fbpx
Wikipedia

Penang

Penang (Malay: Pulau Pinang, [pi.naŋ]) is a Malaysian state located on the northwest coast of Peninsular Malaysia, by the Malacca Strait. It has two parts: Penang Island, where the capital city, George Town, is located, and Seberang Perai on the Malay Peninsula. They are connected by Malaysia's two longest road bridges, the Penang Bridge and the Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah Bridge; the latter is also the second longest oversea bridge in Southeast Asia.[3] The second smallest Malaysian state by land mass, Penang, is bordered by Kedah to the north and the east, and Perak to the south.[1]

Penang
Pulau Pinang
Other transcription(s)
 • MalayPulau Pinang (Rumi)
ڤولاو ڤينڠ (Jawi)
 • Hokkien庇能
Pī-néeng (Tâi-lô)
 • Mandarin槟城 (Simplified)
檳城 (Traditional)
 • Tamilபினாங்கு
Piṉāṅku (Transliteration)
Nickname(s): 
Pulau Mutiara
Pearl of the Orient
Motto(s): 
Bersatu dan Setia
United and Loyal
Anthem: Untuk Negeri Kita
For Our State
   Penang in    Malaysia
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 05°24′09″N 100°21′54″E / 5.40250°N 100.36500°E / 5.40250; 100.36500Coordinates: 05°24′09″N 100°21′54″E / 5.40250°N 100.36500°E / 5.40250; 100.36500
Sovereign state Malaysia
CapitalGeorge Town
Largest citySeberang Perai
Government
 • TypeParliamentary
 • Yang di-Pertua NegeriAhmad Fuzi Abdul Razak
 • Chief MinisterChow Kon Yeow (PH-DAP)
Area
 • Total1,048 km2 (405 sq mi)
Elevation
24 m (79 ft)
Highest elevation833 m (2,733 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total1,783,000 (8th)
 • Density1,684/km2 (4,360/sq mi)
DemonymPenangite
Human Development Index
 • HDI (2018) 0.838 very high (3rd)[2]
Time zoneUTC+08:00 (MST)
 • Summer (DST)Not observed
Postal code
10xxx–11xxx (Penang Island)
12xxx-14xxx (Seberang Perai)
Calling code+6-04-2, +6-04-6, +6-04-8 (Penang Island)
+6-04-3, +6-04-5 (Seberang Perai)
ISO 3166 codeMY-07
Vehicle registrationP
Founded by the British East India Company11 August 1786
Straits Settlements1 April 1867 – 1 April 1946
Japanese occupation19 December 1941 – 3 September 1945
Malayan Union1 April 1946
Federation of Malaya31 August 1957
Federation of Malaysia16 September 1963
Websitewww.penang.gov.my
^[a] 2,465.47/km2 (6,385.5/sq mi) on Penang Island and 1,117.18/km2 (2,893.5/sq mi) in Seberang Perai

Penang is the 8th most populated state in Malaysia. Its population stood at nearly 1.767 million as of 2018, while its population density was as high as 1,684/km2 (4,360/sq mi).[4] It has among the nation's highest population densities and is one of the country's most urbanised states.[5] Seberang Perai is Malaysia's second-largest city by population.[6] Its heterogeneous population is highly diverse in ethnicity, culture, language and religion. Aside from the three main races, the Malays, Chinese, and Indians, Penang is home to significant Eurasian, Siamese and expatriate communities.[7][8][9] A resident of Penang is colloquially known as a Penangite or Penang Lang (Penang Hokkien: 庇能儂; Tâi-lô: Pī-néeng-lâng) in Penang Hokkien due to the significant Penangite Chinese population.[10]

Penang's modern history began in 1786, upon the establishment of George Town by Francis Light. Penang formed part of the Straits Settlements in 1826, which became a British crown colony in 1867. Direct British rule was only briefly interrupted during World War II, when Japan occupied Penang; the British retook Penang in 1945. Penang was later merged with the Federation of Malaya (now Malaysia), which gained independence from the British in 1957.

Following the decline of its entrepôt trade towards the 1970s, Penang's economy was reoriented by the central government towards manufacturing.[11] Today, it has become one of Malaysia's most vital economic powerhouses.[12][13][14] Penang has the third highest Human Development Index (HDI) among Malaysia's states and territories, after Kuala Lumpur and Selangor.[15][16]

Etymology

The name Penang comes from the modern Malay name Pulau Pinang which means "areca nut island".[17] The State of Penang is also referred to as the Pearl of the Orient and "The Island of Pearls" (in Malay: Pulau Mutiara).[18][19]

Penang Island was originally known by native seafarers as Pulau Ka-Satu, meaning The First Island, because it was the largest island encountered on the trading sea-route between Lingga and Kedah.[20] Similarly, the Siamese, then the overlord of Kedah, referred to the island as Koh Maak (Thai: เกาะหมาก).[21][22]

In the 15th century, Penang Island was referred to as Bīnláng Yù[citation needed] (traditional Chinese: 檳榔嶼; simplified Chinese: 槟榔屿; pinyin: bīn láng yǔ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Pin-nn̂g-sū; lit. 'areca nut island') in the navigational drawings used by Admiral Zheng He of Ming China.[23] Emanuel Godinho de Eredia, a 16th-century Portuguese historian, also referred to the island as Pulo Pinaom in the Description of Malacca.[24]

History

Historical affiliations Period
  Kedah Sultanate 1136–1786
  Siam 1786–1867
  Straits Settlements 1826–1941; 1945–1946
  Empire of Japan 1941–1945
  Malayan Union 1946–1948
  Federation of Malaya 1948–1963
  Malaysia 1963–present

Prehistory

Human remains, dating back to about 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, have been uncovered in Seberang Perai, along with seashells, pottery and hunting tools.[25][26] These artifacts indicate that the earliest inhabitants of Penang were nomadic Melanesians during the Neolithic era.[25][26][27]

Early history

The Cherok Tok Kun megalith in Bukit Mertajam, uncovered in 1845, contains Pali inscriptions, indicating that the Hindu-Buddhist Bujang Valley civilisation based in what is now Kedah had established control over parts of Seberang Perai by the 6th century.[28] The entirety of what is now Penang would later become part of the Sultanate of Kedah up to the late 18th century.

Founding of Penang

 
Fort Cornwallis in George Town was built on the spot where Francis Light first set foot in 1786.

The first British vessel arrived in Penang in June 1592. This ship, the Edward Bonadventure, was captained by James Lancaster.[29] However, it was not until the 18th century did the British establish a permanent presence on the island. Prior to the first British settlement, in the early 18th century, three brothers of cross-strait traders from Minangkabau of Sumatra establish settlements on the island. They were Nakhoda Bayan, Nakhoda Intan, and Nakhoda Kecil who brought several followers from Batubara, northeast of Sumatra.[30] They received the appropriate permissions by Ahmad Tajuddin, the sultan of Kedah, and then establish the settlements in Bayan Lepas, Balik Pulau, Gelugor, and Tanjung (now George Town). Other Minang merchants, Datuk Jannaton and Datuk Maharaja Setia who came in 1749, establish Batu Uban area.

In the 1770s, Francis Light was instructed by the British East India Company to form trade relations in the Malay Peninsula.[31][32] Light subsequently landed in Kedah, which was by then a Siamese vassal state. Aware that the Sultanate was under external and internal threats, he promised British military protection to the then Sultan of Kedah, Sultan Muhammad Jiwa Zainal Adilin II; in return, the Sultan offered Penang Island to the British.[31][33]

 
British acquisition and expansion of Penang (in yellow) occurred between 1786 and 1874, when the final alterations to Penang's boundaries were enacted.[34][35][36][37]

It was only in 1786 when the British East India Company finally ordered Light to obtain the island from Kedah.[31][38] Light negotiated with the new Sultan of Kedah, Sultan Abdullah Mukarram Shah, regarding the cession of the island to the British East India Company in exchange for British military aid.[31][38][39] After an agreement between Light and the Sultan was ratified, Light and his entourage sailed on to Penang Island, where they arrived on 17 July 1786.[40][41] Light took formal possession of the island on 11 August "in the name of His Britannic Majesty, King George III and the Honourable East India Company".[31][32] Penang Island was renamed the Prince of Wales Island after the heir to the British throne, while the new settlement of George Town was established in honour of King George III.[42][43]

Unbeknownst to Sultan Abdullah, Light had been acting without the authority or the consent of his superiors in India.[32][31] When Light reneged on his promise of military protection, the Kedah Sultan launched an attempt to recapture the Prince of Wales Island in 1791; the British East India Company subsequently defeated the Kedah forces.[31][44] The Sultan sued for peace and an annual payment of 6000 Spanish dollars to the Sultan was agreed.[45]

In 1800, Lieutenant-Governor Sir George Leith secured a strip of hinterland across the Penang Strait which in subsequent years was named Province Wellesley (now Seberang Perai).[46][31][47] The treaty, negotiated between Leith's First Assistant George Caunter and the new Sultan of Kedah, superseded Light's earlier agreement and gave the British permanent sovereignty over both Prince of Wales Island and the newly ceded mainland territory.[48] Province Wellesley was then gradually expanded up to its present-day boundaries in 1874.[37][34][36] In exchange for the acquisition, the annual payment to the Sultan of Kedah was increased to 10,000 Spanish dollars per annum. From 1874 until 2018, the Malaysian federal government (and its historical predecessors) paid Kedah, on behalf of Penang, RM 10,000 annually as a symbolic gesture.[49]

Since 2018, the Malaysian federal government revised the payments to Kedah, increasing to RM 10 million a year to Kedah (whilst in 2021, the Menteri Besar of Kedah, Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor, in reference to the annual payments, demanded the payments be raised to RM 100 million annually.[50] Despite claims by Sanusi, there was never a lease agreement between Kedah and Penang.[51][52])

Colonial Penang

 
A 1799 map of George Town

Light founded George Town as a free port to entice traders away from nearby Dutch trading posts.[53] Simultaneously, spices were harvested on the island, turning it into a regional centre for spice production.[54][55] Consequently, maritime trade at the Port of Penang grew exponentially; the number of incoming vessels rose from 85 in 1786 to 3,569 in 1802.[56][57]

In 1805, Penang became a separate presidency of British India, sharing similar status with Bombay and Madras.[38] By 1808, a local government for George Town was in place, whilst the establishment of the Supreme Court of Penang marked the birth of Malaysia's modern judiciary.[58] In 1826, Penang, Singapore and Malacca were incorporated into the Straits Settlements, with George Town as the capital.

However, Penang's importance was soon supplanted by Singapore, as the latter rapidly outstripped the Port of Penang as the region's premier entrepôt. In 1832, Singapore replaced George Town as the capital of the Straits Settlements.[59]

 
The Port of Penang in George Town in the 1910s

Even so, the Port of Penang retained its importance as a vital British entrepôt.[60][61] Towards the end of the 19th century, it became a major tin-exporting harbour.[62][63] George Town concurrently evolved into Malaya's principal financial hub, as banks and mercantile firms flocked into the city.[41][63] Meanwhile, other towns, including Bayan Lepas on the island, and Butterworth and Bukit Mertajam in Province Wellesley, emerged due to agricultural and logistical developments.[64][65][66]

Throughout the century, Penang's cosmopolitan population, comprising Chinese, Malay, Indian, Peranakan, Eurasian, Thai and other ethnicities, grew rapidly in tandem with the economic prosperity. However, the population growth also led to social problems, such as inadequate sanitation and public health facilities, as well as rampant crime, with the latter culminating in the Penang Riots of 1867.[67][68] Also in 1867, the Straits Settlements was made a British crown colony.[69][70] Direct British rule meant better law enforcement, as the police force was beefed up and the secret societies that had previously plagued Penang were gradually outlawed.[60][71] More investments were also made on health care and public transportation.[38][68][72]

Due to the improved access to education, the active participation in municipal affairs by its Asian residents and substantial press freedom, George Town was perceived as being more intellectually receptive than Singapore.[38][60][73] The city became a magnet for reputable English authors, Asian intellectuals and revolutionaries, including Rudyard Kipling, Somerset Maugham and Sun Yat-sen.[74][75][76]

World wars

 
The Cenotaph in George Town, erected after World War I, commemorates fallen Allied soldiers.

During World War I, in the Battle of Penang, the German cruiser SMS Emden surreptitiously sailed to Penang Island and sank two Allied warships off its coast, Russian protected cruiser Zhemchug and the French destroyer Mousquet.[77][78] One hundred and forty-seven French and Russian sailors perished during the battle.[78]World War II led to unparallelled social and political upheaval. Although Penang Island had been designated as a fortress, Penang fell to the Imperial Japanese Army on 19 December 1941, after suffering devastating aerial attacks. The British covertly evacuated Penang's European populace; historians have since contended that the moral collapse of British rule in Southeast Asia came not at Singapore, but at Penang.[79][80]

 
British Royal Marines liberating George Town on 3 September 1945.

