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Hong Kong Island

Hong Kong Island is an island in the southern part of Hong Kong. Known colloquially and on road signs simply as Hong Kong, the island has a population of 1,289,500 and its population density is 16,390 per square kilometre (42,400/sq mi),[1] as of 2008. The island had a population of about 3,000 inhabitants scattered in a dozen fishing villages when it was occupied by the United Kingdom in the First Opium War (1839–1842). In 1842, the island was formally ceded in perpetuity to the UK under the Treaty of Nanking and the City of Victoria was then established on the island by the British Force in honour of Queen Victoria. The Central area on the island is the historical, political and economic centre of Hong Kong. The northern coast of the island forms the southern shore of the Victoria Harbour, which is largely responsible for the development of Hong Kong due to its deep waters favoured by large trade ships.

Hong Kong Island
香港島
Dusk view of Hong Kong Island as viewed from North Point, August 2011
Location (in green) within Hong Kong
Geography
Coordinates22°15′52″N 114°11′14″E / 22.26444°N 114.18722°E / 22.26444; 114.18722Coordinates: 22°15′52″N 114°11′14″E / 22.26444°N 114.18722°E / 22.26444; 114.18722
Area78.59 km2 (30.34 sq mi)
Highest elevation552 m (1811 ft)
Highest pointVictoria Peak
Demographics
Population1,270,876 (2011)
Pop. density16,390/km2 (42450/sq mi)
Ethnic groups[citation needed]
Hong Kong Island
Traditional Chinese香港島
Simplified Chinese香港岛
Cantonese YaleHēunggóng dóu
JyutpingHoeng1gong2 dou2
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXiāng gǎng dǎo
Wu
RomanizationShiankaon tau
Hakka
RomanizationHiong1 gong3 dau3
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationHēunggóng dóu
JyutpingHoeng1gong2 dou2
IPA[hœ́ːŋ.kɔ̌ːŋ tǒu]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJHiong-káng-tó
The panoramic night view of "Island side" as seen from "Kowloon side" - TST
A view of Middle Island in the foreground and Repulse Bay in the background from the Ocean Park cable car ride (in the Southern District)
Kornhill and Shau Kei Wan, located in the northern part of Eastern District

The island is home to many famous sights, such as "The Peak", Ocean Park, many historical sites and various large shopping centres. The mountain ranges across the island are also famous for hiking. The northern part of Hong Kong Island, together with Kowloon and Tsuen Wan New Town, forms the core urban area of Hong Kong. Their combined area is approximately 88.3 square kilometres (34.1 square miles) and their combined population (that of the northern part of the island and of Kowloon) is approximately 3,156,500, reflecting a population density of 35,700/km2 (91,500/sq. mi.).

The island is often referred to locally as "Hong Kong side" or "Island side". The suffix "side" applied to other locations (e.g. China-side and Kowloon Walled City-side), the sole remnant of which is "Kowloon side" when indicating the two sides of the harbour.[2]

Suburbs and localities

Hong Kong Island comprises the following suburbs/localities of Hong Kong:

Administration

Hong Kong Island is not part of the Islands District. Four districts of Hong Kong are located on the island:

Hong Kong Island is one of the five Legislative Council geographical constituencies.

History

Human settlement of the area dates back millennia, as evidenced by Neolithic artifacts discovered in Stanley, Hong Kong Island. Qin Shi Huang's imperial government settled Baiyue, and later Hong Kong Island was under the jurisdiction of Panyu County (番禺縣) in Nanhai County (南海郡), to the Western Jin Dynasty. After the sixth year of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (AD 331), it belonged to Baoan County (寶安縣)). According to the book: "monuments and heritage Hong Kong Island East Region "(Chinese name: < 港島東區風物志》 ), the Hong Kong Yacht Club (formerly known as Lantern Island, also known as Kellett Island) (the entrance to the Hong Kong Island at the Cross-Harbour Tunnel today) has unearthed the copper coins from the Sui and Tang Dynasties to the Song Dynasty. It is estimated that at during the Sui and Tang Dynasties, the island already had commercial activity. In the first year of the Wanli Period of the Ming Dynasty (1573), it was the territory of Xin'an County, and remained so until it was ceded to the United Kingdom.[3]

British colony

Following the First Opium War (1839–1842), Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain in 1842 under the Treaty of Nanking and the territory became a Crown colony. At the time, the island was populated by only a few thousand people, and was thus described as being almost uninhabited.

