Keelung

Keelung (/kˈlʊŋ/ kee-LUUNG; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ke-lâng), Chilung or Jilong (/ˈlʊŋ/ jee-LUUNG; pinyin: Jīlóng), officially known as Keelung City, is a major port city situated in the northeastern part of Taiwan. With 361,082 inhabitants, the city forms a part of the Taipei–Keelung metropolitan area with its neighboring New Taipei City and Taipei.

Keelung
基隆市
Kīrun, Ke-lung, Chilung
Keelung City
Top: skyline of downtown Keelung
Second left: Dawulun Fort
Second right: night view of downtown Keelung
Third left: Zhengbin Fishing Port Colorful House
Third right: Keelung Maritime Plaza and Keelung Main Station
Bottom left: Keelung Outer Harbor and Keelung Islet
Bottom right: Heping Island Park
Nickname: 
The Rainy Port (雨港)
Location in Taiwan
Coordinates: 25°08′N 121°44′E
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
Province Taiwan Province (streamlined)
RegionNorthern Taiwan
Districts7
Founded as La Santisima Trinidad1626
Part of Taihoku Prefecture17 April 1895
Provincial city status11 November 1945
City seatZhongzheng District
Government
  Body
  MayorGeorge Hsieh (KMT)
Area
  Total132.7589 km2 (51.2585 sq mi)
  Rank18 of 22
Population
 (October 2023)
  Total362,487
  Rank16 of 22
  Density2,700/km2 (7,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (National Standard Time)
Postal code
200–206
Area code(0)32
ISO 3166 codeTW-KEE
– BirdEagle
– FlowerCommon crepe myrtle
– TreeFormosan Sweet-gum
EnglishKeelung/KLC
Chinese基隆/基市
Websitewww.klcg.gov.tw/en/Default/Index
Keelung City
Chinese name
Chinese基隆
Taiwanese Hokkien Name
Traditional Chinese雞籠
Simplified Chinese鸡笼市
Japanese name
Kanji基隆市
Kanaキールンし

Before the city was founded by the Spanish Empire in 1626, then called La Santisima Trinidad, present-day Keelung was inhabited by Taiwanese indigenous peoples and was part of Spanish and Dutch colonial rule before being subsumed into the Qing dynasty in 1683 as part of Fujian. The city became a flashpoint of the First Opium War and the Keelung Campaign in the Sino-French War between the Qing and the French Third Republic. After Taiwan was detached from Fujian in 1887, the city became part of the Empire of Japan in 1895 following the First Sino-Japanese War. During the Japanese era, the city was known as Kirun first as a town of Taihoku Prefecture, then became a district in 1920 and finally a city in 1924.

After World War II in 1945, the Republic of China, which overthrew the Qing empire, reestablished Keelung as a provincial city of Taiwan Province, which would later become streamlined from 1998. Nicknamed the Rainy Port for its frequent rain and maritime role, the city is Taiwan's second largest seaport (after Kaohsiung) and the 7th largest in the world by 1984.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.