Penang Island was subsequently renamed Tojo-to, after Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo.[80] The period of Japanese occupation was renowned for the Imperial Japanese Army's massacres of Penang's Chinese populace, known as Sook Ching to the locals.[81] Women in Penang were also coerced to work as comfort women by the Japanese.[82] Meanwhile, the Port of Penang was put to use as a major submarine base by the Axis Powers.[83][84][85]

In the last years of the war, Allied bombers from India repeatedly bombed George Town, seeking to destroy the naval facilities and administrative centres.[86] Several colonial buildings were destroyed or damaged, such as the Government Offices, St. Xavier's Institution and Hutchings School (now Penang State Museum).[63] The Penang Strait was also mined to constrict Japanese shipping.[87] Following the surrender of Japan, British forces launched Operation Jurist to recapture Penang Island on 3 September 1945, making George Town the first city in Malaya to be liberated from the Japanese.[86]

Post-war years

 
Flag of the Crown Colony of Penang between 1946 and 1949

Penang was placed under a military administration until 1946. Subsequently, the Straits Settlements was abolished, as the British sought to consolidate the various political entities in British Malaya under a single polity named the Malayan Union. The now separate Crown Colony of Penang was consequently merged into the Malayan Union, which was then replaced by the Federation of Malaya in 1948.

The idea of the absorption of Penang into the vast Malay heartland initially proved unpopular amongst Penangites.[88] Economic and ethnic concerns led to the formation of the Penang Secessionist Committee in 1948. However, the committee's attempt to avert Penang's merger with Malaya ultimately petered out due to British disapproval.[11][89][90]

The British government allayed the concerns raised by the secessionists by guaranteeing George Town's free port status, as well as reintroducing municipal elections in George Town in 1951.[89] By 1956, George Town became the first fully elected municipality in Malaya and in the following year, it was granted city status by Queen Elizabeth II, becoming the first city within the Federation of Malaya, and by extension, Malaysia.

Post-independence era

 
The Komtar Tower, Penang's tallest skyscraper, was built in the 1970s.

George Town was, since colonial times, a free port—until its sudden revocation by the Malaysian federal government in 1969.[11][73][91] Penang subsequently suffered an economic crisis, with the loss of maritime trade resulting in massive unemployment and brain drain.[73][92][93] To alleviate the downturn, the then Chief Minister, Lim Chong Eu, masterminded the construction of the Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone.[93] The zone, regarded by many as the Silicon Valley of the East, proved instrumental in reversing Penang's economic slump and led to the state's rapid economic growth until the late 1990s.[93][94] During Lim's tenure, a number of major infrastructural projects were also undertaken, chiefly the Penang Bridge, the first road link between Penang Island and the Malay Peninsula. Completed in 1985, it was the longest bridge in Southeast Asia until 2014 when it was superseded by the Second Penang Bridge.

 
The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami hit parts of Penang Island, killing 52 people (out of 68 in all of Malaysia).

However, the persistent brain drain, exacerbated by federal government policies that favoured the development of Kuala Lumpur, meant that Penang was no longer at the forefront of the country's economy by the 2000s.[73][94] Penang's economy slowed down in the early 2000s, while the deteriorating state of affairs in general, including an incoherent urban planning policy, poor traffic management and the dilapidation of George Town's heritage buildings due to the repeal of the Rent Control Act in 2001, led to simmering discontent within Penang's society.[39][94][95]

In response, George Town's non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the national press galvanised public support and formed strategic partnerships to restore the city to its former glory.[73][96][97] Also as a result of the widespread resentment, the then federal opposition coalition, Pakatan Rakyat (now Pakatan Harapan), was voted into power within Penang in the 2008 State Election, replacing the erstwhile administration led by the Barisan Nasional.[39][94][98] Meanwhile, the efforts to conserve George Town's heritage architecture paid off, when in 2008, the city's historical core was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[99] The city of George Town along with Malacca City was confirmed as a a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011.

The Indian Ocean tsunami which struck on Boxing Day of 2004 hit the western and northern coasts of Penang Island, claiming 52 lives (out of 68 in Malaysia).[100]

 
Skyline of George Town, as seen from Gurney Drive.

Geography

 
Aerial view of George Town. The city is physically separated from Butterworth (bottom) by the Penang Strait.
 
Enlargeable, detailed map of Penang

With a total land area of just 1,048 km2 (405 sq mi), Penang is the second smallest state in Malaysia by area after Perlis. Penang, situated at the northwestern coastline of Peninsular Malaysia, lies between latitudes 5.59° and 5.12°N, and longitudes 100.17° and 100.56°E. The state consists of Penang Island, Seberang Perai (a narrow strip of the Malay Peninsula) and a handful of smaller islets. Its capital city, George Town, is located at the northeastern tip of Penang Island.

Topography

Penang is geographically divided into two major halves physically divided by the Penang Strait.

  • Penang Island, a 293 km2 (113 sq mi) island.
  • Seberang Perai, a 751 km2 (290 sq mi) hinterland on the Malay Peninsula. It is bordered by Kedah to the east and north, and by Perak to the south.

The Penang Strait is further divided into the North Channel and the South Channel. At the strait's narrowest section, George Town on the island is separated from Butterworth on the mainland by a mere 3 km (1.9 mi).

 
View of George Town as seen from Seberang Perai, with Penang Hill in the background

Penang Island is irregularly shaped, with a hilly and mostly forested interior; its coastal plains are narrow, the most extensive of which is at the northeastern cape.[101] With a height of 833 m (2,733 ft), Penang Hill, at the centre of the island, is the tallest point within Penang. From a small settlement at the northeastern tip of Penang Island, George Town has expanded over the centuries, particularly in the northwestern, western and southern directions, eventually linking up with Bayan Lepas at the island's southeast and urbanising the entire eastern coast of the island.[102] Meanwhile, the topography of Seberang Perai is mostly flat, save for a few hills such as Bukit Mertajam.[103]

The major rivers within Penang include the Pinang, Perai, Muda and Kerian rivers. In particular, the Muda River serves as the northern border between Seberang Perai and Kedah, while the Kerian River forms the southern boundary between Seberang Perai, Kedah and Perak.

Due to land scarcity, land reclamation projects have been undertaken in high-demand areas such as Tanjung Tokong, Jelutong and Gurney Drive.[104][105][106] The latter is being transformed into Gurney Wharf which is a planned seafront park, with land for this purpose currently being reclaimed off Gurney Drive in George Town. Intended as a "new iconic waterfront destination for Penang", Phase 1 of the development is scheduled for completion by 2018.[107][108] Upon the expected completion of Gurney Wharf by August 2021,[109] the 24.28-hectare seafront park will comprise four distinct recreational areas - a beach, a coastal grove, a water garden, and a seaside retail food and beverages (F&B) area.[110] An additional reclamation project at Bayan Baru themed “Linear Waterfront" would extend the electronics-dominated Free Industrial Zone and would include improving and adding fishermen's wharves set up as well also have hotels, restaurants, medical and other developments.[111]

Nature and parks

 
The Penang Botanic Gardens was built in 1884.[112]

In spite of rapid urbanisation, Penang has still managed to safeguard a considerable area of natural environment. Within the state, 7,761 ha (77.61 km2) have been designated as protected forest reserves.[113]

The central hills of Penang Island, including Penang Hill, serve as the green lung for the urbanised island.[114] Two of the major parks within George Town - the Penang Botanical Gardens and the City Park - are situated near the hills.

Penang is also home to the smallest national park in the world - the Penang National Park. Covering 2,562 ha (25.62 km2) of the northwestern tip of Penang Island, it encompasses mangrove swamps, rainforest interspersed with hiking trails and tranquil beaches.[115] Other notable natural attractions nearby include the Tropical Spice Garden and the Entopia Butterfly Farm, the latter of which was Malaysia's first butterfly sanctuary.[116][117]

In Seberang Perai, the Penang Bird Park, established in 1988 in Seberang Jaya, was the first aviary in Malaysia.[118]

Outlying islets

Penang also consists of nine other islets off its coasts. The biggest of all, Jerejak Island, is located in the South Channel of the Penang Strait. Once the site of a leper asylum built in 1868, which was later converted into a maximum-security penitentiary, Jerejak Island remains heavily forested.[119] The other islets under the jurisdiction of Penang include Aman, Betong, Gedung, Kendi and Rimau.

Climate

Climate data for Penang
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 31.6
(88.9)
32.2
(90.0)
32.2
(90.0)
31.9
(89.4)
31.6
(88.9)
31.4
(88.5)
31.0
(87.8)
30.9
(87.6)
30.4
(86.7)
30.4
(86.7)
30.7
(87.3)
31.1
(88.0)
31.3
(88.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.9
(80.4)
27.4
(81.3)
27.6
(81.7)
27.7
(81.9)
27.6
(81.7)
27.3
(81.1)
26.9
(80.4)
26.8
(80.2)
26.5
(79.7)
26.4
(79.5)
26.5
(79.7)
26.7
(80.1)
27.0
(80.6)
Average low °C (°F) 23.2
(73.8)
23.5
(74.3)
23.7
(74.7)
24.1
(75.4)
24.2
(75.6)
23.8
(74.8)
23.4
(74.1)
23.4
(74.1)
23.2
(73.8)
23.3
(73.9)
23.3
(73.9)
23.4
(74.1)
23.5
(74.4)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 68.7
(2.70)
71.7
(2.82)
146.4
(5.76)
220.5
(8.68)
203.4
(8.01)
178.0
(7.01)
192.1
(7.56)
242.4
(9.54)
356.1
(14.02)
383.0
(15.08)
231.8
(9.13)
113.5
(4.47)
2,407.6
(94.79)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 5 6 9 14 14 11 12 14 18 19 15 9 146
Mean monthly sunshine hours 248.8 233.2 235.3 224.5 203.6 202.4 205.5 188.8 161.0 170.2 182.1 209.0 2,464.4
Source: NOAA[120]
Penang
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
69
 
 
32
23
 
 
72
 
 
32
24
 
 
146
 
 
32
24
 
 
221
 
 
32
24
 
 
203
 
 
32
24
 
 
178
 
 
31
24
 
 
192
 
 
31
23
 
 
242
 
 
31
23
 
 
356
 
 
30
23
 
 
383
 
 
30
23
 
 
232
 
 
30
23
 
 
114
 
 
31
23
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: Bayan Lepas Regional Meteorological Office
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
2.7
 
 
89
74
 
 
2.8
 
 
90
74
 
 
5.8
 
 
90
75
 
 
8.7
 
 
89
75
 
 
8
 
 
89
76
 
 
7
 
 
89
75
 
 
7.6
 
 
88
74
 
 
9.5
 
 
88
74
 
 
14
 
 
87
74
 
 
15
 
 
87
74
 
 
9.1
 
 
87
74
 
 
4.5
 
 
87
74
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

As in the rest of Malaysia, Penang has a tropical rainforest climate bordering on a tropical monsoon climate, although the state does experience slightly drier conditions from December to February of the following year. The climate is very much dictated by the surrounding sea and the prevailing wind system.

Penang's proximity with the island of Sumatra makes it susceptible to dust particles carried by wind from perennial but transient forest fires, creating a phenomenon known as the Southeast Asian haze.[121]

The Penang Meteorological Office in Bayan Lepas is the primary weather forecast facility for northern Malaysia.[122]

Temperature (day) 30–32 °C
Temperature (night) 23–25 °C
Ave annual rainfall 2670 mm
Relative humidity 0%–50%

Urban and suburban areas

George Town Conurbation

class=notpageimage|
Map of the Greater Penang Conurbation, which encompasses Penang, southern Kedah and northern Perak.

Penang forms the heart of the Greater Penang Conurbation, Malaysia's second biggest conurbation. Centred in George Town, the metropolitan area encompasses the entire State of Penang, southern Kedah and northern Perak. As of 2010, Greater Penang had nearly 2.5 million residents, second only to Greater Kuala Lumpur (Klang Valley).[123] Greater Penang also generated a GDP of US$13,596,418 in 2010, making the conurbation the second biggest contributor of Malaysia's GDP after Greater Kuala Lumpur.[124]

Governance and law

Penang, being a former British crown colony, is one of only four Malaysian states without hereditary monarchies. The head of state of Penang is the Governor (Malay: Yang di-Pertua Negeri), who is appointed by the King of Malaysia (Malay: Yang di-Pertuan Agong). The present Governor of Penang, Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak, assumed office on 1 May 2021. In practice, the Governor is a figurehead whose functions are chiefly symbolic and ceremonial.[125]

The Penang state government has its own executive council and legislature, but they have relatively limited powers in comparison with those of the Malaysian federal government. According to the Malaysian Federal Constitution, the state may legislate on matters pertaining to Malay customs, land, agriculture and forestry, local government, civil and water works, and state administration, whereas matters that fall under the joint purview of both state and federal authorities include social welfare, wildlife protection and national parks, scholarships, husbandry, town planning, drainage and irrigation, and public health and health regulations.[126]

The Constitution of Penang, codified in 1957, embodies the state's highest laws.[127] Consisting of 42 articles, the constitution pertains to the proceedings and powers of the state government.

Executive

 
The 68-storey Komtar Tower (centre) in George Town also houses the Office of the Chief Minister of Penang.

The Penang State Executive Council is the executive authority of the Penang state government, similar in function to the national Cabinet. It is led by the Chief Minister, who serves as the head of government in Penang. To this day, Penang remains the only Malaysian state where the position of the head of government has been continuously held by an ethnic Chinese since the nation's independence in 1957.[91]

The current Chief Minister of Penang is Chow Kon Yeow of the Democratic Action Party (DAP), who assumed office after the 2018 State Election.[128] Following the 2008 State Election, the Pakatan Rakyat coalition (now Pakatan Harapan), which at the time consisted of the DAP, the People's Justice Party (PKR) and the Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), formed the Penang state government, with the head of government going to the former for being the single largest party in the state legislature.

