fbpx
Wikipedia

Liuqiu Island

Liuqiu Island
Native name:
琉球嶼
Satellite image of Liuqiu
Liuqiu I.
Liuqiu Island in Taiwan
Geography
LocationTaiwan Strait
Coordinates22°20′19.12″N 120°22′11.34″E / 22.3386444°N 120.3698167°E / 22.3386444; 120.3698167Coordinates: 22°20′19.12″N 120°22′11.34″E / 22.3386444°N 120.3698167°E / 22.3386444; 120.3698167
Area6.8 km2 (2.6 sq mi)
Highest elevation34 m (112 ft)
Administration
TownshipLiuqiu
CountyPingtung
ProvinceTaiwan (streamlined)
Demographics
Population12,246 (February 2023)
Additional information
Official websiteliuqiu.pthg.gov.tw
Liuqiu Island
Chinese name
Chinese琉球
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLiúqiú
Wade–GilesLiu-ch'iu
Japanese name
Kanji琉球
Hiraganaりゅうきゅう
Transcriptions
RomanizationRyūkyū
Other names
Xiaoliuqiu
Chinese小琉球
Literal meaningLittle Liuqiu
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXiǎoliúqiú
Wade–GilesHsiao Liu-ch‘iu
Tongyong PinyinSiǎoliúqiú
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳSéu Liù-khiù
Southern Min
Hokkien POJSió-liû-khiû

Liuqiu, also known by several other names, is a coral island in the Taiwan Strait about 13 kilometers (8 mi) southwest of the main island of Taiwan. It has an area of 6.8 km2 (2.6 sq mi) and approximately 13,000 residents, the vast majority of whom share only 10 surnames. It is administered as a township of Pingtung County in Taiwan Province, Republic of China. As of 2019 the township chief is Chen Lung-chin.

Names

 
"Lambay" on a 1905 German map
 
Map including Liuqiu Island (labeled as RYŪKYŪ-SHO) (AMS, 1944)

Liúqiú is the pinyin romanization of the Mandarin pronunciation of the Chinese name 琉球. Other romanizations include Liuchiu, Liu-chiu, and Liu-ch'iu based on the Wade-Giles system for Mandarin and Ryūkyū from its Japanese pronunciation. The original Liuqiu appears in the Book of Sui and other medieval Chinese records as an island kingdom somewhere in the East China Sea. It was written by different authors with different homophonous characters and appears to have transcribed a native name. That kingdom has been variously identified with states on Taiwan Island, Okinawa, and the Penghu Islands. The name Liuqiu Islet (, ) was first used during the Ming Dynasty. Since "Ryūkyū" is also the name of the nearby Ryukyu archipelago including Okinawa and a historical kingdom there, the island has also been nicknamed "Little Liuqiu" (小琉球, Pinyin Xiǎo Liúqiú) as opposed to "Big Liuqiu" (大琉球) for the Ryukyu Islands or Taiwan - since the early 20th century.[1] Transcriptions of the nickname include Xiao Liuqiu, Siaoliouciou,[2][3] and Sio Liu-khiu.[4]

The island was previously known in English and other European languages as Lambay,[5][4] Lamay, or Lamey Island. It is thought to be a transcription of a name from one of the Taiwanese aboriginal languages. Other indigenous names were Samaji[1] and Tugin.[4]

It was occasionally also known as Golden Lion Island,[6][7] a calque of its old Dutch name Gouden Leeuwseylant. The city's tourism department ascribes the name to Vase Rock's supposed resemblance to a lion,[1] but it actually honors the slaughtered crew of the Gouden Leeuw.[4]

History

The Siraya, the Taiwanese indigenous peoples who also lived in nearby Pingtung County on Taiwan Island, are thought to have been the island's original inhabitants.[8]

In 1622, the Dutch ship Goude Leeuws[4] or Gouden Leeuw (Dutch for "Golden Lion") hit the island's coral reefs. Its entire crew was massacred by the island's natives.[9] In 1631, the Dutch yacht Beverwijck wrecked on the same reefs and its fifty-odd survivors battled for two days before also being slaughtered to a man.[9] Hendrik Brouwer, the governor-general of the Dutch East Indies, personally ordered his lieutenant on Taiwan Hans Putmans to "punish and exterminate the people of... the Golden Lion Island as an example for their murderous actions committed against our people."[9] A 1633 expedition under Claes Bruijn discovered it was undermanned for the task and accomplished little, aside from finding the large cave on the island used by its natives as shelter in times of trouble. A larger expedition under Jan Jurriansz van Lingga in 1636 corralled the locals into it, sealed its entrances, and filled its air with burning pitch and sulphur for eight days. By the end of the "Lamey" or Liuqiu Island Massacre, about 300 were killed and 323 were enslaved, the men being sold to plantations on Taiwan and Indonesia and the women and children being used as wives or domestics on Taiwan.[9]

The first Han inhabitant is variously described as a Fujianese fisherman surnamed Chen, sometimes said to have arrived by accident during a storm in the same year as the massacre,[10] or as Li Yuelao, who supposedly "discovered" and developed the island after Koxinga overthrew the Dutch in 1662.[11] The few remaining native inhabitants were picked off by further slave raids and assaults until 1645, when a Chinese merchant who leased the island from the Dutch removed the last 13 indigenous inhabitants.[9] It was resettled by the Chinese, who erected a prosperous fishing village,[10] but only had about 200 inhabitants at the end of Qing control in 1895.[4]

During the Japanese occupation of Taiwan following the First Sino-Japanese War, the island was administered as a village of the Tōkō District of Takao Prefecture.