Japanese invasion and occupation

The Second World War was a dark period for Hong Kong. In the 1930s, the British anticipated a Japanese attack on Hong Kong. As Wong Nai Chung Gap was a strategically-important place of defence, large-scale defensive works were constructed there, including anti-aircraft batteries, howitzers and machine gun nests.

The Battle of Hong Kong began on 8 December 1941. British, Canadian and Indian armies and the Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Forces resisted the Japanese invasion commanded by Sakai Takashi, which began eight hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor. However, the Japanese took control of the Hong Kong skies on the first day of attack and outnumbered the defenders, who retreated from the Gin Drinkers Line and consequently from Kowloon under heavy aerial bombardment and artillery barrage.

On 18 December, the Japanese had conquered North Point, reaching Wong Nai Chung Gap on the next day. English and Scottish forces and the Canadian Winnipeg Grenadiers vigorously defended the crucial point of Wong Nai Chung Gap, and for a while successfully secured the passage between Central and the secluded southern parts of the island. Japanese casualties were about 600. However, Allied forces there were ultimately defeated by the Japanese on 23 December, and Wong Nai Chung Reservoir was lost – the only one in Hong Kong at the time. As Wan Chai Gap had also fallen that same day, the British had no choice but to surrender.

Hong Kong was surrendered on 25 December 1941, thereafter often called "Black Christmas" by locals. The Governor of Hong Kong, Mark Young, surrendered in person at the temporary Japanese headquarters, on the third floor of the Peninsula Hotel, thus beginning the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. Isogai Rensuke became the first Japanese governor of Hong Kong. Hyper-inflation and food rationing followed; and the Japanese declared Hong Kong Dollars illegal. The Japanese enforced a repatriation policy throughout the period of occupation because of the scarcity of food and the possible counter-attack of the Allies. As a result, the unemployed were deported to the Mainland, and the population of Hong Kong had dwindled from 1.6 million in 1941 to 600,000 in 1945.[4]

Geography

Hong Kong Island is the second-largest island of the territory, the largest being Lantau Island. Its area is 78.59 km2 (30.34 sq mi), including 6.98 km2 (2.69 sq mi) of land reclaimed since 1887 and some smaller scale ones since 1851. It makes up approximately 7% of the total territory. It is separated from the mainland (Kowloon Peninsula and New Territories) by Victoria Harbour.

Most of the hills across the middle of the island are included within the country parks.

Demographics

The population as of 2011 is 1,270,876, which makes up approximately 19% of that of Hong Kong. Its population density is higher than for the whole of Hong Kong, c. 18,000 per km2. However, the population is heavily concentrated along the northern shore. The combined population of Central and Western, Wan Chai, and Eastern is 1,085,500, giving this urbanised part of the island a density of around 26,000 per km2, or 67,000 per mi2, in its approximately 41.3 km2 (15.9 sq mi).

The residents living in the Central and Western and Wanchai districts of Hong Kong island have the highest median household income of any area in Hong Kong. Affluent districts on Hong Kong Island are The Peak, Western Mid-Levels (Conduit Road/Robinson Road/Magazine Gap Road/Kotewall Road etc.), Eastern Mid-Levels (Happy Valley/Tai Hang/Jardine's Lookout), Tai Tam, Deep Water Bay and Repulse Bay.

88.5% of Hong Kong Island's residents are of Chinese descent. The largest ethnic minority groups are Filipinos (4%), Indonesians (2.4%), and White people (2.4%).[5][needs update]

80.2% of Hong Kong Island's residents use Cantonese as their usual language, while 8% use English and 1.9% use Mandarin.[5]

Transport

Seven of the MTR rapid transit system's eleven lines service Hong Kong Island. The Island line and South Island line run exclusively on Hong Kong Island, with the Island line serving the north shore at 17 stations, and the South Island line connecting four stations on Ap Lei Chau and in Wong Chuk Hang to the north shore at Admiralty station.[6][7] Five MTR lines – the Tsuen Wan line, the Tseung Kwan O line, the Tung Chung line, the Airport Express – connect the north shore with Kowloon and provide onward service to the New Territories, and the East Rail line which provides another cross-harbour connection upon its extension from Hung Hom station to Admiralty station. In future, the planned North Island line infrastructure project would extend both the Tung Chung line and the Tseung Kwan O line to connect them to each other, forming a route parallel to the middle section of the Island line.

Two other rail systems, Hong Kong Tramways and the Peak Tram, also run exclusively on Hong Kong Island. The former runs mostly parallel to the Island line between Kennedy Town and Shau Kei Wan, with a loop linking Causeway Bay and Happy Valley; the latter is a funicular linking Central District to Victoria Peak.