Legislature

Political Party/
Alliance
State Legislative

Assembly

Malaysian

Parliament

Pakatan Harapan 37 (92.5%) 11 (84.6%)
Barisan Nasional 2 (5.0%) 2 (15.4%)
PAS 1 (2.5%) 0

The unicameral 40-seat Penang State Legislative Assembly, whose members are called State Assemblymen, convenes at the neoclassical Penang State Assembly Building in George Town. Penang practises the Westminster system whereby members of the Penang State Executive Council are appointed from amongst the elected State Assemblymen. Moreover, the dissolution of the Penang State Legislative Assembly, typically conducted prior to a State Election, requires the consent of the governor of Penang.

Following the 2018 State Election, the Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition commands a supermajority in the legislature by controlling 37 seats. Out of the 37 PH seats, 19 are retained by the Democratic Action Party (DAP), 14 by the People's Justice Party (PKR), two by the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (Bersatu) and two by the National Trust Party (Amanah). The state opposition is formed by the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, which holds two seats, and the Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), which occupies one seat.

Amendments to Penang's Constitution require the support of two-thirds of the Penang State Legislative Assembly.[127]

 
Affiliation Coalition/Party Leader Status Seats
2018 election Current
  Pakatan Harapan Chow Kon Yeow Government 37 33
 
 
Perikatan Nasional
Barisan Nasional
Muhamad Yusoff Mohd. Noor Opposition 3 7
Total 40 40
Government majority 34 26

Local governments

 
The City Hall in George Town serves as the headquarters of the Penang Island City Council.

There are currently two local governments in Penang.

Both the mayor of Penang Island and Seberang Perai are appointed by the Penang state government for a two-year term, while the councillors are appointed for one-year terms of office.[129] The local councils are responsible, among others, for regulating traffic and parking, maintaining cleanliness and drainage, managing waste disposal, issuing business licenses, and overseeing public health.[citation needed]

Penang is also divided into five administrative districts - two on Penang Island and three in Seberang Perai. Each district is headed by a district officer. The lands and district office in each district deals with land administration and revenue; thus it differs from the local governments (city council) which oversee the provision and maintenance of urban infrastructure.[130]

Judiciary

 

The Malaysian legal system had its roots in 19th-century George Town. In 1807, a Royal Charter was granted to Penang which provided for the establishment of a Supreme Court. The Supreme Court of Penang, then sited at Fort Cornwallis, was opened in 1808.[131] Sir Edmond Stanley assumed office as the First Recorder of the Supreme Court in 1808, thus serving as the first Superior Court Judge in British Malaya.[131] The legal establishment in Penang was progressively extended to the whole of Malaya by 1951.[131]

Today, the Penang High Court in George Town sits at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of courts within Penang. There are also four Magistrates Courts and two Sessions Courts scattered throughout the state.[132]

Foreign relations

A total of 24 countries have either established their consulates or appointed honorary consuls within Penang.[133] The State of Penang has also ratified a sister state agreement with Japan's Kanagawa Prefecture and a friendship state agreement with China's Hainan Province.[134][135] In addition, George Town is twinned with eight sister cities and five friendship cities, while Seberang Perai has four sister cities.[136][137]

Consulates

Sister cities

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1970 776,124—    
1980 900,772+16.1%
1991 1,064,166+18.1%
2000 1,231,209+15.7%
2010 1,526,324+24.0%
2020 1,740,405+14.0%
Source: [160]

Source of interstate immigrants to Penang in 2016[161]

    Perak (28.22%)
    Selangor (20.86%)
    Kedah (19.63%)
    Johor (10.43%)
    Kuala Lumpur (10.43%)
    Sarawak (3.68%)
    Negeri Sembilan (3.68%)
  Other states (3.07%)

Penang, with an estimated population of 1,774,400 as of 2021, has the 3rd highest population density of all Malaysian states (excluding Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya), at 1,774.4/km2 (4,596/sq mi). In addition, Penang is one of the most urbanised Malaysian states, with an urbanisation level of 90.8% as of 2015.[162]

Due to its vibrant economy, Penang is also one of the major recipients of interstate migrants within Malaysia.[163] Between 2015 and 2016, Penang achieved the highest migration effectiveness ratio among Malaysian states; for every 100 Malaysians that migrated into and out of Penang, the state's population increased by 58 persons.[161][164] The bulk of the interstate immigrants came from Perak, Selangor, Kedah, Johor and Kuala Lumpur.[161]

Penang's population is almost equally distributed between the island and the mainland.

  • Penang Island had a population of 722,384 as of 2010 and a population density of 2,465.47/km2 (6,385.5/sq mi).[165]
  • Seberang Perai had a population of 838,999 as of 2010 and a population density of 1,117.18/km2 (2,893.5/sq mi).[165]

The Greater Penang Conurbation, which also covers parts of neighbouring Kedah and Perak, is the second largest metropolitan area in the nation, with almost 2.5 million inhabitants as of 2010.[citation needed]

Ethnicities

Ethnic composition of Penang (2020)[4]
Ethnicities / Nationality Percentage
Chinese
41.3%
Malay
41%
Indians
8.9%
Others
0.7%
Non-Malaysians
8.1%

Penang has been regarded as a Chinese state because of their high population but in recent years, the proportion of Bumiputeras within the state, which include ethnic Malays and East Malaysian indigenous races, has reached parity with that of the Chinese.[166] 2021 estimates from Malaysia's Department of Statistics showed that the Bumiputeras constituted more than 45% of Penang's population, whereas the Chinese made up another 45%.[4] Ethnic Indians comprised nearly 10% of the state's populace.[citation needed]

In particular, George Town remains a Chinese-majority city, with the Chinese making up over half of the city's population as of 2010.[165] George Town's Chinese populace includes the Peranakan, a hybrid ethnicity whose rich legacies can still be seen to this day in the form of distinctive architectures, costumes and cuisine.[167][168][169] Moreover, the city is also renowned for its more cosmopolitan population, which also comprises indigenous East Malaysians, the Eurasians and the Siamese.[7][166][170] Meanwhile, the Malays have formed the plurality in Seberang Perai.[165]

In addition, Penang is home to a sizeable expatriate population, especially from Singapore, Japan and various Asian countries, as well as other Commonwealth nations. Almost 9% of Penang's population consisted of foreigners, reflecting the well-established allure of Penang amongst expatriates.[4] Most expatriates settle within the vicinity of George Town; the city's northern suburbs, such as Tanjung Tokong, Tanjung Bungah and Batu Ferringhi, are particularly popular.[9][165]

Languages

Major languages spoken in Penang are Malay, English, Hokkien, Mandarin, and Tamil. In particular, Penang is well known for its distinctive Hokkien language, known as Penang Hokkien.[171]

Under British rule, English was the official language in Penang. The mushrooming of English and missionary schools throughout George Town contributed greatly to the widespread use of the language in the state.[44][172]

As in the rest of Malaysia, Malay is currently the official language in Penang. The Malays in Penang also use a variant of the Kedah Malay dialect, with slight modifications made to the original dialect to suit the conditions of an urban, cosmopolitan society.[173]

Tamil is the most widely spoken language amongst Penang's Indian community. There are also other Indian languages spoken by minority Indians such as Telugu, Malayalam and Punjabi who hailed from diverse ancestries in the Indian subcontinent.[174][175] Meanwhile, Penang's Chinese population uses a variety of Chinese dialects, including Teochew, Hakka and Cantonese. Mandarin, more commonly used by youths, has been the medium of instruction in Chinese schools throughout the state.[176]

Penang Hokkien serves as the lingua franca among the various ethnic Chinese communities in Penang.[177] Originally a variant of the Minnan language, Penang Hokkien has absorbed numerous loanwords from Malay and English, yet another legacy of the Peranakan culture. It is spoken by many Penangites irrespective of race for communication purposes.[171][178][179] Greater emphasis has been placed on preserving the language's relevance in the face of the increasing influence of Mandarin and English among the youth.[180][181]

Religions

Religions in Penang (2010)[165]
Religion Percentage
Islam
44.63%
Buddhism
35.63%
Hinduism
8.70%
Christianity
5.13%
Chinese folk religion
4.55%
Other
0.31%
No religion
1.05%

As with other Peninsular states, Islam is the official religion of the State of Penang.[127] Even so, other religions are allowed to be practised within the state, contributing to its cosmopolitan society. Penang is unique among Malaysian states in that no single religion commands an absolute majority among the populace.

 
Built in 1818, St. George's Church in George Town is the oldest Anglican church in Southeast Asia.

As of 2010, Muslims constituted over 44% of Penang's population, followed by Buddhists at nearly 36% and Hindus at almost 9%. Notably, smaller communities of Chinese Muslims and Indian Muslims have long existed within George Town, while most Buddhists in Penang follow either Theravada, Mahayana or Vajrayana traditions.[182][183][184] A significant multiracial community of Christians, of both Catholic and Protestant sects, also exist in Penang, consisting of ethnic Chinese, Indians, Eurasians, East Malaysian migrants and expatriates.[165] Meanwhile, more than 10% of the state's Chinese populace adhere to Taoism and other Chinese folk religions.[citation needed]

One particular street in George Town exemplifies the harmonious coexistence of the various religions in Penang. Along Pitt Street, Muslim, Taoist, Hindu and Christian places of worship are situated just metres away from one another, earning the street its nickname, the Street of Harmony.[185][186] This reflects Penang's diverse ethnic and socio-cultural amalgamation.

There was once a tiny community of Jews in George Town, who mainly resided along Jalan Zainal Abidin (formerly Yahudi Road).[55] The last known native Jew died in 2011, rendering the centuries-old Jewish community in Penang effectively extinct.[187]

Economy

Economic indicators
Nominal GDP RM77.641 billion (2017) [16]
GDP per capita RM49,873 (2017) [16]
Real GDP growth 5.3% (2017) [16]
CPI inflation 1.4% (February 2018) [188]
Unemployment 2.1% (2017) [16]
Labour force
participation rate
67.5% (2017) [16]
Government debt nil (2016) [189]

Economic sectors in Penang by GDP share (2017)[16]

  Services (49.3%)
  Manufacturing (44.8%)
  Construction (2.6%)
  Agriculture (2.0%)
  Mining (0.1%)

In spite of its tiny size, Penang, regarded as the Silicon Valley of the East, has one of the largest economies in Malaysia, contributing as much as RM7 billion of the country's tax income in 2015.[190][191] Penang has the highest Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita among Malaysian states. With a GDP per capita of RM49,873 as of 2017, Penang has also surpassed the World Bank's threshold to be considered a high-income economy, which was set at US$12,056 within the same year.[16][192]

Furthermore, Penang consistently records one of the lowest unemployment rates within the nation - 2.1% as of 2017.[16][193] The state has experienced one of the largest reductions in Gini coefficient within Malaysia as well, at 0.356 in 2016.[193]

Penang is the top destination within Malaysia for foreign investors; the state held the largest share of Malaysia's foreign direct investment (FDI) in 2017, gaining nearly 25 of the nation's overall FDI.[194] In addition, George Town was ranked Malaysia's most attractive destination for commercial property investment by Knight Frank in 2016, surpassing even Kuala Lumpur.[195] The bulk of Penang's FDI as of 2017 originated from Switzerland, Germany, Hong Kong, the Netherlands, Ireland and Singapore.[16] It is an attractive destination for FDI as it continued to receive investment during the Coronavirus disease 2019, when it received the second highest level of investment in Q1 2020.[196]

Penang's economic growth, particularly since 2008, was described by Bloomberg as Malaysia's "biggest economic success", despite the federal government's focus on other states such as Johor and Sarawak.[197] Penang's economic performance also allowed the Penang state government to completely eradicate the state's public debt by 2016.[189]

Manufacturing

 
Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone, known as the Silicon Valley of the East[190]

Since the 1970s, manufacturing has formed the backbone of Penang's economy, contributing 44.8% of the state's GDP as of 2017 and attracting as many as 3,000 firms to set up operations within the state.[16][198] Machinery and transport equipment accounted for 71% of Penang's total exports during the first nine months of 2014.[199]

The Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone, now regarded as the Silicon Valley of the East, is the main electronics manufacturing hub within Malaysia.[12][13][190] Located at the southeastern corner of Penang Island, the zone is home to several high-tech multinational firms, including Dell, Intel, AMD, Motorola, Agilent, Renesas, Osram, Bosch, Sony and Seagate and others

Seberang Perai has witnessed massive industrialisation as well, with industrial estates and oil refineries being established in the late 20th century in areas like Mak Mandin and Perai.[200] The major local firms currently operating in Perai, including Malayan Sugar, Malayawata Steel, Southern Steel, Harvik Rubber and Soon Soon Oilmills, have been joined by multinational companies, such as Mattel, Pensonic, Hitachi, Mitsuoka, Chevron and Honeywell Aerospace.[200] In recent years, Batu Kawan has also been rapidly industrialised, with a number of international firms, such as Boston Scientific and Bose Corporation, setting up manufacturing plants in the town.[201]

Aside from electronics and engineering manufacturing, Penang is Malaysia's main jewellery finishing hub, contributing 85% of the nation's gold and jewellery exports as of 2016.[202] Penang's gold and jewellery industry is relatively well-established, dating back to the founding of the Penang Goldsmith Association in 1832.[202] Jewellery from Penang is exported to over 20 foreign markets, including Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Canada and the United States.[202]

Services

 
Design Village in Batu Kawan is the largest outlet mall in Malaysia.