After the Republic of China resumed control in 1945, the island became a township[12] of Pingtung County within Taiwan Province, which became streamlined in 1998.

Liuqiu transitioned to a tourism-based economy in the early 21st century,[13] particularly following its inclusion in the Dapeng Bay National Scenic Area in 2004. It now receives hundreds of thousands of tourists a year,[14] although this brings new challenges. In early 2015, more than 850 metric tons (840 long tons; 940 short tons) of garbage piled up on the island when the county government forgot to budget funds to transport it to Taiwan Island for incineration.[14] The island was left without disposal services from January to May, when it was finally able to draw on a national subsidy to correct the problem.[14] Similarly, refuse from tourists and fishermen killed over 90% of the island's coral before conservation efforts began to reverse the trend.[13]

Geography

 
Liuqiu Island (pink) and the southern end of Taiwan, with the rest of Pingtung County in yellow

Liuqiu Island is a foot-[10] or boot-shaped[15] coral island covering 6.8 square kilometers (2.6 sq mi)[16] at high tide and about 7.4 km2 (2.9 sq mi) at low tide,[10] running about 4 kilometers (2.5 mi) north to south and 2 kilometers (1.2 mi) east to west.[16] It lies in the southeast corner of the Taiwan Strait, about 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9 mi) SSW of Donggang[15] at the mouth of the Gaoping River[16] on the southwestern shore of Taiwan Island. Overall, the island inclines gently from the southwest to the northeast,[16] but consists of two grabens—one NE to SW, the other NW to SE—that meet in the middle, dividing the island into four terraces.[15] Its highest point is Belly Hill, about 80 meters (260 ft) above sea level.[10]

Liuqiu is the only island township in Pingtung County. It is one of Taiwan's largest coral islands, and the only one with significant population and human activities.[citation needed] It is also covered with limestone and land colored red by weathered iron oxide and silicon oxide.[15] Its beaches, reefs, caves and eroded rock formations have become tourist attractions. Its principal beaches are Chungau Beach (t 中澳沙灘, s 中澳沙滩, Zhōng'ào Shātān) on the north shore[17] and Duozaiping (t 肚仔坪潮間帶, s 肚仔坪潮间带, Dǔzǎipíng Cháojiāndài)[18] and Geban Bay on the west shore.[19] The most important of the island's caves are Black Dwarf Cave, Beauty Cave, and Lobster Cave.[20] The most famous rocks are Vase Rock at the north end of the island,[21] the Sanfu Ecological Corridor (t 杉褔生態廊道, s 杉褔生态廊道, Shānfù Shēngtài Lángdào) on the east coast, and the Houshi Fringing Reef (厚石裙礁, Hòushí Qúnjiāo) in the southeast,[22] which includes Mouse Rock (老鼠石, Lǎoshǔ Shí), Guanyin Rock (t 觀音石, s 观音石, Guānyīn Shí), Indian Rock (t 紅蕃石, s 红蕃石, Hóngfān Shí), and Climbing Tiger Rock (爬山虎, Páshānhǔ) in the southeast.[20]

Its forests include white popinac, acacia, wild pineapple (lintou), and bamboo.[23]

Wildlife

Liuqiu has a diverse ecosystem. Chung Au Beach, a shell-sand beach, abuts waters that are home to approximately 176 species of fish and numerous coral species. It is also home to young and adult green sea turtles, with adult females coming ashore to nest during the summer months. Marine vertebrates such as sharks, flying fish, sea turtles, and cetaceans such as sperm whales may appear around the island.[24]

Climate

Overall, Liuqiu has a dry and warm climate but is the most typhoon-prone of the Taiwanese islands.[15] It has a tropical monsoon climate (Am), with warm temperatures year round with a rainy or monsoon season from April to October and a dry season with cooler temperatures from November to March.[citation needed] The rainiest recorded month was one June (2,657 mm or 104.6 in); the driest, one December (1.9 mm or 0.075 in).[15]

Climate data for Liuqiu Township
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 25.1
(77.2)
25.7
(78.3)
27.5
(81.5)
29.5
(85.1)
31.3
(88.3)
31.7
(89.1)
32.2
(90.0)
32.0
(89.6)
31.3
(88.3)
30.2
(86.4)
27.8
(82.0)
25.5
(77.9)
29.2
(84.5)
Average low °C (°F) 18.0
(64.4)
18.5
(65.3)
19.8
(67.6)
22.2
(72.0)
24.3
(75.7)
25.5
(77.9)
25.8
(78.4)
25.5
(77.9)
25.0
(77.0)
24.1
(75.4)
21.8
(71.2)
18.8
(65.8)
22.4
(72.4)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 16.0
(0.63)
20.5
(0.81)
38.8
(1.53)
69.8
(2.75)
197.4
(7.77)
415.3
(16.35)
390.9
(15.39)
416.7
(16.41)
241.9
(9.52)
42.7
(1.68)
18.7
(0.74)
16.2
(0.64)
1,884.9
(74.22)
Average relative humidity (%) 75 76 75 77 78 81 80 81 79 76 75 74 77
Mean monthly sunshine hours 175 167 190 192 200 201 225 196 175 184 167 163 2,235
Source 1: Wunderground[25][dubious ]
Source 2: Central Weather Bureau (Rainfall data of Kaohsiung City is shown for reference due to the island's proximity to Kaohsiung)[26][dubious ]
Average sea temperature of Liuqiu
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
25.0 °C (77.0 °F) 25.2 °C (77.4 °F) 25.7 °C (78.3 °F) 26.9 °C (80.4 °F) 28.1 °C (82.6 °F) 29.1 °C (84.4 °F) 29.4 °C (84.9 °F) 29.2 °C (84.6 °F) 28.8 °C (83.8 °F) 28.1 °C (82.6 °F) 27.0 °C (80.6 °F) 25.8 °C (78.4 °F) 27.4 °C (81.3 °F)

Administration

The current township chief is Chen Lung-chin (t 陳隆進, s 陈隆进, Chén Lóngjìn).[14]

Liuqiu Township consists of 8 villages, with the township seat located in Zhongfu Village.

