Nángǎng (南港) is a district of Taipei. It is the seat of Academia Sinica (Taiwan).

  • Area: 21.8424 km˛
  • Population: 113,114 (Sep.2003) -- 56,728 males and 56,436 females
  • Director: Yung-cheng Lee (李永成)

Table of contents
1 Administration
2 History
3 Miscellaneous
4 External links

Administration

There are 19 municipal villages (里 li) in Nanchang. The following placenames are romanized in Tongyong Pinyin, with Hanyu Pinyin in parentheses, where they differ:
  • Jhongnan (中南 Zhongnan)
  • Nangang (南港)
  • Sanchong (三重)
  • Dongsin (東新 Dongxin)
  • Dongmin (東明)
  • Singuang (新光 Xinguang)
  • Sisin (西新 Xixin)
  • Yucheng (玉成)
  • Hecheng (合成)
  • Chengfu (成福)
  • Wanfu (萬福)
  • Hongfu (鴻福)
  • Baifu (百福)
  • Renfu (仁福)
  • Lianchen (聯成)
  • Jiujhuang (舊庄 Jiuzhuang)
  • Jhongyan (中研 Zhongyan)
  • Jiuru (九如)
  • Sinfu (新富 Xinfu)

The villages contain 423 neighbourhoods (鄰 lin).

Jhongyan, which was part of Jiujhuang until December 1974, contains Academia Sinica.

History

Nangang was settled in 1735 by Fujianese, especially in the present villages of Nangang, Sanchong, and Dongsin. Until the Japanese Occupation, the placename was Great Jia'na Fortress, Nangang-Sanchong Port (大加吶堡南港三重埔). Nangang, literally "Southern Port", refers to its position on Keelung River.

In 1920, Nangang was part of Neihu Hamlet, Qixing Prefecture, Taipei District (台北州七星郡內湖庄). In December 1945, the administrative levels were changed to Neihu Township, Qixing District, Taipei County (台北縣七星區內湖鄉). July 6 the following year, as proposed by Que Shankeng (闕山坑), Nangang was separated into its own township. In 1967, it became a district of Taipei.

Miscellaneous

External links

zh-tw:南港區