The services sector has overtaken the manufacturing sector as the largest economic sector in Penang, with the former accounting for 49.3% of Penang's GDP as of 2017.[16] In addition, almost 35 of Penang's workforce are employed in services-related industries, which include retail, accommodation, medical tourism, and food and beverages (F&B) sub-sectors.[199] Medical tourism has emerged as an integral component of Penang's services sector. George Town, in particular, has become the centre of medical tourism within Malaysia, attracting approximately half of the nation's medical tourist arrivals in 2013 and generating about 70% of the country's medical tourism revenue.[203][204]

 
Shophouses in George Town's Little India sell Indian fabrics and textile, as well as Hindu prayer paraphernalia.

Penang also has a vibrant retail sub-sector, which employs as many as 24% of Penang's workforce.[199] As the main shopping destination in northern Malaysia, Penang is home to several shopping malls, such as Gurney Plaza, Gurney Paragon, 1st Avenue Mall, Straits Quay, Queensbay Mall and Design Village and other shopping centre in Mainland and Island (Penang). While shopping malls now dominate the retail scene, centuries-old shophouses are still operating alongside George Town's flea markets and wet markets, all of which cater more to local products, including spices, nutmegs and tau sar pneah, a famous Penang delicacy.[205][206]

Due to the efforts of the Penang state government to promote the state as a shared services and outsourcing (SSO) hub, Penang has attracted the second largest share of investments for Global Business Services (GBS) within Malaysia, after Kuala Lumpur.[198][207] Penang's SSO industry, which includes international corporations such as AirAsia, Citigroup, Jabil and Dell, has provided more than 8,000 high-income jobs and contributed RM12.79 billion of revenue in 2013.[198][208]

In addition to these, a startup community has been growing within Penang, including the likes of Piktochart and DeliverEat.[12] Attracted by the cheaper living costs and the presence of several multinational technology firms, Penang's startups are also being actively encouraged by the public and private sectors, with initiatives to encourage entrepreneurship and promote the Internet of Things (IoT).[209][210]

Furthermore, George Town is Malaysia's second most popular centre for meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions (MICE), after Kuala Lumpur.[211] In 2017, Penang hosted 2,511 business events with an estimated economic impact of RM1.002 billion.[212] Among the major MICE venues within Penang are the SPICE Arena, Straits Quay and Prangin Mall.[213][214]

Commerce

George Town was formerly the financial centre of British Malaya. The first international bank to open a branch in George Town (and by extension, Malaysia) was Standard Chartered in 1875.[55][63] This was followed by HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland in 1885 and 1888 respectively.[55][63]

To this day, George Town still serves as the financial centre of northern Malaysia. The city contains various Malaysian and international banks, including Standard Chartered, HSBC, Citibank, UOB, OCBC, Bank of China and Bank Negara Malaysia. Most of the international banks still retain their offices at Beach Street, which also serves as the city's main Central Business District.[citation needed]

Since the 1990s, Northam Road, along with Gurney Drive, has also emerged as the George Town's second Central Business District.[215] Northam Road, in particular, hosts an array of financial services, including the Malaysian Employees Provident Fund, as well as accounting, auditing and insurance offices.[216][217]

Finance and its related activities, such as insurance, auditing and real estate transactions, accounted for more than 8% of Penang's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as of 2017.[16]

Tourism

 
A beach at Batu Ferringhi

Penang has always been one of the most popular tourist destinations in Malaysia. Throughout history, the state welcomed some of the most influential personalities, including W. Somerset Maugham, Rudyard Kipling, Lee Kuan Yew, Queen Elizabeth II and King Charles III.[218][219][220] Penang is known for its rich heritage and architecture, its vibrant multicultural society, a wide range of modern entertainment and retail choices, natural features such as beaches and hills, and the world-famous Penang cuisine.[221]

Unlike other Malaysian states, Penang does not rely only on air transportation for tourist arrivals. Aside from the Penang International Airport, Swettenham Pier, conveniently located within the heart of George Town, has emerged as one of the major tourist entry points into the state. As of 2017, Penang attracted nearly 8.6 million tourists, with the airport posting a record 7.2 million passenger arrivals and the pier registering another 1.35 million tourist arrivals.[222][223] Within the same year, Penang, which contributed close to RM3.9 million of tourism tax revenue, was Malaysia's third largest tourism tax contributor after Kuala Lumpur and Sabah.[224]

 
Penang Port worker working on the control tower overseeing North Butterworth Container Terminal (NBCT).

In recent years, George Town has received numerous international accolades. The city has been listed by several publications, including the Lonely Planet, CNN, Forbes and Time, as one of Asia's top travel destinations.[225][226][227][228][229] These are in addition to George Town's reputation as a gastronomic haven, with the CNN placing George Town as one of Asia's best street food cities.[230]

Entrepôt trade and shipping

Formerly a vital British entrepôt, Penang's maritime trade has greatly declined, due to the loss of George Town's free-port status in 1969 and the concurrent development of Port Klang near the federal capital Kuala Lumpur.[73]

In spite of this, the Port of Penang remains the main harbour within northern Malaysia. The Port of Penang handled more than 1.52 million TEUs of cargo in 2017, making it the third busiest seaport by volume in the country.[231] The Port's strategic location enabled it to service not just northern Malaysia, but also southern Thailand.[231]

Culture

Public Holidays in Penang
Holiday Date
New Year's Day
1 Jan
variable
2 days in
Jan/Feb
Labour Day
1 May
variable
King's Birthday
1st Sat of Jun
George Town World
Heritage City Day
7 Jul
Governor's Birthday
2nd Sat of Jul
Revelation of
the Koran Day
variable
2 days
(variable)
National Day
31 Aug
Malaysia Day
16 Sep
variable
variable
variable
variable
Christmas
25 Dec

Festivals

Penang's diverse, cosmopolitan society means that there are a great many celebrations and festivities in any given year. The major cultural and religious festivities in the state include, but not limited to, the Chinese New Year, Eid ul-Fitri, Deepavali, Thaipusam, Vaisakhi, Christmas, Vesak Day and Songkran.[232][233]

Expatriates residing in Penang have also introduced a host of other celebrations. Bon Odori is celebrated yearly by the Japanese in George Town, while St. Patrick's Day and Oktoberfest, traditionally celebrated by the Irish and the Germans respectively, have also been gaining popularity amongst the locals.[234][235][236]

Moreover, Penang hosts several major festivals in any given year. The George Town Festival, first held in 2010, has evolved into one of the largest arts events in Southeast Asia, while the Penang Hot Air Balloon Fiesta attracts close to 200,000 visitors from all over the world.[237][238]

Performance arts

 
A Chingay troupe in George Town

George Town is the birthplace of a unique form of the Chingay procession. Introduced in 1919, Penang's variant of Chingay includes the act of balancing gigantic flags on one's forehead or hands.[239] A yearly Chingay parade is held in the city every December, though Chingay performances are also a common feature of Chinese festivities and major state celebrations in Penang.[239]

Bangsawan, which was also developed in Penang, is a type of Malay theatre that incorporates Indian, Western, Islamic, Chinese and Indonesian influences.[240][241] Boria is also indigenous to Penang, featuring singing accompanied by violin, maracas and tabla.[242]

Aside from these, the state has orchestras based in George Town, the Penang Philharmonic Orchestra, Penang Symphony Orchestra, as well as several chamber and musical organisations, including the[243] award-winning social enterprise, The Rondo Production .[244] Dewan Sri Pinang and Penangpac within Straits Quay are two of the major performing venues in the city.[citation needed]

Street art

 
Ernest Zacharevic's Children on a Bicycle in George Town

In 2012, as part of the George Town Festival, Lithuanian artist Ernest Zacharevic created a series of 6 wall paintings depicting local culture, inhabitants and lifestyles.[245] In addition, several wrought iron caricatures have been installed within George Town, with each caricature detailing the city's history and the daily lives of its inhabitants.[246] In recent years, the street art scene has also begun to grow out of the city, in areas such as Balik Pulau and Butterworth.[247][248]

In addition, art exhibitions are frequently held at cultural centres within George Town, such as the Hin Bus Depot.[249]

Museums

The Penang State Museum and Art Gallery in George Town is the state's primary public museum; it houses relics, photographs, maps, and other artefacts that document the history and culture of Penang.[250]

Other museums in the city focus on religious and cultural aspects, as well as famous personalities, including the Penang Islamic Museum, Sun Yat-sen Museum, Batik Painting Museum, and Universiti Sains Malaysia Museum and Gallery.[251] Besides that, the birthplace of Malaysia's legendary singer-actor, P. Ramlee, has been restored and turned into a museum[252]

In recent years, private-run museums have sprung up throughout the city, such as the Camera Museum and the Penang Toy Museum. A handful of newer 3D visual and interactive museums have also been established, such as the Made-in-Penang Interactive Museum and the Penang Time Tunnel.[253][254]

Architecture

 
Wat Chaiyamangkalaram is a Thai Buddhist temple at Pulau Tikus.

Penang is home to a relatively wide variety of architectures, both historical and modern. The historical core of George Town has been inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to its unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.[99]

 
Skyscrapers at Gurney Drive in George Town

Fort Cornwallis, in George Town, was the first structure built by the British in Penang. The city's UNESCO World Heritage Site also covers several important landmarks, including the City Hall, the Penang High Court, St. George's Church, the Eastern & Oriental Hotel and the Central Business District at Beach Street. Aside from European architecture, a huge assortment of Asian architectural styles also exists throughout George Town, exemplified by buildings like the Kong Hock Keong Temple, Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion, the Pinang Peranakan Mansion, Khoo Kongsi, Snake Temple, Kapitan Keling Mosque and Sri Mahamariamman Temple. Meanwhile, the Siamese and the Burmese have also left a visible impact on certain landmarks within the city, such as Wat Chaiyamangkalaram, Dhammikarama Burmese Temple and Kek Lok Si.[citation needed]

Aside from the colonial era architecture, Penang Island contains most of the skyscrapers within Penang, with the state's tallest buildings all located within the island. The tallest skyscrapers in George Town, and by extension, Penang, include the Komtar Tower, Setia V, Gurney Paragon and Arte S.[citation needed]

Cuisine

 
A bowl of Penang Hokkien mee

George Town, popularly regarded as the food capital of Malaysia, is renowned for its good and varied cuisine which incorporates Malay, Chinese, Indian, Peranakan, Thai and European influences.[255] The city has been recognised by various publications, such as Time Magazine, CNN and Lonely Planet, as one of the Asian cities with the best street cuisine.[230][256][257] According to Time Magazine in 2004, "nowhere else can such great tasting food be so cheap," whilst Robin Barton of the Lonely Planet described George Town as the culinary epicentre of the many cultures that arrived after it was set up as a trading port in 1786, from Malays to Indians, Acehenese to Chinese, Burmese to Thais.[256][257]

The various street dishes and delicacies of Penang include (but not limited to) asam laksa, Nasi Lemuni, char kway teow, curry mee, Hokkien mee, nasi kandar, oh chien (fried oyster omelette), lor bak, rojak, pasembur, chendol, ais kacang, and tau sar pneah (bean paste biscuit).[258][206]

In art and literature

In her poetical illustration   Pulo Penang., to a drawing by Samuel Austin, Letitia Elizabeth Landon compares the beauties of the island with those of the speaker's beloved.[259]

Education

 
Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang's premier public university

Penang's literacy rate stood at 98.2% as of 2010, whilst specifically, the literacy rate of Penang's youth between 15 and 24 years of age rose to 99.5% in 2014, after Selangor and Kuala Lumpur.[260][261] Correspondingly, Penang has the third highest Human Development Index within Malaysia.[15]

As of 2017, Penang, including both the mainland and the island contains a total of 48 tertiary institutions (including universities, colleges, medical colleges, industrial training institutes and teaching schools), 12 international schools, 110 secondary schools, 271 primary schools and 602 kindergartens.[262][263][264]

 
Penang Free School, founded in 1816, is the oldest English school in Southeast Asia.