Liuqiu Township Administrative Divisions

Economy

In the early modern era and under the Japanese, Liuqiu's residents were mostly occupied with fishing and small-scale agriculture.[23] After the restoration of Chinese control in 1945, some quarries were opened to export stone and lime.[23] As Taiwan's economy has improved, tourism has employed more and more people.[23]

Water and electricity are provided from Taiwan Island.[16] Because of the constant threat of summer typhoons, construction on the island is now specially designed to accommodate strong winds and waves.[15]

Fishing

The traditional mainstay of the local economy has been fishing in the rich waters of the nearby Kuroshio Current.[23] Most residents still make their living by fishing,[16] but the better pay catering to tourists has caused it to run short of manpower. The trade is increasingly reliant on foreign sailors brought in to crew local boats[23] and on cage aquaculture (t 箱網養殖, s 箱网养殖, xiāngwǎng yǎngzhí), the latter of which is also used as a tourist attraction.[27]

Agriculture

The lack of rivers on the island[16] and infertile ground[15] makes farming difficult. Early on, the main products came from local coconut palms. After 1945, the islands' farmers focused on sweet potatoes and peanuts. Presently, production on the island's 140 hectares (350 acres) of farmland has shifted to mangos and other fruits, including papayas, guavas, and rose apples.[23]

The overall climate is only suitable for dryness-tolerant crops, but the island's exposure to the monsoon and typhoons make even those high risk. As such, cultivated land has been decreasing since at least 1980 and old fields have been given up to scrubland and forest. The island's agricultural association has focused on high-margin, fast-turnover fruit instead, particularly mangos.[23]

Tourism

 
Sanmin Old Street

The sea temperature of the island is above 25 °C (77 °F) year round,[citation needed] allowing many species of coral reefs to inhabit the area and making it one of the best locations for winter swimming activities in Taiwan. Tourism became a mainstay of Liuqiu's economy in the 21st century. After it was included in the Dapeng Bay National Scenic Area in 2004, it gained media exposure and advertised until it was one of Pingtung County's main sightseeing locations.[13] Home to less than 15,000 residents, the island saw over 500,000 tourists in 2012[13] and over 400,000 in 2014.[14] B&Bs and hotels now cover the island, while others rent bicycles and motorcycles or facilitate scuba certification and diving.

The island's main sights are its temples; its beaches, reefs, caves, and rock formations; its net cages for fishing; the bamboo forest and wetland park (t 竹林生態濕地公園, s 竹林生态湿地公园, Zhúlín Shēngtài Shīdì Gōngyuán) in the center of the island;[28] the architecture and shops along Sanmin Road 三民老街, Sānmín Lǎojiē); the Sanfu Fishing Port (t 杉福漁港, s 杉福渔港, Shānfú Yúgǎng); the Sea View Pavilion (望海亭, Wànghǎi Tíng) beside Beauty Cave,[29] Restoration Pavilion (t 復育涼亭, s 复育凉亭, Fùyù Liángtíng) on a reclaimed landfill on the east coast,[30] and Sunset Pavilion (落日亭, Luòrì Tíng) on the island's southwest corner;[31] and Sanzu or Wild Boar Ditch (t 山豬溝, s 山猪沟, Shānzhū Gōu), a steep gully northwest of Sanban'ao near Black Dwarf Cave.[32][20]

The Taiwanese government has restricted access and set daily limits for visitors at the islands' intertidal zones since 2012. The increased control has helped restore the areas' ecosystems and biological diversity in the years since.[33]

Religion

 
The Biyun Temple during Taiwan's Ghost Festival

Chinese ancestral veneration is abundantly demonstrated, with most plots of undeveloped land on the southern half of the island outside the tourist areas covered with graves.[8] Regulations established by Taiwan's Ministry of the Interior usually prohibit burials within 500 meters (1,600 ft) of a residence, but complying to this particular law on Liuqiu Island would be impossible.[8]

Liuqiu is famed for its many temples: at least 38 main ones[34] and as many as 70 in total.[35] The people are quite religious and it is common to pray and give offerings for recovery from illness; for blessings for new ships, houses, and marriages; for protection while fishing; and for appropriate times for funerals.[35]

The deities worshipped on the island are mostly those of the local faiths of Quanzhou and Zhangzhou in Fujian, whence the original Han settlers originated.[35] The most important and popular is Guanyin, the Buddhist Bodhisattva of Compassion. Her Jade Cloud Temple (t 碧雲寺, s 碧云寺, Bìyún Sì) and her annual birthday festival on the 19th day of the 2nd lunar month are likewise the main ones on the island. The birthday festivities are celebrated at temples in every village, with ceremonies and Taiwanese opera performances in her honor performed for about a month and a half.[35] This has become a major tourist draw, as has the still larger "Welcoming the King" festival held every three years in honor of the plague subduer deity, Lord Wu.[35]

