Tainan

Tainan City
臺南市
Tâi-lâm
Clockwise from top: Downtown Tainan, statue of Yoichi Hatta, THSR Tainan Station, danzai noodles, Fort Provintia, beehive firework in Yanshuei
Etymology: pinyin: Táinán; lit. 'Taiwan south'
Nickname(s): 
The Phoenix City (鳳凰城), The Prefecture City (府城), Nanying (南瀛)
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
Formed under Fort Zeelandia1624
Capital of Kingdom of Tungning1661
Tainan Prefecture1895
Provincial city status25 October 1945
Upgraded to special municipality and merger with Tainan County25 December 2010
SeatAnping, Xinying
Districts
Government
  Body
  MayorHuang Wei-cher (DPP)
Area
2,191.65 km2 (846.20 sq mi)
  Urban
259 km2 (100 sq mi)
  Rank7 out of 22
Population
 (March 2023)
1,856,642
  Rank6 of 22
  Density850/km2 (2,200/sq mi)
  Urban
1,205,000
  Urban density4,700/km2 (12,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (National Standard Time)
Postal code
700–745
Area code(0)6
ISO 3166 codeTW-TNN
BirdPheasant-tailed jacana
FlowerPhalaenopsis
TreeDelonix regia
Websitewww.tainan.gov.tw/en/ (in English)
Tainan City
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese臺南
Simplified Chinese台南
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTáinán Shì
Bopomofoㄊㄞˊ   ㄋㄢˊ   ㄕˋ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhTairnan Shyh
Wade–GilesT'ai2-nan2 Shih4
Tongyong PinyinTáinán Shìh
MPS2Táinán Shr̀
IPA[tʰǎɪ.nǎn ʂɻ̩̂]
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳThòi-nàm-sṳ
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTâi-lâm-chhī
Tâi-lôTâi-lâm-tshī
Japanese name
Hiraganaたいなんし
Katakanaタイナンシ
Kyūjitai臺南市
Shinjitai台南市
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnTainan-shi
Kunrei-shikiTainan-si

Tainan (/ˈtˈnɑːn/), officially Tainan City, is a special municipality in southern Taiwan, facing the Taiwan Strait on its western coast. Tainan is the oldest city on the island and commonly called the "prefectural capital" for its over 260-year history as the capital of Taiwan under Dutch rule, the Kingdom of Tungning and later Qing dynasty rule until 1887. Tainan's complex history of comebacks, redefinitions and renewals inspired its popular nickname "the Phoenix City". Tainan is classified as a "Sufficiency"-level global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.

As Taiwan's oldest urban area with over 400 years history, Tainan was initially established by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) as a ruling and trading base called Fort Zeelandia during the Dutch colonial rule on the island. After Koxinga seized the Dutch fort in 1662, Tainan remained as the capital of the Tungning Kingdom ruled by House of Koxinga until 1683 and afterwards the capital of Taiwan Prefecture under the Qing dynasty until 1887, when the new provincial capital was first moved to present-day Taichung, and then to Taipei eventually. Following the cession of Taiwan, Tainan became the second capital of the short-lived Republic of Formosa from June to October in 1895 until the Capitulation of Tainan by the invading forces of Japanese empire. Under Japanese rule, the city was the seat of Tainan Prefecture. After the surrender of Japan in World War II, the Republic of China took control of Taiwan in 1945 and reorganized the city as a provincial city in Taiwan Province; a role that would remain in place until 2010 when the city was merged with nearby Tainan County into a new special municipality.

The legacy of Tainan's long history of establishment has left significant impact on Taiwan, and its former name, Tayouan, has been claimed to be the origin of the name "Taiwan". It is also one of Taiwan's cultural capitals, for its rich folk cultures including the famous local street food and traditional cuisine, extensively preserved Taoist rites and other living local traditions covering everything from child birth to funerals. The city houses the first Confucian school–temple in Taiwan, built in 1665, the remains of the Eastern and Southern gates of the old city, and countless other historical monuments. Tainan claims more Buddhist and Taoist temples than any other city in Taiwan.