In particular, George Town is home to some of Malaysia's oldest schools. Established in 1816, Penang Free School is the oldest English school in Southeast Asia, while numerous public schools originally founded during the colonial era in Penang include St. Xavier's Institution, St. George's Girls' School and Methodist Boys' School. In addition, the city is a pioneer in Chinese education within the region; following the establishment of Chung Hwa Confucian High School in 1904, several prominent Chinese schools were built, such as Chung Ling High School, Penang Chinese Girls' High School, Heng Ee High School, Jit Sin High School and Phor Tay High School.[citation needed]

As a popular destination for expatriates, George Town contains a number of international schools as well, such as Uplands International School, Dalat International School, Tenby International School and Hua Xia International School.[265] These schools offer primary and secondary education up to A Levels and International Baccalaureate.[265] A few of these schools, such as Penang Japanese School and Chinese Taipei School, cater to expatriates of specific nationalities.[263][266]

Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) is the premier public university within Penang. Established in 1969 as Malaysia's second university, it was originally named Universiti Pulau Pinang (University of Penang).[267] The main campus is situated at Gelugor, while an engineering campus has been built in Nibong Tebal. As of 2018, it was ranked 207th in the QS World University Rankings, the fourth highest within the country.[268]

RCSI & UCD Malaysia Campus is a medical university in George Town, with teaching hospitals in Penang and Perak. Founded as a private medical school in 1996, RUMC gained university status in 2018 and is the only Irish university branch campus in Malaysia. Graduates of RUMC are conferred degrees awarded and recognised by the National University of Ireland.

Other tertiary institutions within Penang include Wawasan Open University, Han Chiang University College of Communication, DISTED College, Sentral College, SEGi College, KDU College, INTI International College, Equator Academy of Arts, Penang Skills and Development Centre and Lam Wah Ee Nursing College.[262] Aside from these institutions, RECSAM, a research and training facility aimed at the enhancement of the science and mathematics education in Southeast Asia, is sited within Penang as well.

The state also contains 107 libraries, including the Penang State Library and the Penang Digital Library.[269] The latter, launched by the Penang state government in 2016, is the first digital library in Malaysia.[270]

Health care

Health care in Penang is adequately provided by the numerous public and private hospitals throughout the state. These hospitals have also helped Penang to emerge as the centre of Medical tourism in Malaysia. The Penang General Hospital, administered and funded by the Malaysian Ministry of Health, is the main tertiary referral hospital within northern Malaysia. It is supported by five other public hospitals within Penang, all of which also come under the administration of the country's Ministry of Health.[271]

Aside from public hospitals, Penang is home to 15 private hospitals, including Penang Adventist Hospital, Lam Wah Ee Hospital, Mount Miriam Cancer Hospital, Gleneagles Medical Centre, Island Hospital, Loh Guan Lye Specialists Centre and Pantai Hospital.[272] These hospitals cater not only to the local population, but also to patients from other states and foreign health tourists.[204][273]

Infant mortality rate within Penang dropped by 85% between 1970 and 2000 to 5.7 per 1,000 live births, while neonatal mortality rate also decreased by 84.7% within this corresponding period to 4.1 per 1,000 live births.[92] As of 2017, Penang's life expectancy at birth stood at 72.5 years for men and 77.7 years for women.[16]

Media

George Town was once the nucleus of Malaysia's print press. The nation's first newspaper was founded in the city – the Prince of Wales Island Gazette in 1806.[274] The Star, currently one of Malaysia's top dailies, has its origins as a regional newspaper founded in George Town in the 1970s, while the country's oldest Chinese newspaper, Kwong Wah Yit Poh, was also established in the city in 1910.[274]

In 2011, the then Chief Minister of Penang, Lim Guan Eng, launched the Penang edition of Time Out.[275] This version of the international listings magazine is published in three versions - a yearly guide, a website and a mobile app.[276]

The Penang state government also publishes its own multi-lingual newspaper, Buletin Mutiara, which is distributed for free every fortnight.[277] The Penang-centric newspaper focuses on the current issues within Penang.[277]

Film and television

Due to its well-preserved colonial-era cityscape, a number of movies have been filmed within George Town, such as Crazy Rich Asians, Anna and the King, Lust, Caution and You Mean the World to Me, the latter of which is the first movie to be filmed entirely in Penang Hokkien.[278] Singaporean drama series, The Little Nyonya and The Journey: Tumultuous Times, were also filmed within the city's UNESCO World Heritage Site. In addition, the city became one of the pit-stops of The Amazing Race 16, The Amazing Race Asia 4 and The Amazing Race Asia 5.[citation needed]

Radio broadcasting

The history of Penang radio broadcasting began in 1925 when the Penang Wireless Association was established. With the issuance of the first shortwave radio broadcast licence on 24 August 1934, Station ZHJ – Malaya's first radio station was launched and went on the air from Khoo Sian Ewe's house at Perak Road. It was transmitted via 493 meter waves from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. everyday in Malay, English, Chinese, Hokkien and Tamil. During the Japanese occupation period from 19 December 1941 until 2 September 1945, the Imperial Army used Penang Chinese Recreation Club at Burmah Road in George Town as radio station to transmit propaganda and renamed the station as Penang Hoso Kyoku (Penang Broadcasting Corporation). Following the surrender of the Japanese Army, the British came back into power and reclaimed the station and the building, which later became the state branch of Radio Malaya on 1 April 1946. While news programmes were produced in Singapore, the state branch in Penang produces regional programmings for the radio station.[279]

Radio Malaya Penang moved its headquarters from Chinese Recreational Club to United Engineers Building at Bishop Street in 1948 and established its temporary studio in a temporary office building in Gelugor, which moved to Sepoy Lines Road in 1955. In 1961, it moved into its present building at Burmah Road, which was officially opened by Governor Raja Uda on 30 October 1965. Penang state radio station became part of the Radio Malaysia network on 16 September 1963, when Malaysia was established and the larger Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) on 11 October 1969, following the merger of the nation's Radio and Television operations. Today, RTM Penang state branch operates one radio channel - Mutiara FM.[280]

Transportation

Land

 
The Second Penang Bridge, 24 km-long (15 mi), is the longest bridge in Southeast Asia.

Penang Island is connected to the mainland by two bridges. The 13.5 km (8.4 mi) Penang Bridge, completed in 1985, spans the Penang Strait between Gelugor on the island and Perai on the mainland. Spanning 24 km (15 mi), the Second Penang Bridge is located further south, linking Batu Maung on the island to Batu Kawan on the mainland. The latter was opened to the public in 2014 and is currently the second longest bridge in Southeast Asia.[citation needed]

The North–South Expressway, a 966 km-long (600 mi) expressway along the western part of Peninsular Malaysia, passes through Seberang Perai. In addition, about 34.9 km (21.7 mi) of the Malayan Railway's West Coast Line also lies within Seberang Perai, with the Butterworth railway station serving as the main railway station within northern Malaysia. Aside from the regular Malayan Railway services, the Butterworth railway station is the southernmost terminus of the State Railway of Thailand's Southern Line and the International Express from Bangkok. Notably, the train station is also one of the main stops of the Eastern and Oriental Express service between Bangkok and Singapore.[citation needed]

On Penang Island, the Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway is a vital coastal highway that runs along the island's eastern seaboard, connecting George Town with the Penang Bridge, the Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone, the Penang International Airport and the Second Penang Bridge. The Federal Route 6 is a pan-island trunk road, while the two major ring roads within George Town are the George Town Inner Ring Road and the Penang Middle Ring Road.

In Seberang Perai, the major ring roads and expressways include the Butterworth Outer Ring Road (BORR) and the Butterworth–Kulim Expressway.[citation needed]

Public transportation

 
A trishaw, known locally as beca, on a street in George Town.

Under British rule, George Town served as a pioneer in public transportation within British Malaya. The city's first tram system, originally powered by steam, began operations in the 1880s.[281][282] Although the tram lines have since been disused, another colonial legacy, the trishaw, still plies the city's streets, albeit catering primarily for tourists.[283]

 
The Penang Hill Railway, Malaysia's only funicular railway system

Buses now form the backbone of public transportation within Penang. Public bus services are mainly provided by Rapid Penang, which operates 56 routes within Greater Penang, including interstate routes into Kedah and Perak. Among the routes are free-of-charge transit services such as the Central Area Transit, the Congestion Alleviation Transport and the Pulau Tikus Loop.[284] In addition, the Hop-On Hop-Off bus service, which utilises open-topped double decker buses, has been introduced for tourists within George Town.[285]

Meanwhile, the only rail-based transportation system within Penang is the Penang Hill Railway, a funicular railway to the peak of Penang Hill. Opened in 1923, it is also the sole funicular railway system in Malaysia.[citation needed] The Penang state government has recently drawn up plans to bring in more rail-based transport systems throughout Penang, as part of the Penang Transport Master Plan.[94][126] What are purposed are a Light Rail Transit line between George Town and Bayan Lepas, two monorail lines that connect George Town with Air Itam, Paya Terubong and Tanjung Tokong,[286][287] a tram line limited to within George Town's UNESCO World Heritage Site[288] and a cross-strait cable car line linking Komtar in George Town and Penang Sentral in Butterworth[289] Currently, the Light Rapid Transit line between George Town and the Penang International Airport, also known as the Bayan Lepas LRT line, is being allocated the top priority by the Penang state government.[290][291][292] In April 2019, the LRT project was received conditional approval from the federal government. Construction was expected to commence in June 2020.[293]

Efforts are also being undertaken to promote pedestrianisation and the use of bicycles as an environmentally friendly mode of transportation.[294][295] Dedicated cycling lanes have been paved throughout the city and in 2016, George Town became the first Malaysian city to operate a public bicycle-sharing service, with the inauguration of LinkBike.[296][297][298]

The Penang Sentral in Butterworth is the main rapid transit hub within Penang. Penang Sentral's location, adjacent to the Sultan Abdul Halim Ferry Terminal and the Butterworth railway station, allows it to function as a termini for public and interstate buses, ferry and train services.[citation needed]

Air

Penang International Airport (PEN) is located in Bayan Lepas at the southeast of Penang Island, 16 km (9.9 mi) south of George Town. It serves as the main airport for northern Malaysia, with frequent links to major regional cities such as Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Bangkok, Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, Taipei, Hong Kong, Guangzhou and Doha. Penang International Airport is Malaysia's second busiest in terms of cargo traffic and recorded the third highest passenger traffic of all Malaysian airports as of 2013.[299]

The airport is also a hub for two Malaysian low-cost carriers - AirAsia and Firefly.[300] Among the international carriers that operate out of the airport are Scoot, Jetstar Asia Airways, China Airlines, China Southern Airlines, Thai Smile and Qatar Airways.[citation needed]

Sea

 
The Port of Penang with George Town in the background, as seen from Butterworth
 
A Rapid Ferry crossing the Penang Strait towards George Town.

The Port of Penang, the main harbour in northern Malaysia, is operated by the Penang Port Commission. The Port consists of seven facilities, with six of them in Butterworth and Perai on the mainland, including the North Butterworth Container Terminal, Butterworth Deep Water Wharves and the Prai Bulk Cargo Terminal. The Port of Penang, the third busiest seaport in Malaysia, handled more than 1.52 million TEUs of cargo in 2017.[231]

Meanwhile, Swettenham Pier, situated in the heart of George Town, is the sole Port facility on Penang Island. The pier now accommodates cruise ships, making it one of the major entry points into Penang. As of 2017, Swettenham Pier recorded 1.35 million tourist arrivals, thereby surpassing Port Klang as the busiest cruise shipping terminal in Malaysia; the pier has also attracted some of the world's largest cruise liners, such as the RMS Queen Mary 2.[301][302][223] The pier also serves as a homeport for regional-based cruise ships.[301]

Occasionally, the Port of Penang hosts warships as well, including those from Singapore, the United States and most recently, China.[303][304][305]

The cross-strait Rapid Ferry service connects George Town and Butterworth, and was formerly the only transportation link between Penang Island and the mainland until the completion of the Penang Bridge in 1985. At the time of writing, six ferries ply the Penang Strait between George Town and Butterworth daily.[306]

Sports

Penang has a relatively well-developed sporting infrastructure. The Penang State Stadium in Batu Kawan is the main stadium within the state, whereas the City Stadium in George Town is the sole stadium within the city. Both stadia function as the home ground of the Penang FA.[citation needed]

The SPICE Arena in Bayan Baru is another major sporting venue within Penang, consisting of an indoor arena and an aquatics centre.[307]

 
The SPICE Arena is also one of the major venues in Penang for meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions (MICE).[213]

The Nicol David International Squash Centre at Gelugor is one of the major squash training facilities in Malaysia and was reportedly where squash legend Nicol David first trained during her childhood years.[308] George Town is also home to Malaysia's oldest equestrian centre, the Penang Turf Club, which was established in 1864. In addition, Penang contains a total of three golf courses, one of which is on Penang Island.[309]

The major annual sporting events within Penang include the Penang International Dragon Boat Festival and the Penang Bridge International Marathon. The former, held every December in Teluk Bahang, is a dragon boat race that has attracted several international teams, including those from Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, China, South Korea and Australia.[310] The latter is a marathon which includes the Penang Bridge as its route. Held every November, it attracted a record 35,000 participants from 85 countries in 2017.[311]

Among the national and international sporting events that were hosted within Penang include the 2000 Sukma Games, the 2001 Southeast Asian Games and the 2013 Women's World Open Squash Championship. Penang has also hosted the 2018 Asia Pacific Masters Games, the first edition of a Masters Games within Asia.[312]

Utilities

Water supply, which comes under the jurisdiction of the Penang state government, is wholly managed by the Penang Water Supply Corporation (PBAPP). The state enjoys the lowest domestic water tariff in Malaysia, at RM0.32 per 1,000 litres.[313] Penang's water supply is obtained from several sources, namely the Air Itam Dam, Teluk Bahang Dam, Mengkuang Dam, Bukit Panchor Dam, Berapit Dam, Cherok Tok Kun Dam, the Guillemard Reservoir, the Penang Botanic Gardens and the Muda River.[314] The latter, which forms Penang's northern border with Kedah, provides up to 80% of Penang's water supply.[315]