Two other important temples[20] are Spirit Mountain Temple (t 靈山寺, s 灵山寺, Língshān Sì) on a cliff beside Baisha Port, built in the early 1960s and primarily dedicated to Lord Buddha,[36] and the Palace of the Three Prosperous Ones (t 三隆宮, s 三隆宫, Sānlóng Gōng) south of Benfu Village and dedicated to Lord Zhu, Lord Chi and Lord Wu.[37] Erlong Temple in Haizikou is also a common waypoint used by tourists following the ring road along the island's coast.[38]

Christianity was introduced by the Dutch. There is still a Presbyterian church on the island,[35] begun by English missionaries who also once operated a sanitarium on the island.[4] Spanish Catholicism and Japanese Shintoism and Buddhism were introduced by their respective empires but have since died out.[35]

Transportation

 
Baisha Port, one of two ports on Liuqiu
 
Liuqiu Airport

The only public transportation to Liuqiu is by ship from Donggang in Pingtung County and Zhongyun[36] in Kaohsiung on Taiwan Island. Boats arrive at Baisha Port on the north end of the island[39] or Dafu Port on its east coast.[40] The island is 8–9 nautical miles (15–17 km; 9.2–10.4 mi) from the Taiwan mainland, which is about a 25- to 30-minute boat ride. The island has two lighthouses: one guiding ships into Baisha Port and the White Lighthouse on Mount Dongnanjian.[41]

Although Liuqiu Airport once had passenger service with direct flights between Kaohsiung international airport and the island, it is now only used for helicopters.

Education

The island provides primary and junior high education. Its five schools are Liuqiu, Baisha, Quande,[16] and Tiannan Primary Schools[citation needed] and Liuqiu Junior High School.[16] High school and university students attend schools on Taiwan Island.

A 2004 report on the island described its brain drain before the growth of the tourism industry: "'Liuchiu has two problems... All the young people go over there,' he [said] pointing to Kaohsiung on the horizon, 'and all the old people go over there,'... pointing to the south of the island" and its graves.[8]

Notable natives

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c "History of Liuqiu", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  2. ^ Yu Kai-hsiang; et al. (10 August 2015), "8 Killed, 4 Missing, 420 Injured as Typhoon Soudelor Hits Taiwan", Focus Taiwan, Taipei: Central News Agency.
  3. ^ Jake Chung (13 July 2017). "Turtle-lover's polymer clay models prove an online hit". Taipei Times (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2 November 2019. Polymer clay sea turtles made by Peng Kuan-chieh are displayed on Pingtung's Siaoliouciou Island on Friday last week
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Campbell (1903), p. 542.
  5. ^ Campbell (1896), map.
  6. ^ "Black Ghost Cave Incident", Xpat Mag.
  7. ^ Campbell (1903), p. 542, "Explanatory Notes".
  8. ^ a b c d Momphard, David (18 July 2004), "Of Grottoes and Graves", Taipei Times.
  9. ^ a b c d e Blussé, Leonard (2000). "The Cave of the Black Spirits". In Blundell, David (ed.). Austronesian Taiwan. California: University of California. ISBN 0-936127-09-0.
  10. ^ a b c d e Ni (2018), p. 173.
  11. ^ "Taiwanese Islands: Xiao Liuqiu", Letters from Taiwan, 27 April 2015.
  12. ^ [Chinese-English comparison table of names of administrative regions above the township level in Taiwan] (PDF) (in Chinese). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2012. Accessed via . Ministry of the Interior. 16 June 2011. Archived from the original on August 16, 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d Wang Jiecun; et al. (7 April 2013), "小琉球遊客倍增生態保育更重要", Official site, Taipei: Public Television Service. (in Chinese)
  14. ^ a b c d e , The China Post, Taipei: China Post Group, 11 April 2015.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h "Liuqiu Scenery", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i "General Information", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2017.
  17. ^ "Chungau Beach", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  18. ^ "Duozaiping", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  19. ^ "Geban Bay", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  20. ^ a b c d "Scenic Spots", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  21. ^ "Vase Rock", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  22. ^ "Houshi Fringing Reef", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h "Economy", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  24. ^ 幸運!搭交通船到小琉球遇見「鯨」喜
  25. ^ "Climate". Wunderground.
  26. ^ "Climate". Central Weather Bureau.
  27. ^ "Net Cage", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  28. ^ "Wetland Part", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  29. ^ "Sea View Pavilion", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  30. ^ "Restoration Pavilion", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  31. ^ "Sunset Galley", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  32. ^ "Wild Boar Ditch", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  33. ^ "Southern Taiwan Attractions See Tourist Boom", Taiwan Today, Taipei: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 5 May 2015.
  34. ^ di Genova, Trista (10 July 2008). "Hsiao Liuchiu: Unknown paradise on the sea". The China Post. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g "Religion", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  36. ^ a b "Lingshan Temple", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  37. ^ "Sanlung Temple", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  38. ^ "Haitzukuo", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  39. ^ "Baisha Port", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  40. ^ "Dafu Port", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.
  41. ^ "White Lighthouse", Official site, Liuqiu: Liuqiu Township Office, 2009.