 
Kowloon portal of the Western Harbour Crossing, one of the tunnels that link Kowloon and Hong Kong Island.

Hong Kong Island is connected to the Kowloon Peninsula on the mainland by two road-only tunnels (the Cross-Harbour Tunnel and the Western Harbour Crossing), three MTR railway tunnels (East Rail line, Tsuen Wan line and Tung Chung line/Airport Express) and one combined road and MTR rail link tunnel (Eastern Harbour Crossing, containing the Tseung Kwan O line and road traffic in separate parallel conduits). There are no bridges between the island and Kowloon, although two bridges – the Ap Lei Chau Bridge, a road bridge, and Aberdeen Channel Bridge, part of the South Island line – connect the Hong Kong island to Ap Lei Chau.

See also

References

  1. ^ Census and Statistics Department (2008), (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2009, retrieved 31 August 2009
  2. ^ Booth, Martin. Gweilo: A memoir of a Hong Kong childhood, Bantam Books, 2005. ISBN 0-553-81672-1, pp108, 173
  3. ^ "Archaeological Work in Hong Kong".
  4. ^ T. L. Tsim (1 January 1989). The Other Hong Kong Report 1989. Chinese University Press. p. 391.
  5. ^ a b , Hong Kong Census, 2011, archived from the original on 27 September 2013, retrieved 27 September 2013
  6. ^ "Highways Department - Island Line". www.hyd.gov.hk. Highways Department of the Government of Hong Kong. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  7. ^ "Highways Department - South Island Line (East)". www.hyd.gov.hk. Highways Department of the Government of Hong Kong. Retrieved 8 January 2019.