In 1904, George Town became the first city within British Malaya to be supplied with electricity, upon the completion of a hydroelectric scheme.[316] Currently, electricity for industrial and domestic consumption is provided by Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB), which operates a 398MW oil-powered power plant at Gelugor.[317]

As of 2014, Penang had a recorded broadband penetration rate of 80.3%, the highest among all Malaysian states.[318] Penang is also the first Malaysian state to provide its citizens with free internet connection.[319] Penang Free Wi-Fi, launched by the Penang state government in 2008, aims to boost internet penetration throughout Penang and is provided free-of-charge.[319] Its bandwidth speeds within the George Town city centre were increased to 3 Mbit/s, while 1,560 hotspots have been installed throughout the state.[320]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . Jabatan Perangkaan Malaysia. p. 27. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  2. ^ "| Human Development Reports". hdr.undp.org.
  3. ^ "Brunei is Home to Southeast Asia's Longest Oversea Bridge. Soon | Seasia.co". Good News from Southeast Asia. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d "Current Population Estimates Malaysia, 2018". Department of Statistics Malaysia. July 2018.
  5. ^ "Massive projects in place to alleviate urbanisation in Penang". 29 October 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  6. ^ (PDF). Department of Statistics, Malaysia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 February 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  7. ^ a b Julia Tan (November 2014). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  8. ^ "The History of Penang Eurasians". Penang Tourism. 2 December 2013. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  9. ^ a b . Penang Monthly. March 2017. Archived from the original on 11 March 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  10. ^ Opalyn Mok (19 August 2017). "Has Mandarin replaced Hokkien in Penang?". Malay Mail.
  11. ^ a b c Christie, Clive (1998). A Modern History of Southeast Asia: Decolonization, Nationalism and Separatism. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-354-5.
  12. ^ a b c Lianne Chia (26 January 2017). . Channel NewsAsia. Archived from the original on 29 January 2018. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  13. ^ a b Roughneen, Simon (15 July 2015). "Styling itself as the 'Silicon Valley of the East'". Nikkei Asian Review.
  14. ^ "Southeast Asian tech hubs race to become the next Silicon Valley - Nikkei Asian Review". Nikkei Asian Review. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  15. ^ a b Idris, Imran. . Penang International Halal Expo Conference. Archived from the original on 16 December 2017. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "My Local Stats - Penang 2017". Department of Statistics Malaysia. July 2018.
  17. ^ Gardner, Simon (2011). Heritage Trees of Penang. Penang: Areca Books. ISBN 978-967-57190-6-6.
  18. ^ "Penang, pearl of the Orient, in conservation struggle". The Daily Telegraph. 8 October 2005. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022.
  19. ^ . Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia. 2000. Archived from the original on 9 April 2008. Retrieved 14 July 2008.
  20. ^ . Penang State Government. Archived from the original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  21. ^ Clement Liang. "Penang's Disappearing Thai Heritage". Penang Heritage Trust.
  22. ^ (Press release) (in Thai). Komchadluek. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  23. ^ Ooi, Kee Beng (September 2012). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 3 December 2019. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  24. ^ "Betel Nut Island". Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  25. ^ a b "Prehistoric human skeleton found at Penang neolithic site". TODAY. 19 April 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  26. ^ a b "Penang to seek Unesco heritage status for Guar Kepah neolithic site". The Star. 26 April 2017.
  27. ^ Freedman Leonard, Rousham Emily (1996). Perspectives In Human Biology: Humans In The Australasian Region. World Scientific. ISBN 9789814497862.
  28. ^ Habibu, Sira (9 December 2013). "Lembah Bujang covers a larger area". The Star.
  29. ^ "Sir James Lancaster (English merchant) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  30. ^ Dr. A. Murad Merican (12 October 2006). . Utusan Melayu (M) Bhd. Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Founding of Penang". www.sabrizain.org. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  32. ^ a b c . Visit Penang. 2008. Archived from the original on 2 January 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  33. ^ Swettenham; Frank Athelstane (1850–1946). "Map to illustrate the Siamese question". W. & A.K. Johnston Limited. University of Michigan Library. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  34. ^ a b "Plan Of Prince Of Wales Island And Province Wellesley". www.nas.gov.sg. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  35. ^ "Map of Prince of Wales Island, or Pulo Penang and Province …". www.nas.gov.sg. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  36. ^ a b "Map Of Prince Of Wales Island And Province Wellesley, …". www.nas.gov.sg. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  37. ^ a b "Documents Archive | Empire in Asia". www.fas.nus.edu.sg. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  38. ^ a b c d e Lewis, Su Lin (2016). Cities in Motion: Urban Life and Cosmopolitanism in Southeast Asia, 1920–1940. United Kingdom: Cambridge University. ISBN 9781107108332.
  39. ^ a b c Jenkins, Gwynn (2008). Contested Space: Cultural Heritage and Identity Reconstructions : Conservation Strategies Within a Developing Asian City. LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 9783825813666.
  40. ^ Zabidi, Nor Diana (11 August 2014). . Penang State Government (in Malay). Archived from the original on 18 September 2017. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  41. ^ a b Hockton, Keith (2012). Penang: An Inside Guide to Its Historic Homes, Buildings, Monuments and Parks. Petaling Jaya: MPH Group. ISBN 978-967-415-303-8.
  42. ^ Ooi, Keat Gin (2010). The A to Z of Malaysia. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780810876415.
  43. ^ Everett-Heath, John (2017). The Concise Dictionary of World Place Names. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192556462.
  44. ^ a b Ooi, Keat Gin (2015). "Disparate Identities: Penang from a Historical Perspective, 1780–1941" (PDF). Kajian Malaysia. 33 (Supp. 2): 27–52. ISSN 0127-4082. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  45. ^ "Light, Francis (The Light Letters)". AIM25. Part of The Malay Documents now held by School of Oriental and African Studies. Retrieved 29 October 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  46. ^ Blackledge, J.P. (6 July 1950). "Province Wellesley Looks Back". The Singapore Free Press. Singapore. p. 2. Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  47. ^ "History". Seberang Perai City Council. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  48. ^ Marcus Langdon (2013). Penang: The Fourth Presidency of India. 1805-1830. Volume One: Ships, Men and Mansions. Areca Books. pp. 219, 222.
  49. ^ "Unconstitutional to wipe Penang off Malaysia's map, Kedah told". Malay Mail. 11 February 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  50. ^ "Kedah MB said to be asking RM100m a year for 'lease' of Penang". www.thesundaily.my. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  51. ^ "1786 Kedah-Penang lease agreement a myth, says historian". The Vibes. 28 October 2021. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  52. ^ "After MB's 'leased' remark, historical group's Kedah arm renews calls for review of the past". The Vibes. 24 September 2021. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  53. ^ Ashley Jackson (November 2013). Buildings of Empire. OUP Oxford. pp. 7–. ISBN 978-0-19-958938-8.
  54. ^ Ooi, Kee Beng (2014). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 29 May 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  55. ^ a b c d Khoo, Su Nin (2007). Streets of George Town, Penang. Penang: Areca Books. ISBN 978-983-9886-00-9.
  56. ^ Nordin, Hussin. "Malaysian Journal of Society and Space" (PDF). Charting the Early History of Penang Trading Networks and Its Connections with the New ASEAN Growth Triangle (Malaysia-Indonesia-Thailand).
  57. ^ Nordin, Hussin (1 December 2005). "Networks of Malay Merchants and the Rise of Penang as a Regional Trading Centre". Southeast Asian Studies. 43 (3): 215–237. ISSN 0563-8682.
  58. ^ Koay Su Lin, Steven Sim (2014). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 18 September 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  59. ^ "Singapore becomes admin centre of the Straits Settlements - Singapore History". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  60. ^ a b c Turnbull, C. M. "The Penang Story". Penang's Changing Role in the Straits Settlements, 1826–1946.
  61. ^ Khoo, Salma Nasution (2009). Penang and Its Region: The Story of an Asian Entrepôt. Singapore: National University of Singapore. ISBN 978-9971-69-423-4.
  62. ^ Wong, Yee Tuan (2015). Penang Chinese Commerce in the 19th Century: The Rise and Fall of the Big Five. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute. ISBN 978-981-4515-02-3.
  63. ^ a b c d e Langdon, Marcus (2014). George Town's Historic Commercial and Civic Precincts. Penang: George Town World Heritage Incorporated.
  64. ^ Wong, Chun Wai (30 March 2013). . The Star. Archived from the original on 4 March 2018. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  65. ^ Opalyn Mok (1 October 2017). "Take a walk around old Butterworth to discover the town's heritage". Malay Mail.
  66. ^ Nicholas Chan (June 2015). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 22 September 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  67. ^ Wong, Chun Wai (20 April 2013). "A cowboy town that was old Penang". The Star.
  68. ^ a b Ooi, Giok Ling (2 September 1991). "British Colonial Health Care Development and the Persistence of Ethnic Medicine in Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore". National University of Singapore.
  69. ^ "Formation of the Straits Settlements - Singapore History". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  70. ^ Singapore, National Library Board. "Straits Settlements | Infopedia". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  71. ^ "Asian Studies". Government Legislation for Chinese Secret Societies in the Straits Settlements in the Late 19th. Century.
  72. ^ Francis, Ric & Ganley, Colin: Penang trams, trolleybuses & railways: municipal transport history, 1880s–1963. Areca Books: Penang, 2006
  73. ^ a b c d e f Daniel Goh, P. S. (2014). "Between History and Heritage: Post-Colonialism, Globalisation, and the Remaking of Malacca, Penang and Singapore" (PDF). Trans-Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia.
  74. ^ . sunyatsenpenang.com. Archived from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  75. ^ Singapore, National Library Board. "Sun Yat Sen | Infopedia". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  76. ^ Bangkok, Barbara Crossette; BARBARA CROSSETTE is chief of The Times bureau in (30 June 1985). "Correspondent's Choice; on Penang Island, a Legend Lives". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  77. ^ Mücke, Hellmuth von. The Emden-Ayesha Adventure: German Raiders in the South Seas and Beyond, 1914. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2000. ISBN 1-55750-873-9
  78. ^ a b Ajay Kamalakaran (20 May 2015). "Battle of Penang: When Malay fishermen rescued Russian sailors". Russia Beyond the Headlines. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  79. ^ "Penang Evacuated - British Garrison Withdrawn NEW JAP THRUSTS IN MALAYA London, December 19 - Northern Times (Carnarvon, WA : 1905–1952) - 20 Dec 1941". Trove. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  80. ^ a b Bayly, Christopher (2005). Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941–1945. Harvard University.
  81. ^ Netto, Anil (6 October 2013). "Old Penang: The Sook Ching massacres of World War II - anilnetto.com". anilnetto.com. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  82. ^ "THE ALLIED REOCCUPATION OF THE ANDAMAN ISLANDS, 1945". www.iwm.org.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  83. ^ "uboat.net - U-boat Operations- The Monsun U-boats - 3. Monsun boats". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  84. ^ "German U-Boat Operations in Australian Waters". www.navy.gov.au.
  85. ^ "World War II: Yanagi Missions -- Japan's Underwater Convoys | HistoryNet". www.historynet.com. 12 June 2006. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  86. ^ a b Barber, Andrew (2010). Penang At War : A History of Penang During and Between the First and Second World Wars 1914–1945. AB&B.
  87. ^ Paul H. Kratoska (1998). The Japanese Occupation of Malaya: A Social and Economic History. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. pp. 296–. ISBN 978-1-85065-284-7.
  88. ^ Koay, Su Lin (September 2016). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  89. ^ a b Koay, Su Lin (1 October 2016). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  90. ^ "Journal of Southeast Asian Studies". The Penang Secession Movement, 1948–1951.
  91. ^ a b Brash, Celeste (2008). Kuala Lumpur, Melaka and Penang. Lonely Planet. ISBN 978-1-74104-485-0.
  92. ^ a b "Higher Education in Regional and City Development : State of Penang, Malaysia". OECD.
  93. ^ a b c Ooi, Kee Beng (December 2009). . Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  94. ^ a b c d e Ooi, Kee Beng (2010). Pilot Studies for a New Penang. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 9789814279697.
  95. ^ Sue-Ching Jou, Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao, Natacha Aveline-Dubach (2014). Globalization and New Intra-Urban Dynamics in Asian Cities. Taipei: National Taiwan University. ISBN 9789863500216.
  96. ^ Ng, Su-Ann (7 November 2004). "Penang losing its tourism lustre". The Star.
  97. ^ "Tsunami impact in Penang, Malaysia: Our island, our world". aliran.com. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  98. ^ Saravanamuttu Jayaratnam, Lee Hock Guan, Ooi Kee Beng (2008). March 8: Eclipsing May 13. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 9789812308962.