Bibliography

  • "Formosa" , Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th ed., Vol. IX, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1879, pp. 415–17.
  • Campbell, William (1896), "The Island of Formosa: Its Past and Future", Scottish Geographical Magazine, vol. 12, pp. 385–399, doi:10.1080/00369229608732903.
  • Campbell, William (1903), Formosa under the Dutch: Described from Contemporary Records, London: Kegan Paul, ISBN 9789576380839, OCLC 644323041.
  • Ni Hao (2018), Travel Guide of Famous Islands in China, Travelling in China, No. 50, London: DeepLogic.

External links

  • Tapeng Bay National Scenic Area (in Chinese)
  • Liuqiu Township Office (in Chinese)
  • (in English)

liuqiu, island, this, article, about, island, archipelago, ryukyu, islands, medieval, island, kingdom, liuqiu, medieval, native, name, 琉球嶼satellite, image, liuqiuliuqiu, taiwangeographylocationtaiwan, straitcoordinates22, 3386444, 3698167, 3386444, 3698167, co. This article is about the island For the archipelago see Ryukyu Islands For the medieval island kingdom see Liuqiu medieval Liuqiu IslandNative name 琉球嶼Satellite image of LiuqiuLiuqiu I Liuqiu Island in TaiwanGeographyLocationTaiwan StraitCoordinates22 20 19 12 N 120 22 11 34 E 22 3386444 N 120 3698167 E 22 3386444 120 3698167 Coordinates 22 20 19 12 N 120 22 11 34 E 22 3386444 N 120 3698167 E 22 3386444 120 3698167Area6 8 km2 2 6 sq mi Highest elevation34 m 112 ft Administration Republic of ChinaTownshipLiuqiuCountyPingtungProvinceTaiwan streamlined DemographicsPopulation12 246 February 2023 Additional informationOfficial websiteliuqiu pthg gov twLiuqiu IslandChinese nameChinese琉球TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinLiuqiuWade GilesLiu ch iuJapanese nameKanji琉球HiraganaりゅうきゅうTranscriptionsRomanizationRyukyuOther namesXiaoliuqiuChinese小琉球Literal meaningLittle LiuqiuTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinXiǎoliuqiuWade GilesHsiao Liu ch iuTongyong PinyinSiǎoliuqiuHakkaPha k fa sṳSeu Liu khiuSouthern MinHokkien POJSio liu khiu Liuqiu also known by several other names is a coral island in the Taiwan Strait about 13 kilometers 8 mi southwest of the main island of Taiwan It has an area of 6 8 km2 2 6 sq mi and approximately 13 000 residents the vast majority of whom share only 10 surnames It is administered as a township of Pingtung County in Taiwan Province Republic of China As of 2019 update the township chief is Chen Lung chin Contents 1 Names 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Wildlife 3 2 Climate 4 Administration 5 Economy 5 1 Fishing 5 2 Agriculture 5 3 Tourism 6 Religion 7 Transportation 8 Education 9 Notable natives 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Bibliography 12 External linksNames Edit Lambay on a 1905 German map Map including Liuqiu Island labeled as RYuKYu SHO AMS 1944 Liuqiu is the pinyin romanization of the Mandarin pronunciation of the Chinese name 琉球 Other romanizations include Liuchiu Liu chiu and Liu ch iu based on the Wade Giles system for Mandarin and Ryukyu from its Japanese pronunciation The original Liuqiu appears in the Book of Sui and other medieval Chinese records as an island kingdom somewhere in the East China Sea It was written by different authors with different homophonous characters and appears to have transcribed a native name That kingdom has been variously identified with states on Taiwan Island Okinawa and the Penghu Islands The name Liuqiu Islet 嶼 yǔ was first used during the Ming Dynasty Since Ryukyu is also the name of the nearby Ryukyu archipelago including Okinawa and a historical kingdom there the island has also been nicknamed Little Liuqiu 小琉球 Pinyin Xiǎo Liuqiu as opposed to Big Liuqiu 大琉球 for the Ryukyu Islands or Taiwan since the early 20th century 1 Transcriptions of the nickname include Xiao Liuqiu Siaoliouciou 2 3 and Sio Liu khiu 4 The island was previously known in English and other European languages as Lambay 5 4 Lamay or Lamey Island It is thought to be a transcription of a name from one of the Taiwanese aboriginal languages Other indigenous names were Samaji 1 and Tugin 4 It was occasionally also known as Golden Lion Island 6 7 a calque of its old Dutch name Gouden Leeuwseylant The city s tourism department ascribes the name to Vase Rock s supposed resemblance to a lion 1 but it actually honors the slaughtered crew of the Gouden Leeuw 4 History EditMain article Liuqiu Island Massacre The Siraya the Taiwanese indigenous peoples who also lived in nearby Pingtung County on Taiwan Island are thought to have been the island s original inhabitants 8 In 1622 the Dutch ship Goude Leeuws 4 or Gouden Leeuw Dutch for Golden Lion hit the island s coral reefs Its entire crew was massacred by the island s natives 9 In 1631 the Dutch yacht Beverwijck wrecked on the same reefs and its fifty odd survivors battled for two days before also being slaughtered to a man 9 Hendrik Brouwer the governor general of the Dutch East Indies personally ordered his lieutenant on Taiwan Hans Putmans to punish and exterminate the people of the Golden Lion Island as an example for their murderous actions committed against our people 9 A 1633 expedition under Claes Bruijn discovered it was undermanned for the task and accomplished little aside from finding the large cave on the island used by its natives as shelter in times of trouble A larger expedition under Jan Jurriansz van Lingga in 1636 corralled the locals into it sealed its entrances and filled its air with burning pitch and sulphur for eight days By the end of the Lamey or Liuqiu Island Massacre about 300 were killed and 323 were enslaved the men being sold to plantations on Taiwan and Indonesia and the women and children being used as wives or