External links

    hong, kong, island, island, southern, part, hong, kong, known, colloquially, road, signs, simply, hong, kong, island, population, population, density, square, kilometre, 2008, update, island, population, about, inhabitants, scattered, dozen, fishing, villages,. Hong Kong Island is an island in the southern part of Hong Kong Known colloquially and on road signs simply as Hong Kong the island has a population of 1 289 500 and its population density is 16 390 per square kilometre 42 400 sq mi 1 as of 2008 update The island had a population of about 3 000 inhabitants scattered in a dozen fishing villages when it was occupied by the United Kingdom in the First Opium War 1839 1842 In 1842 the island was formally ceded in perpetuity to the UK under the Treaty of Nanking and the City of Victoria was then established on the island by the British Force in honour of Queen Victoria The Central area on the island is the historical political and economic centre of Hong Kong The northern coast of the island forms the southern shore of the Victoria Harbour which is largely responsible for the development of Hong Kong due to its deep waters favoured by large trade ships Hong Kong Island香港島Dusk view of Hong Kong Island as viewed from North Point August 2011Location in green within Hong KongGeographyCoordinates22 15 52 N 114 11 14 E 22 26444 N 114 18722 E 22 26444 114 18722 Coordinates 22 15 52 N 114 11 14 E 22 26444 N 114 18722 E 22 26444 114 18722Area78 59 km2 30 34 sq mi Highest elevation552 m 1811 ft Highest pointVictoria PeakDemographicsPopulation1 270 876 2011 Pop density16 390 km2 42450 sq mi Ethnic groups88 5 Chinese4 Filipino2 4 Indonesian2 4 White citation needed Hong Kong IslandTraditional Chinese香港島Simplified Chinese香港岛Cantonese YaleHeunggong douJyutpingHoeng1gong2 dou2TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinXiang gǎng dǎoWuRomanizationShian平kaon上 tau上HakkaRomanizationHiong1 gong3 dau3Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationHeunggong douJyutpingHoeng1gong2 dou2IPA hœ ːŋ kɔ ːŋ to u Southern MinHokkien POJHiong kang toThe panoramic night view of Island side as seen from Kowloon side TST A view of Middle Island in the foreground and Repulse Bay in the background from the Ocean Park cable car ride in the Southern District Kornhill and Shau Kei Wan located in the northern part of Eastern District The island is home to many famous sights such as The Peak Ocean Park many historical sites and various large shopping centres The mountain ranges across the island are also famous for hiking The northern part of Hong Kong Island together with Kowloon and Tsuen Wan New Town forms the core urban area of Hong Kong Their combined area is approximately 88 3 square kilometres 34 1 square miles and their combined population that of the northern part of the island and of Kowloon is approximately 3 156 500 reflecting a population density of 35 700 km2 91 500 sq mi The island is often referred to locally as Hong Kong side or Island side The suffix side applied to other locations e g China side and Kowloon Walled City side the sole remnant of which is Kowloon side when indicating the two sides of the harbour 2 Contents 1 Suburbs and localities 2 Administration 3 History 3 1 British colony 3 1 1 Japanese invasion and occupation 4 Geography 5 Demographics 6 Transport 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksSuburbs and localities EditHong Kong Island comprises the following suburbs localities of Hong Kong Aberdeen Admiralty Ap Lei Chau Big Wave Bay Braemar Hill Causeway Bay Central Chung Wan Chai Wan Chung Hom Kok Cyberport Deep Water Bay East Mid Levels Fortress Hill Happy Valley Jardine s Lookout Kennedy Town Lung Fu Shan Mid Levels Mount Davis North Point Pok Fu Lam Quarry Bay Repulse Bay Sai Wan Ho Sai Wan Sai Ying Pun Sandy Bay Shau Kei Wan Shek O Shek Tong Tsui Sheung Wan Siu Sai Wan So Kon Po Stanley Tai Hang Tai Tam Tin Hau Victoria Park Victoria Peak Wan Chai West Mid Levels Wong Chuk HangAdministration EditMain article Hong Kong Island constituency Hong Kong Island is not part of the Islands District Four districts of Hong Kong are located on the island Central and Western District Eastern District Southern District including the islands of Ap Lei Chau and Ap Lei Pai Wan Chai DistrictHong Kong Island is one of the five Legislative Council geographical constituencies History EditHuman settlement of the area dates back millennia as evidenced by Neolithic artifacts discovered in Stanley Hong Kong Island Qin Shi Huang s imperial government settled Baiyue and later Hong Kong Island was under the jurisdiction of Panyu County 番禺縣 in Nanhai County 南海郡 to the Western Jin Dynasty After the sixth year of the Eastern Jin Dynasty AD 331 it belonged to Baoan County 寶安縣 According to the book monuments and heritage Hong Kong Island East Region Chinese name lt 港島東區風物志 the Hong Kong Yacht Club formerly known as Lantern Island also known as Kellett Island the entrance to the Hong Kong Island at the Cross Harbour Tunnel today has unearthed the copper coins from the Sui and Tang Dynasties to the Song Dynasty It is estimated that at during the Sui and Tang Dynasties the island already had commercial activity In the first year of the Wanli Period of the Ming Dynasty 1573 it was the territory of Xin an County and remained so until it was ceded to the United Kingdom 3 British colony Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2011 Main article History of Hong Kong 1800s 1930s Following the First Opium War 1839 1842 Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain in 1842 under the Treaty of Nanking and the territory became a Crown colony At the time the island was populated by only a few thousand people and was thus described as being almost uninhabited Japanese invasion and occupation Edit The Second World War was a dark period for Hong Kong In the 1930s the British anticipated a Japanese attack on Hong Kong As Wong Nai Chung Gap was a strategically important place of defence large scale defensive works were constructed there including anti aircraft batteries howitzers and machine gun nests The Battle of Hong Kong began on 8 December 1941 British Canadian and Indian armies and the Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Forces resisted the Japanese invasion commanded by Sakai Takashi which began eight hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor However the Japanese took control of the Hong Kong skies on the first day of attack and outnumbered the defenders who retreated