  99. ^ a b "Eight new sites, from the Straits of Malacca, to Papua New Guinea and San Marino, added to UNESCO's World Heritage List". UNESCO. 7 July 2008. Retrieved 7 July 2008.
  100. ^ Sandeep Chaurley (27 December 2013). "Nine years on, Penang's tsunami pain still lingers". Malay Mail. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  101. ^ Lim, H. S. (2011). "TSS Mapping Using THEOS Imagery over Penang Island, Malaysia". Universiti Sains Malaysia.
  102. ^ Chau, Loon Wai (2005). "Probing Different Centralities in City Regions: A space-syntactic approach". Techne Press. 1.
  103. ^ Abd. Rahman, Abdul Hadi (2000). "Coastal Sedimentation and Recent Coastline Changes Along the Seberang Perai Coast, Pulau Pinang". Universiti Malaya.
  104. ^ Arnold Loh (30 December 2016). . The Star. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  105. ^ "E & O gains more time to finish Seri Tg Pinang reclamation". The Star. 21 January 2016.
  106. ^ "Cover Story: IJM Land to unveil two much-awaited projects". The Edge Markets. 13 April 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  107. ^ "Gurney Wharf, Penang's new waterfront park-in-the-city". 23 February 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  108. ^ CHOW, TAN SIN. "Makeover for Gurney Drive". The Star.
  109. ^ "Gurney Wharf expected to be completed by Aug, 2021". 2 February 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  110. ^ "GURNEY WHARF - A Penang State Project". Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  111. ^ Nambiar, Predeep (23 June 2020). "Penang reveals new reclamation project off Bayan Baru". Free Malaysia Today. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  112. ^ "History". Penang Botanical Gardens.
  113. ^ Chow, Mei Mei (6 March 2018). "Penang's commitment to safeguard its forests". Malaysiakini. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
  114. ^ Ngai, Weng Chan (1998). "Environmental Hazards Associated with Hill Land Development in Penang Island, Malaysia: Some Recommendations on Effective Management". Disaster Prevention and Management. 7.
  115. ^ "The smallest national park in the world: Penang National Park". Time Out Penang. 27 October 2014.
  116. ^
penang, other, uses, disambiguation, malay, pulau, pinang, naŋ, malaysian, state, located, northwest, coast, peninsular, malaysia, malacca, strait, parts, island, where, capital, city, george, town, located, seberang, perai, malay, peninsula, they, connected, . For other uses see Penang disambiguation Penang Malay Pulau Pinang pi naŋ is a Malaysian state located on the northwest coast of Peninsular Malaysia by the Malacca Strait It has two parts Penang Island where the capital city George Town is located and Seberang Perai on the Malay Peninsula They are connected by Malaysia s two longest road bridges the Penang Bridge and the Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah Bridge the latter is also the second longest oversea bridge in Southeast Asia 3 The second smallest Malaysian state by land mass Penang is bordered by Kedah to the north and the east and Perak to the south 1 Penang Pulau PinangStateOther transcription s MalayPulau Pinang Rumi ڤولاو ڤينڠ Jawi Hokkien庇能 Pi neeng Tai lo Mandarin槟城 Simplified 檳城 Traditional Tamilப ன ங க Piṉaṅku Transliteration FlagCoat of armsNickname s Pulau Mutiara Pearl of the OrientMotto s Bersatu dan Setia United and LoyalAnthem Untuk Negeri KitaFor Our State source source Penang in MalaysiaOpenStreetMapCoordinates 05 24 09 N 100 21 54 E 5 40250 N 100 36500 E 5 40250 100 36500 Coordinates 05 24 09 N 100 21 54 E 5 40250 N 100 36500 E 5 40250 100 36500Sovereign state MalaysiaCapitalGeorge TownLargest citySeberang PeraiGovernment TypeParliamentary Yang di Pertua NegeriAhmad Fuzi Abdul Razak Chief MinisterChow Kon Yeow PH DAP Area 1 Total1 048 km2 405 sq mi Elevation24 m 79 ft Highest elevation Penang Hill 833 m 2 733 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2020 Total1 783 000 8th Density1 684 km2 4 360 sq mi DemonymPenangiteHuman Development Index HDI 2018 0 838 very high 3rd 2 Time zoneUTC 08 00 MST Summer DST Not observedPostal code10xxx 11xxx Penang Island 12xxx 14xxx Seberang Perai Calling code 6 04 2 6 04 6 6 04 8 Penang Island 6 04 3 6 04 5 Seberang Perai ISO 3166 codeMY 07Vehicle registrationPFounded by the British East India Company11 August 1786Straits Settlements1 April 1867 1 April 1946Japanese occupation19 December 1941 3 September 1945Malayan Union1 April 1946Federation of Malaya31 August 1957Federation of Malaysia16 September 1963Websitewww wbr penang wbr gov wbr my a 2 465 47 km2 6 385 5 sq mi on Penang Island and 1 117 18 km2 2 893 5 sq mi in Seberang PeraiPenang is the 8th most populated state in Malaysia Its population stood at nearly 1 767 million as of 2018 update while its population density was as high as 1 684 km2 4 360 sq mi 4 It has among the nation s highest population densities and is one of the country s most urbanised states 5 Seberang Perai is Malaysia s second largest city by population 6 Its heterogeneous population is highly diverse in ethnicity culture language and religion Aside from the three main races the Malays Chinese and Indians Penang is home to significant Eurasian Siamese and expatriate communities 7 8 9 A resident of Penang is colloquially known as a Penangite or Penang Lang Penang Hokkien 庇能儂 Tai lo Pi neeng lang in Penang Hokkien due to the significant Penangite Chinese population 10 Penang s modern history began in 1786 upon the establishment of George Town by Francis Light Penang formed part of the Straits Settlements in 1826 which became a British crown colony in 1867 Direct British rule was only briefly interrupted during World War II when Japan occupied Penang the British retook Penang in 1945 Penang was later merged with the Federation of Malaya now Malaysia which gained independence from the British in 1957 Following the decline of its entrepot trade towards the 1970s Penang s economy was reoriented by the central government towards manufacturing 11 Today it has become one of Malaysia s most vital economic powerhouses 12 13 14 Penang has the third highest Human Development Index HDI among Malaysia s states and territories after Kuala Lumpur and Selangor 15 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Early history 2 3 Founding of Penang 2 4 Colonial Penang 2 5 World wars 2 6 Post war years 2 7 Post independence era 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Nature and parks 3 3 Outlying islets 3 4 Climate 3 5 Urban and suburban areas 3 6 George Town Conurbation 4 Governance and law 4 1 Executive 4 2 Legislature 4 3 Local governments 4 4 Judiciary 4 5 Foreign relations 4 6 Consulates 4 7 Sister cities 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnicities 5 2 Languages 5 3 Religions 6 Economy 6 1 Manufacturing 6 2 Services 6 3 Commerce 6 4 Tourism 6 5 Entrepot trade and shipping 7 Culture 7 1 Festivals 7 2 Performance arts 7 3 Street art 7 4 Museums 7 5 Architecture 7 6 Cuisine 7 7 In art and literature 8 Education 9 Health care 10 Media 10 1 Film and television 10 2 Radio broadcasting 11 Transportation 11 1 Land 11 1 1 Public transportation 11 2 Air 11 3 Sea 12 Sports 13 Utilities 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditThe name Penang comes from the modern Malay name Pulau Pinang which means areca nut island 17 The State of Penang is also referred to as the Pearl of the Orient and The Island of Pearls in Malay Pulau Mutiara 18 19 Penang Island was originally known by native seafarers as Pulau Ka Satu meaning The First Island because it was the largest island encountered on the trading sea route between Lingga and Kedah 20 Similarly the Siamese then the overlord of Kedah referred to the island as Koh Maak Thai ekaahmak 21 22 In the 15th century Penang Island was referred to as Binlang Yu citation needed traditional Chinese 檳榔嶼 simplified Chinese 槟榔屿 pinyin bin lang yǔ Pe h ōe ji Pin nn g su lit areca nut island in the navigational drawings used by Admiral Zheng He of Ming China 23 Emanuel Godinho de Eredia a 16th century Portuguese historian also referred to the island as Pulo Pinaom in the Description of Malacca 24 History EditMain article History of Penang Historical affiliations Period Kedah Sultanate 1136 1786 Siam 1786 1867 Straits Settlements 1826 1941 1945 1946 Empire of Japan 1941 1945 Malayan Union 1946 1948 Federation of Malaya 1948 1963 Malaysia 1963 presentPrehistory Edit Human remains dating back to about 5 000 to 6 000 years ago have been uncovered in Seberang Perai along with seashells pottery and hunting tools 25 26 These artifacts indicate that the earliest inhabitants of Penang were nomadic Melanesians during the Neolithic era 25 26 27 Early history Edit The Cherok Tok Kun megalith in Bukit Mertajam uncovered in 1845 contains Pali inscriptions indicating that the Hindu Buddhist Bujang Valley civilisation based in what is now Kedah had established control over parts of Seberang Perai by the 6th century 28 The entirety of what is now Penang would later become part of the Sultanate of Kedah up to the late 18th century Founding of Penang Edit See also History of George Town Penang and Francis Light Fort Cornwallis in George Town was built on the spot where Francis Light first set foot in 1786 The first British vessel arrived in Penang in June 1592 This ship the Edward Bonadventure was captained by James Lancaster 29 However it was not until the 18th century did the British establish a permanent presence on the island Prior to the first British settlement in the early 18th century three brothers of cross strait traders from Minangkabau of Sumatra establish settlements on the island They were Nakhoda Bayan Nakhoda Intan and Nakhoda Kecil who brought several followers from Batubara northeast of Sumatra 30 They received the appropriate permissions by Ahmad Tajuddin the sultan of Kedah and then establish the settlements in Bayan Lepas Balik Pulau Gelugor and Tanjung now George Town Other Minang merchants Datuk Jannaton and Datuk Maharaja Setia who came in 1749 establish Batu Uban area In the 1770s Francis Light was instructed by the British East India Company to form trade relations in the Malay Peninsula 31 32 Light subsequently landed in Kedah which was by then a Siamese vassal state Aware that the Sultanate was under external and internal threats he promised British military protection to the then Sultan of Kedah Sultan Muhammad Jiwa Zainal Adilin II in return the Sultan offered Penang Island to the British 31 33 British acquisition and expansion of Penang in yellow occurred between 1786 and 1874 when the final alterations to Penang s boundaries were enacted 34 35 36 37 It was only in 1786 when the British East India Company finally ordered Light to obtain the island from Kedah 31 38 Light negotiated with the new Sultan of Kedah Sultan Abdullah Mukarram Shah regarding the cession of the island to the British East India Company in exchange for British military aid 31 38 39 After an agreement between Light and the Sultan was ratified Light and his entourage sailed on to Penang Island where they arrived on 17 July 1786 40 41 Light took formal possession of the island on 11 August in the name of His Britannic Majesty King George III and the Honourable East India Company 31 32 Penang Island was renamed the Prince of Wales Island after the heir to the British throne while the new settlement of George Town was established in honour of King George III 42 43 Unbeknownst to Sultan Abdullah Light had been acting without the authority or the consent of his superiors in India 32 31 When Light reneged on his promise of military protection the Kedah Sultan launched an attempt to recapture the Prince of Wales Island in 1791 the British East India Company subsequently defeated the Kedah forces 31 44 The Sultan sued for peace and an annual payment of 6000 Spanish dollars to the Sultan was agreed 45 In 1800 Lieutenant Governor Sir George Leith secured a strip of hinterland across the Penang Strait which in subsequent years was named Province Wellesley now Seberang Perai 46 31 47 The treaty negotiated between Leith s First Assistant George Caunter and the new Sultan of Kedah superseded Light s earlier agreement and gave the British permanent sovereignty over both Prince of Wales Island and the newly ceded mainland territory 48 Province Wellesley was then gradually expanded up to its present day boundaries in 1874 37 34 36 In exchange for the acquisition the annual payment to the Sultan of Kedah was increased to 10 000 Spanish dollars per annum From 1874 until 2018 the Malaysian federal government and its historical predecessors paid Kedah on behalf of Penang RM 10 000 annually as a symbolic gesture 49 Since 2018 the Malaysian federal government revised the payments to Kedah increasing to RM 10 million a year to Kedah whilst in 2021 the Menteri Besar of Kedah Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor in reference to the annual payments demanded the payments be raised to RM 100 million annually 50 Despite claims by Sanusi there was never a lease agreement between Kedah and Penang 51 52 Colonial Penang Edit A 1799 map of George Town Light founded George Town as a free port to entice traders away from nearby Dutch trading posts 53 Simultaneously spices were harvested on the island turning it into a regional centre for spice production 54 55 Consequently maritime trade at the Port of Penang grew exponentially the number of incoming vessels rose from 85 in 1786 to 3 569 in 1802 56 57 In 1805 Penang became a separate presidency of British India sharing similar status with Bombay and Madras 38 By 1808 a local government for George Town was in place whilst the establishment of the Supreme Court of Penang marked the birth of Malaysia s modern judiciary 58 In 1826 Penang Singapore and Malacca were incorporated into the Straits Settlements with George Town as the capital However Penang s importance was soon supplanted by Singapore as the latter rapidly outstripped the Port of Penang as the region s premier entrepot In 1832 Singapore replaced George Town as the capital of the Straits Settlements 59 The Port of Penang in George Town in the 1910sEven so the Port of Penang retained its importance as a vital British entrepot 60 61 Towards the end of the 19th century it became a major tin exporting harbour 62 63 George Town concurrently evolved into Malaya s principal financial hub as banks and mercantile firms flocked into the city 41 63 Meanwhile other towns including Bayan Lepas on the island and Butterworth and Bukit Mertajam in Province Wellesley