domestics on Taiwan 9 The first Han inhabitant is variously described as a Fujianese fisherman surnamed Chen sometimes said to have arrived by accident during a storm in the same year as the massacre 10 or as Li Yuelao who supposedly discovered and developed the island after Koxinga overthrew the Dutch in 1662 11 The few remaining native inhabitants were picked off by further slave raids and assaults until 1645 when a Chinese merchant who leased the island from the Dutch removed the last 13 indigenous inhabitants 9 It was resettled by the Chinese who erected a prosperous fishing village 10 but only had about 200 inhabitants at the end of Qing control in 1895 4 During the Japanese occupation of Taiwan following the First Sino Japanese War the island was administered as a village of the Tōkō District of Takao Prefecture After the Republic of China resumed control in 1945 the island became a township 12 of Pingtung County within Taiwan Province which became streamlined in 1998 Liuqiu transitioned to a tourism based economy in the early 21st century 13 particularly following its inclusion in the Dapeng Bay National Scenic Area in 2004 It now receives hundreds of thousands of tourists a year 14 although this brings new challenges In early 2015 more than 850 metric tons 840 long tons 940 short tons of garbage piled up on the island when the county government forgot to budget funds to transport it to Taiwan Island for incineration 14 The island was left without disposal services from January to May when it was finally able to draw on a national subsidy to correct the problem 14 Similarly refuse from tourists and fishermen killed over 90 of the island s coral before conservation efforts began to reverse the trend 13 Geography Edit Vase Rock Liuqiu Island pink and the southern end of Taiwan with the rest of Pingtung County in yellow Liuqiu Island is a foot 10 or boot shaped 15 coral island covering 6 8 square kilometers 2 6 sq mi 16 at high tide and about 7 4 km2 2 9 sq mi at low tide 10 running about 4 kilometers 2 5 mi north to south and 2 kilometers 1 2 mi east to west 16 It lies in the southeast corner of the Taiwan Strait about 8 nautical miles 15 km 9 mi SSW of Donggang 15 at the mouth of the Gaoping River 16 on the southwestern shore of Taiwan Island Overall the island inclines gently from the southwest to the northeast 16 but consists of two grabens one NE to SW the other NW to SE that meet in the middle dividing the island into four terraces 15 Its highest point is Belly Hill about 80 meters 260 ft above sea level 10 Liuqiu is the only island township in Pingtung County It is one of Taiwan s largest coral islands and the only one with significant population and human activities citation needed It is also covered with limestone and land colored red by weathered iron oxide and silicon oxide 15 Its beaches reefs caves and eroded rock formations have become tourist attractions Its principal beaches are Chungau Beach t 中澳沙灘 s 中澳沙滩 Zhōng ao Shatan on the north shore 17 and Duozaiping t 肚仔坪潮間帶 s 肚仔坪潮间带 Dǔzǎiping Chaojiandai 18 and Geban Bay on the west shore 19 The most important of the island s caves are Black Dwarf Cave Beauty Cave and Lobster Cave 20 The most famous rocks are Vase Rock at the north end of the island 21 the Sanfu Ecological Corridor t 杉褔生態廊道 s 杉褔生态廊道 Shanfu Shengtai Langdao on the east coast and the Houshi Fringing Reef 厚石裙礁 Houshi Qunjiao in the southeast 22 which includes Mouse Rock 老鼠石 Lǎoshǔ Shi Guanyin Rock t 觀音石 s 观音石 Guanyin Shi Indian Rock t 紅蕃石 s 红蕃石 Hongfan Shi and Climbing Tiger Rock 爬山虎 Pashanhǔ in the southeast 20 Its forests include white popinac acacia wild pineapple lintou and bamboo 23 Wildlife Edit Liuqiu has a diverse ecosystem Chung Au Beach a shell sand beach abuts waters that are home to approximately 176 species of fish and numerous coral species It is also home to young and adult green sea turtles with adult females coming ashore to nest during the summer months Marine vertebrates such as sharks flying fish sea turtles and cetaceans such as sperm whales may appear around the island 24 Climate Edit Overall Liuqiu has a dry and warm climate but is the most typhoon prone of the Taiwanese islands 15 It has a tropical monsoon climate Am with warm temperatures year round with a rainy or monsoon season from April to October and a dry season with cooler temperatures from November to March citation needed The rainiest recorded month was one June 2 657 mm or 104 6 in the driest one December 1 9 mm or 0 075 in 15 Climate data for Liuqiu TownshipMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 25 1 77 2 25 7 78 3 27 5 81 5 29 5 85 1 31 3 88 3 31 7 89 1 32 2 90 0 32 0 89 6 31 3 88 3 30 2 86 4 27 8 82 0 25 5 77 9 29 2 84 5 Average low C F 18 0 64 4 18 5 65 3 19 8 67 6 22 2 72 0 24 3 75 7 25 5 77 9 25 8 78 4 25 5 77 9 25 0 77 0 24 1 75 4 21 8 71 2 18 8 65 8 22 4 72 4 Average rainfall mm inches 16 0 0 63 20 5 0 81 38 8 1 53 69 8 2 75 197 4 7 77 415 3 16 35 390 9 15 39 416 7 16 41 241 9 9 52 42 7 1 68 18 7 0 74 16 2 0 64 1 884 9 74 22 Average relative humidity 75 76 75 77 78 81 80 81 79 76 75 74 77Mean monthly sunshine hours 175 167 190 192 200 201 225 196 175 184 167 163 2 235Source 1 Wunderground 25 dubious discuss Source 2 Central Weather Bureau Rainfall data of Kaohsiung City is shown for reference due to the island s proximity to Kaohsiung 26 dubious discuss Average sea temperature of Liuqiu Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year25 0 C 77 0 F 25 2 C 77 4 F 25 7 C 78 3 F 26 9 C 80 4 F 28 1 C 82 6 F 29 1 C 84 4 F 29 4 C 84 9 F 29 2 C 84 6 F 28 8 C 83 8 F 28 1 C 82 6 F 27 0 C 80 6 F 25 8 C 78 4 F 27 4 C 81 3 F Administration EditThe current township chief is Chen Lung chin t 陳隆進 s 陈隆进 Chen Longjin 14 Liuqiu