the Japanese colonial period, the Chiayi City Historical Relic Museum occupies a former Shinto shrine annex built in the early 20th century, displaying artifacts from colonial and pre-colonial eras to illustrate administrative and religious history. Its intact Japanese-style architecture aids in interpreting Taiwan's modernization under colonial rule.[135] Hinoki Village features over two dozen preserved Japanese-era wooden buildings from the 1920s-1930s, originally forestry-related structures relocated and restored for public access, now housing cultural exhibits that highlight industrial heritage without natural site overlap.[136] Recent preservation initiatives, including the public-private revitalization of the Old Chiayi Prison—converted into Taiwan's first prison museum by 2022—have enhanced site accessibility and generated tourism income through adaptive reuse, aligning with broader efforts to sustain historical assets amid urban development.[137][138]Natural and recreational areas
Chiayi's natural landscapes include forested mountains in the county and reservoirs with urban-adjacent green spaces in the city, supporting hiking, cycling, and scenic viewing. The Alishan National Forest Recreation Area in Chiayi County preserves ancient Taiwan red cypresses and yellow cedars, offering trails through misty forests, sunrise observation points, and seasonal cherry blossoms.[139] Accessible via buses from Chiayi City, it draws substantial visitors, with over 3.9 million recorded in recent tallies amid Taiwan's tourism rebound.[140] Historical logging in the region, intensified during Japanese colonial exploitation for Alishan Forest Railway timber, has been countered by conservation, though illegal poaching persists as a challenge.[141][142] Lantan Reservoir, situated 3 kilometers east of Chiayi City center, spans 70 hectares and facilitates recreational pursuits like walking trails, cycling around the lake, fishing, birdwatching, and picnicking.[143][144] The site provides free access with parking and integrates natural beauty with low-impact activities, attracting local families and day-trippers.[145] Urban recreational parks enhance accessibility for city dwellers; Chiayi Park covers 26.8 hectares with gardens, fishponds, walking paths, and playgrounds amid century-old trees.[146] Hinoki Village, a repurposed forestry dormitory site in Chiayi City, links urban recreation to Alishan's cypress heritage through green plazas and preserved wooden structures suitable for casual strolls.[147] Eco-tourism in Chiayi has grown, with the travel sector's revenue rising 16% year-over-year to NT$2.5 billion in 2023, fueled by these outdoor sites.[79]Sports and Notable Figures
Local sports achievements
Chiayi has a storied tradition in baseball, particularly highlighted by the Kano team from the former Chiayi Agricultural and Forestry Vocational School during the Japanese colonial era. In 1931, the multi-ethnic Kano squad achieved national prominence by advancing to the finals of Japan's prestigious Summer Koshien high school baseball tournament, marking the first time a team from Taiwan reached that stage and earning the region the moniker "Heroic Battlefield, the Hometown of Baseball."[148] This accomplishment, though ending in a loss to Kyoto's Josei High School, shocked the Japanese baseball establishment and solidified Chiayi's early reputation in the sport.[149] In the professional era, the Chiayi-Tainan Luka represented the region in the Taiwan Major League (TML) from 1997 to 2002, competing as one of the league's southern franchises before folding amid financial challenges common to the TML at the time.[150] While the team experienced early-season promise, such as winning its first six games in 2001, it struggled with consistency, finishing with poor overall records and no league titles.[150] Local facilities, including stadiums in Chiayi, occasionally hosted TML and Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL) games, contributing to regional exposure but without sustained professional success.[151] Contemporary efforts emphasize youth development and community engagement, with the Chiayi City Baseball Committee organizing the annual Jhu-Luo Shan International Junior Baseball Tournament since 1998, drawing teams from multiple countries and fostering regional talent.[148] Chiayi has been designated an outstanding city under Taiwan's Sports i Taiwan 2.0 initiative for three consecutive years as of 2025, achieving a 40% population sports participation rate through programs promoting fitness and organized athletics.[52] These initiatives prioritize youth baseball and multi-sport events, yielding regional successes such as strong performances in national citizens' games, though Chiayi produces few Olympic-level athletes.[152]Prominent residents and contributions
Vincent Siew, born on January 3, 1939, in Chiayi City, served as Premier of Taiwan from 1997 to 2000 and Vice President from 2008 to 2012, playing a pivotal role in economic policy formulation and advancing cross-strait economic dialogues, including the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) negotiations. His tenure as Minister of Economic Affairs earlier emphasized export-led growth and trade liberalization, contributing to Taiwan's integration into global supply chains.[153] In the arts, Sylvia Chang, born in 1953 in Chiayi, has been a multifaceted figure in Taiwanese cinema since the 1970s, directing acclaimed films like Love Education (2004) and producing works that blend local narratives with international appeal, earning her recognition for elevating Taiwan's film industry on the global stage.[154] Her contributions include scripting and acting in over 100 productions, fostering a new wave of cinematic storytelling rooted in Taiwanese experiences.[155] Sow-Hsin Chen, born in 1935 in the Chiayi region, advanced soft condensed matter physics through pioneering neutron scattering techniques at MIT, where he served as a professor emeritus; his research on dynamic structure factors in liquids and biomolecules influenced fields like biophysics and materials science until his death in 2021.[156] Chen's empirical work, including quasi-elastic neutron scattering applications, provided foundational data for understanding molecular dynamics, with over 500 publications cited thousands of times.[157] In agriculture-related business, figures from Chiayi have contributed to agri-tech innovations, such as rapid freezing technologies for fruit preservation developed by local cooperatives, enhancing export viability for regional produce like pineapples and though not tied to a single native, these efforts stem from Chiayi's historical agricultural base.[158]International Ties
Sister city partnerships
Chiayi City maintains sister city partnerships primarily with municipalities in the United States, aimed at fostering cultural, educational, and economic exchanges. These agreements, established since the 1980s, support initiatives like student exchanges, trade delegations, and tourism promotion, reflecting Taiwan's strategy to build informal diplomatic networks amid restrictions from the People's Republic of China (PRC) on official state-to-state relations.[159] No formal sister city ties with PRC entities, such as Nanjing, have been documented, consistent with Taiwan's policy avoiding recognition of PRC sovereignty claims over the island. The earliest partnership is with Jackson, Mississippi, designated as a sister city on April 11, 1983, focusing on mutual visits and agricultural cooperation given Chiayi's role in Taiwan's rice production.[159] Syracuse, New York, became the sixth foreign sister city in 1995, with ongoing activities including mayoral visits and cultural events, as evidenced by a 2024 delegation exchange.[160]| Partner City | Country/State | Category | Establishment Date | Key Exchange Areas |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jackson | USA (Mississippi) | Sister City | April 11, 1983 | Agriculture, trade, cultural visits[159] |
| Syracuse | USA (New York) | Sister City | 1995 | Education, tourism, municipal cooperation[160] |