from the Gin Drinkers Line and consequently from Kowloon under heavy aerial bombardment and artillery barrage On 18 December the Japanese had conquered North Point reaching Wong Nai Chung Gap on the next day English and Scottish forces and the Canadian Winnipeg Grenadiers vigorously defended the crucial point of Wong Nai Chung Gap and for a while successfully secured the passage between Central and the secluded southern parts of the island Japanese casualties were about 600 However Allied forces there were ultimately defeated by the Japanese on 23 December and Wong Nai Chung Reservoir was lost the only one in Hong Kong at the time As Wan Chai Gap had also fallen that same day the British had no choice but to surrender Hong Kong was surrendered on 25 December 1941 thereafter often called Black Christmas by locals The Governor of Hong Kong Mark Young surrendered in person at the temporary Japanese headquarters on the third floor of the Peninsula Hotel thus beginning the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong Isogai Rensuke became the first Japanese governor of Hong Kong Hyper inflation and food rationing followed and the Japanese declared Hong Kong Dollars illegal The Japanese enforced a repatriation policy throughout the period of occupation because of the scarcity of food and the possible counter attack of the Allies As a result the unemployed were deported to the Mainland and the population of Hong Kong had dwindled from 1 6 million in 1941 to 600 000 in 1945 4 Geography EditHong Kong Island is the second largest island of the territory the largest being Lantau Island Its area is 78 59 km2 30 34 sq mi including 6 98 km2 2 69 sq mi of land reclaimed since 1887 and some smaller scale ones since 1851 It makes up approximately 7 of the total territory It is separated from the mainland Kowloon Peninsula and New Territories by Victoria Harbour Most of the hills across the middle of the island are included within the country parks Demographics EditThe population as of 2011 update is 1 270 876 which makes up approximately 19 of that of Hong Kong Its population density is higher than for the whole of Hong Kong c 18 000 per km2 However the population is heavily concentrated along the northern shore The combined population of Central and Western Wan Chai and Eastern is 1 085 500 giving this urbanised part of the island a density of around 26 000 per km2 or 67 000 per mi2 in its approximately 41 3 km2 15 9 sq mi The residents living in the Central and Western and Wanchai districts of Hong Kong island have the highest median household income of any area in Hong Kong Affluent districts on Hong Kong Island are The Peak Western Mid Levels Conduit Road Robinson Road Magazine Gap Road Kotewall Road etc Eastern Mid Levels Happy Valley Tai Hang Jardine s Lookout Tai Tam Deep Water Bay and Repulse Bay 88 5 of Hong Kong Island s residents are of Chinese descent The largest ethnic minority groups are Filipinos 4 Indonesians 2 4 and White people 2 4 5 needs update 80 2 of Hong Kong Island s residents use Cantonese as their usual language while 8 use English and 1 9 use Mandarin 5 Transport EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hong Kong Island news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Admiralty MTR station the interchange station between the Tsuen Wan line Island line East Rail line and South Island line Seven of the MTR rapid transit system s eleven lines service Hong Kong Island The Island line and South Island line run exclusively on Hong Kong Island with the Island line serving the north shore at 17 stations and the South Island line connecting four stations on Ap Lei Chau and in Wong Chuk Hang to the north shore at Admiralty station 6 7 Five MTR lines the Tsuen Wan line the Tseung Kwan O line the Tung Chung line the Airport Express connect the north shore with Kowloon and provide onward service to the New Territories and the East Rail line which provides another cross harbour connection upon its extension from Hung Hom station to Admiralty station In future the planned North Island line infrastructure project would extend both the Tung Chung line and the Tseung Kwan O line to connect them to each other forming a route parallel to the middle section of the Island line Two other rail systems Hong Kong Tramways and the Peak Tram also run exclusively on Hong Kong Island The former runs mostly parallel to the Island line between Kennedy Town and Shau Kei Wan with a loop linking Causeway Bay and Happy Valley the latter is a funicular linking Central District to Victoria Peak Kowloon portal of the Western Harbour Crossing one of the tunnels that link Kowloon and Hong Kong Island Hong Kong Island is connected to the Kowloon Peninsula on the mainland by two road only tunnels the Cross Harbour Tunnel and the Western Harbour Crossing three MTR railway tunnels East Rail line Tsuen Wan line and Tung Chung line Airport Express and one combined road and MTR rail link tunnel Eastern Harbour Crossing containing the Tseung Kwan O line and road traffic in separate parallel conduits There are no bridges between the island and Kowloon although two bridges the Ap Lei Chau Bridge a road bridge and Aberdeen Channel Bridge part of the South Island line connect the Hong Kong island to Ap Lei Chau See also Edit Hong Kong portalConnaught Road Conservation in Hong Kong Des Voeux Road List of islands and peninsulas of Hong Kong List of places in Hong Kong List of streets and roads in Hong Kong Queen s RoadReferences Edit Census and Statistics Department 2008 Population and Vital Events PDF archived from the original PDF on 24 August 2009 retrieved 31 August 2009 Booth Martin Gweilo A memoir of a Hong Kong childhood Bantam Books 2005 ISBN 0 553 81672 1 pp108 173 Archaeological Work in Hong Kong T L Tsim 1 January 1989 The Other Hong Kong Report 1989 Chinese University Press p 391 a b District Profiles Hong Kong Census 2011 archived from the original on 27 September 2013 retrieved 27 September 2013 Highways Department Island Line www hyd gov hk Highways Department of the Government of Hong Kong Retrieved 8 January 2019 Highways Department South Island Line East www hyd gov hk Highways Department of the Government of Hong Kong Retrieved 8 January 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hong Kong Island Map of Hong Kong in 1844 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hong Kong Island amp oldid 1130496425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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