Township consists of 8 villages with the township seat located in Zhongfu Village Liuqiu Township Administrative Divisions Zhongfu Village Yufu Village Benfu Village Shanfu Village Shangfu Village Dafu Village Tianfu Village Nanfu VillageEconomy EditIn the early modern era and under the Japanese Liuqiu s residents were mostly occupied with fishing and small scale agriculture 23 After the restoration of Chinese control in 1945 some quarries were opened to export stone and lime 23 As Taiwan s economy has improved tourism has employed more and more people 23 Water and electricity are provided from Taiwan Island 16 Because of the constant threat of summer typhoons construction on the island is now specially designed to accommodate strong winds and waves 15 Fishing Edit The traditional mainstay of the local economy has been fishing in the rich waters of the nearby Kuroshio Current 23 Most residents still make their living by fishing 16 but the better pay catering to tourists has caused it to run short of manpower The trade is increasingly reliant on foreign sailors brought in to crew local boats 23 and on cage aquaculture t 箱網養殖 s 箱网养殖 xiangwǎng yǎngzhi the latter of which is also used as a tourist attraction 27 Agriculture Edit The lack of rivers on the island 16 and infertile ground 15 makes farming difficult Early on the main products came from local coconut palms After 1945 the islands farmers focused on sweet potatoes and peanuts Presently production on the island s 140 hectares 350 acres of farmland has shifted to mangos and other fruits including papayas guavas and rose apples 23 The overall climate is only suitable for dryness tolerant crops but the island s exposure to the monsoon and typhoons make even those high risk As such cultivated land has been decreasing since at least 1980 and old fields have been given up to scrubland and forest The island s agricultural association has focused on high margin fast turnover fruit instead particularly mangos 23 Tourism Edit Sanmin Old Street The sea temperature of the island is above 25 C 77 F year round citation needed allowing many species of coral reefs to inhabit the area and making it one of the best locations for winter swimming activities in Taiwan Tourism became a mainstay of Liuqiu s economy in the 21st century After it was included in the Dapeng Bay National Scenic Area in 2004 it gained media exposure and advertised until it was one of Pingtung County s main sightseeing locations 13 Home to less than 15 000 residents the island saw over 500 000 tourists in 2012 13 and over 400 000 in 2014 14 B amp Bs and hotels now cover the island while others rent bicycles and motorcycles or facilitate scuba certification and diving The island s main sights are its temples its beaches reefs caves and rock formations its net cages for fishing the bamboo forest and wetland park t 竹林生態濕地公園 s 竹林生态湿地公园 Zhulin Shengtai Shidi Gōngyuan in the center of the island 28 the architecture and shops along Sanmin Road 三民老街 Sanmin Lǎojie the Sanfu Fishing Port t 杉福漁港 s 杉福渔港 Shanfu Yugǎng the Sea View Pavilion 望海亭 Wanghǎi Ting beside Beauty Cave 29 Restoration Pavilion t 復育涼亭 s 复育凉亭 Fuyu Liangting on a reclaimed landfill on the east coast 30 and Sunset Pavilion 落日亭 Luori Ting on the island s southwest corner 31 and Sanzu or Wild Boar Ditch t 山豬溝 s 山猪沟 Shanzhu Gōu a steep gully northwest of Sanban ao near Black Dwarf Cave 32 20 The Taiwanese government has restricted access and set daily limits for visitors at the islands intertidal zones since 2012 The increased control has helped restore the areas ecosystems and biological diversity in the years since 33 Religion Edit The Biyun Temple during Taiwan s Ghost Festival Chinese ancestral veneration is abundantly demonstrated with most plots of undeveloped land on the southern half of the island outside the tourist areas covered with graves 8 Regulations established by Taiwan s Ministry of the Interior usually prohibit burials within 500 meters 1 600 ft of a residence but complying to this particular law on Liuqiu Island would be impossible 8 Liuqiu is famed for its many temples at least 38 main ones 34 and as many as 70 in total 35 The people are quite religious and it is common to pray and give offerings for recovery from illness for blessings for new ships houses and marriages for protection while fishing and for appropriate times for funerals 35 The deities worshipped on the island are mostly those of the local faiths of Quanzhou and Zhangzhou in Fujian whence the original Han settlers originated 35 The most important and popular is Guanyin the Buddhist Bodhisattva of Compassion Her Jade Cloud Temple t 碧雲寺 s 碧云寺 Biyun Si and her annual birthday festival on the 19th day of the 2nd lunar month are likewise the main ones on the island The birthday festivities are celebrated at temples in every village with ceremonies and Taiwanese opera performances in her honor performed for about a month and a half 35 This has become a major tourist draw as has the still larger Welcoming the King festival held every three years in honor of the plague subduer deity Lord Wu 35 Two other important temples 20 are Spirit Mountain Temple t 靈山寺 s 灵山寺 Lingshan Si on a cliff beside Baisha Port built in the early 1960s and primarily dedicated to Lord Buddha 36 and the Palace of the Three Prosperous Ones t 三隆宮 s 三隆宫 Sanlong Gōng south of Benfu Village and dedicated to Lord Zhu Lord Chi and Lord Wu 37 Erlong Temple in Haizikou is also a common waypoint used by tourists following the ring road along the island s coast 38 Christianity was introduced by the Dutch There is still a Presbyterian church on the island 35 begun by English missionaries who also once operated a sanitarium on the island 4 Spanish Catholicism and Japanese Shintoism and Buddhism were introduced by their respective empires but have since died out 35 Transportation Edit Baisha Port one of two ports on Liuqiu Liuqiu Airport The only public transportation to Liuqiu is by ship from Donggang in Pingtung County and Zhongyun 36 in Kaohsiung on Taiwan Island Boats arrive at Baisha Port on the north end of the island 39 or Dafu Port on its east coast 40 The island is 8 9 nautical miles 15 17 km 9 2 10 4 mi from the Taiwan mainland which is about a 25 to 30 minute boat ride The island has two lighthouses one guiding ships into Baisha Port and the White Lighthouse on Mount Dongnanjian 41 Although Liuqiu Airport once had passenger service with direct flights between Kaohsiung international airport and the island it is now only used for helicopters Education EditThe island provides primary and junior high education Its five schools are Liuqiu Baisha Quande 16 and Tiannan Primary Schools citation needed and Liuqiu Junior High School 16 High school and university students attend schools on Taiwan Island A 2004 report on the island described its brain drain before the growth of the tourism industry Liuchiu has two problems All the young people go over there he said pointing to Kaohsiung on the horizon and all the old people go over there pointing to the south of the island and its graves 8 Notable natives EditLee Shu chuan Secretary General of the KuomintangSee also EditList of islands of Taiwan List of islands in the East China Sea Lamey Island MassacreReferences EditCitations Edit a b c History of Liuqiu Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Yu Kai hsiang et al 10 August 2015 8 Killed 4 Missing 420 Injured as Typhoon Soudelor Hits Taiwan Focus Taiwan Taipei Central News Agency Jake Chung 13 July 2017 Turtle lover s polymer clay models prove an online hit Taipei Times in Chinese Taiwan Retrieved 2 November 2019 Polymer clay sea turtles made by Peng Kuan chieh are displayed on Pingtung s Siaoliouciou Island on Friday last week a b c d e f g Campbell 1903 p 542 Campbell 1896 map Black Ghost Cave Incident Xpat Mag Campbell 1903 p 542 Explanatory Notes a b c d Momphard David 18 July 2004 Of Grottoes and Graves Taipei Times a b c d e Blusse Leonard 2000 The Cave of the Black Spirits In Blundell David ed Austronesian Taiwan California University of California ISBN 0 936127 09 0 a b c d e Ni 2018 p 173 Taiwanese Islands Xiao Liuqiu Letters from Taiwan 27 April 2015 臺灣地區鄉鎮市區級以上行政區域名稱中英對照表 Chinese English comparison table of names of administrative regions above the township level in Taiwan PDF in Chinese Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2012 Accessed via Taiwan Geographic Names Information Systems Ministry of the Interior 16 June 2011 Archived from the original on August 16 2013 Retrieved 5 September 2015 a b c d Wang Jiecun et al 7 April 2013 小琉球遊客倍增生態保育更重要 Official site Taipei Public Television Service in Chinese a b c d e Garbage Reported to Be Piling Up on Liouciou Island The China Post Taipei China Post Group 11 April 2015 a b c d e f g h Liuqiu Scenery Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 a b c d e f g h i General Information Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2017 Chungau Beach Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Duozaiping Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Geban Bay Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 a b c d Scenic Spots Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Vase Rock Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Houshi Fringing Reef Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 a b c d e f g h Economy Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 幸運 搭交通船到小琉球遇見 鯨 喜 Climate Wunderground Climate Central Weather Bureau Net Cage Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Wetland Part Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Sea View Pavilion Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Restoration Pavilion Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Sunset Galley Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Wild Boar Ditch Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Southern Taiwan Attractions See Tourist Boom Taiwan Today Taipei Ministry of Foreign Affairs 5 May 2015 di Genova Trista 10 July 2008 Hsiao Liuchiu Unknown paradise on the sea The China Post Retrieved 9 August 2012 a b c d e f g Religion Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 a b Lingshan Temple Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Sanlung Temple Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Haitzukuo Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Baisha Port Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Dafu Port Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 White Lighthouse Official site Liuqiu Liuqiu Township Office 2009 Bibliography Edit Formosa Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed Vol IX New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1879 pp 415 17 Campbell William 1896 The Island of Formosa Its Past and Future Scottish Geographical Magazine vol 12 pp 385 399 doi 10 1080 00369229608732903 Campbell William 1903 Formosa under the Dutch Described from Contemporary Records London Kegan Paul ISBN 9789576380839 OCLC 644323041 Ni Hao 2018 Travel Guide of Famous Islands in China Travelling in China No 50 London DeepLogic External links EditTapeng Bay National Scenic Area in Chinese Liuqiu Township Office in Chinese Liuqiu official tourism website in English Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lamay Island Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liuqiu Island amp oldid 1142272067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.