emerged due to agricultural and logistical developments 64 65 66 Throughout the century Penang s cosmopolitan population comprising Chinese Malay Indian Peranakan Eurasian Thai and other ethnicities grew rapidly in tandem with the economic prosperity However the population growth also led to social problems such as inadequate sanitation and public health facilities as well as rampant crime with the latter culminating in the Penang Riots of 1867 67 68 Also in 1867 the Straits Settlements was made a British crown colony 69 70 Direct British rule meant better law enforcement as the police force was beefed up and the secret societies that had previously plagued Penang were gradually outlawed 60 71 More investments were also made on health care and public transportation 38 68 72 Due to the improved access to education the active participation in municipal affairs by its Asian residents and substantial press freedom George Town was perceived as being more intellectually receptive than Singapore 38 60 73 The city became a magnet for reputable English authors Asian intellectuals and revolutionaries including Rudyard Kipling Somerset Maugham and Sun Yat sen 74 75 76 World wars Edit The Cenotaph in George Town erected after World War I commemorates fallen Allied soldiers During World War I in the Battle of Penang the German cruiser SMS Emden surreptitiously sailed to Penang Island and sank two Allied warships off its coast Russian protected cruiser Zhemchug and the French destroyer Mousquet 77 78 One hundred and forty seven French and Russian sailors perished during the battle 78 World War II led to unparallelled social and political upheaval Although Penang Island had been designated as a fortress Penang fell to the Imperial Japanese Army on 19 December 1941 after suffering devastating aerial attacks The British covertly evacuated Penang s European populace historians have since contended that the moral collapse of British rule in Southeast Asia came not at Singapore but at Penang 79 80 British Royal Marines liberating George Town on 3 September 1945 Penang Island was subsequently renamed Tojo to after Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo 80 The period of Japanese occupation was renowned for the Imperial Japanese Army s massacres of Penang s Chinese populace known as Sook Ching to the locals 81 Women in Penang were also coerced to work as comfort women by the Japanese 82 Meanwhile the Port of Penang was put to use as a major submarine base by the Axis Powers 83 84 85 In the last years of the war Allied bombers from India repeatedly bombed George Town seeking to destroy the naval facilities and administrative centres 86 Several colonial buildings were destroyed or damaged such as the Government Offices St Xavier s Institution and Hutchings School now Penang State Museum 63 The Penang Strait was also mined to constrict Japanese shipping 87 Following the surrender of Japan British forces launched Operation Jurist to recapture Penang Island on 3 September 1945 making George Town the first city in Malaya to be liberated from the Japanese 86 Post war years Edit Flag of the Crown Colony of Penang between 1946 and 1949 Penang was placed under a military administration until 1946 Subsequently the Straits Settlements was abolished as the British sought to consolidate the various political entities in British Malaya under a single polity named the Malayan Union The now separate Crown Colony of Penang was consequently merged into the Malayan Union which was then replaced by the Federation of Malaya in 1948 The idea of the absorption of Penang into the vast Malay heartland initially proved unpopular amongst Penangites 88 Economic and ethnic concerns led to the formation of the Penang Secessionist Committee in 1948 However the committee s attempt to avert Penang s merger with Malaya ultimately petered out due to British disapproval 11 89 90 The British government allayed the concerns raised by the secessionists by guaranteeing George Town s free port status as well as reintroducing municipal elections in George Town in 1951 89 By 1956 George Town became the first fully elected municipality in Malaya and in the following year it was granted city status by Queen Elizabeth II becoming the first city within the Federation of Malaya and by extension Malaysia Post independence era Edit The Komtar Tower Penang s tallest skyscraper was built in the 1970s George Town was since colonial times a free port until its sudden revocation by the Malaysian federal government in 1969 11 73 91 Penang subsequently suffered an economic crisis with the loss of maritime trade resulting in massive unemployment and brain drain 73 92 93 To alleviate the downturn the then Chief Minister Lim Chong Eu masterminded the construction of the Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone 93 The zone regarded by many as the Silicon Valley of the East proved instrumental in reversing Penang s economic slump and led to the state s rapid economic growth until the late 1990s 93 94 During Lim s tenure a number of major infrastructural projects were also undertaken chiefly the Penang Bridge the first road link between Penang Island and the Malay Peninsula Completed in 1985 it was the longest bridge in Southeast Asia until 2014 when it was superseded by the Second Penang Bridge The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami hit parts of Penang Island killing 52 people out of 68 in all of Malaysia However the persistent brain drain exacerbated by federal government policies that favoured the development of Kuala Lumpur meant that Penang was no longer at the forefront of the country s economy by the 2000s 73 94 Penang s economy slowed down in the early 2000s while the deteriorating state of affairs in general including an incoherent urban planning policy poor traffic management and the dilapidation of George Town s heritage buildings due to the repeal of the Rent Control Act in 2001 led to simmering discontent within Penang s society 39 94 95 In response George Town s non governmental organisations NGOs and the national press galvanised public support and formed strategic partnerships to restore the city to its former glory 73 96 97 Also as a result of the widespread resentment the then federal opposition coalition Pakatan Rakyat now Pakatan Harapan was voted into power within Penang in the 2008 State Election replacing the erstwhile administration led by the Barisan Nasional 39 94 98 Meanwhile the efforts to conserve George Town s heritage architecture paid off when in 2008 the city s historical core was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site 99 The city of George Town along with Malacca City was confirmed as a a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011 The Indian Ocean tsunami which struck on Boxing Day of 2004 hit the western and northern coasts of Penang Island claiming 52 lives out of 68 in Malaysia 100 Skyline of George Town as seen from Gurney Drive Geography Edit Aerial view of George Town The city is physically separated from Butterworth bottom by the Penang Strait Enlargeable detailed map of Penang With a total land area of just 1 048 km2 405 sq mi Penang is the second smallest state in Malaysia by area after Perlis Penang situated at the northwestern coastline of Peninsular Malaysia lies between latitudes 5 59 and 5 12 N and longitudes 100 17 and 100 56 E The state consists of Penang Island Seberang Perai a narrow strip of the Malay Peninsula and a handful of smaller islets Its capital city George Town is located at the northeastern tip of Penang Island Topography Edit Penang is geographically divided into two major halves physically divided by the Penang Strait Penang Island a 293 km2 113 sq mi island Seberang Perai a 751 km2 290 sq mi hinterland on the Malay Peninsula It is bordered by Kedah to the east and north and by Perak to the south The Penang Strait is further divided into the North Channel and the South Channel At the strait s narrowest section George Town on the island is separated from Butterworth on the mainland by a mere 3 km 1 9 mi View of George Town as seen from Seberang Perai with Penang Hill in the backgroundPenang Island is irregularly shaped with a hilly and mostly forested interior its coastal plains are narrow the most extensive of which is at the northeastern cape 101 With a height of 833 m 2 733 ft Penang Hill at the centre of the island is the tallest point within Penang From a small settlement at the northeastern tip of Penang Island George Town has expanded over the centuries particularly in the northwestern western and southern directions eventually linking up with Bayan Lepas at the island s southeast and urbanising the entire eastern coast of the island 102 Meanwhile the topography of Seberang Perai is mostly flat save for a few hills such as Bukit Mertajam 103 The major rivers within Penang include the Pinang Perai Muda and Kerian rivers In particular the Muda River serves as the northern border between Seberang Perai and Kedah while the Kerian River forms the southern boundary between Seberang Perai Kedah and Perak Due to land scarcity land reclamation projects have been undertaken in high demand areas such as Tanjung Tokong Jelutong and Gurney Drive 104 105 106 The latter is being transformed into Gurney Wharf which is a planned seafront park with land for this purpose currently being reclaimed off Gurney Drive in George Town Intended as a new iconic waterfront destination for Penang Phase 1 of the development is scheduled for completion by 2018 107 108 Upon the expected completion of Gurney Wharf by August 2021 109 the 24 28 hectare seafront park will comprise four distinct recreational areas a beach a coastal grove a water garden and a seaside retail food and beverages F amp B area 110 An additional reclamation project at Bayan Baru themed Linear Waterfront would extend the electronics dominated Free Industrial Zone and would include improving and adding fishermen s wharves set up as well also have hotels restaurants medical and other developments 111 Nature and parks Edit The Penang Botanic Gardens was built in 1884 112 In spite of rapid urbanisation Penang has still managed to safeguard a considerable area of natural environment Within the state 7 761 ha 77 61 km2 have been designated as protected forest reserves 113 The central hills of Penang Island including Penang Hill serve as the green lung for the urbanised island 114 Two of the major parks within George Town the Penang Botanical Gardens and the City Park are situated near the hills Penang is also home to the smallest national park in the world the Penang National Park Covering 2 562 ha 25 62 km2 of the northwestern tip of Penang Island it encompasses mangrove swamps rainforest interspersed with hiking trails and tranquil beaches 115 Other notable natural attractions nearby include the Tropical Spice Garden and the Entopia Butterfly Farm the latter of which was Malaysia s first butterfly sanctuary 116 117 In Seberang Perai the Penang Bird Park established in 1988 in Seberang Jaya was the first aviary in Malaysia 118 Outlying islets Edit Penang also consists of nine other islets off its coasts The biggest of all Jerejak Island is located in the South Channel of the Penang Strait Once the site of a leper asylum built in 1868 which was later converted into a maximum security penitentiary Jerejak Island remains heavily forested 119 The other islets under the jurisdiction of Penang include Aman Betong Gedung Kendi and Rimau Climate Edit Climate data for PenangMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 31 6 88 9 32 2 90 0 32 2 90 0 31 9 89 4 31 6 88 9 31 4 88 5 31 0 87 8 30 9 87 6 30 4 86 7 30 4 86 7 30 7 87 3 31 1 88 0 31 3 88 2 Daily mean C F 26 9 80 4 27 4 81 3 27 6 81 7 27 7 81 9 27 6 81 7 27 3 81 1 26 9 80 4 26 8 80 2 26 5 79 7 26 4 79 5 26 5 79 7 26 7 80 1 27 0 80 6 Average low C F 23 2 73 8 23 5 74 3 23 7 74 7 24 1 75 4 24 2 75 6 23 8 74 8 23 4 74 1 23 4 74 1 23 2 73 8 23 3 73 9 23 3 73 9 23 4 74 1 23 5 74 4 Average rainfall mm inches 68 7 2 70 71 7 2 82 146 4 5 76 220 5 8 68 203 4 8 01 178 0 7 01 192 1 7 56 242 4 9 54 356 1 14 02 383 0 15 08 231 8 9 13 113 5 4 47 2 407 6 94 79 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 5 6 9 14 14 11 12 14 18 19 15 9 146Mean monthly sunshine hours 248 8 233 2 235 3 224 5 203 6 202 4 205 5 188 8 161 0 170 2 182 1 209 0 2 464 4Source NOAA 120 PenangClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 69 32 23 72 32 24 146 32 24 221 32 24 203 32 24 178 31 24 192 31 23 242 31 23 356 30 23 383 30 23 232 30 23 114 31 23 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource Bayan Lepas Regional Meteorological OfficeImperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 2 7 89 74 2 8 90 74 5 8 90 75 8 7 89 75 8 89 76 7 89 75 7 6 88 74 9 5 88 74 14 87 74 15 87 74 9 1 87 74 4 5 87 74 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesAs in the rest of Malaysia Penang has a tropical rainforest climate bordering on a tropical monsoon climate although the state does experience slightly drier conditions from December to February of the following year The climate is very much dictated by the surrounding sea and the prevailing wind system Penang s proximity with the island of Sumatra makes it susceptible to dust particles carried by wind from perennial but transient forest fires creating a phenomenon known as the Southeast Asian haze 121 The Penang Meteorological Office in Bayan Lepas is the primary weather forecast facility for northern Malaysia 122 Temperature day 30 32 CTemperature night 23 25 CAve annual rainfall 2670 mmRelative humidity 0 50 Urban and suburban areas Edit KedahPerakNortheast Penang IslandSouthwest Penang IslandNorth Seberang PeraiCentral Seberang PeraiSouth Seberang PeraiPenang StraitPenang StraitStrait of MalaccaStrait of Malacca PenangHill Int Airport Port George Town Batu Ferringhi Tanjung Tokong Tanjung Bungah Pulau Tikus Jelutong Gelugor Batu Lanchang Air Itam Paya Terubong Bayan Lepas Batu Maung Bayan Baru Teluk Kumbar Sungai Nibong Balik Pulau Teluk Bahang Butterworth Bukit Mertajam Batu Kawan Kepala Batas Alma Nibong Tebal Perai Seberang Jaya Juru MertajamHill Permatang Pauh Relau Sungai Jawi Simpang Ampat Tasek Gelugorclass notpageimage A map of Penang with the locations of the capital city of George Town and its suburbs and other major towns George Town Conurbation Edit PENANGKEDAHPERAKPenangIslandSeberangPeraiSungaiPetaniKulimBandarBaharuKerian George Townclass notpageimage Map of the Greater Penang Conurbation which encompasses Penang southern Kedah and northern Perak Main article Greater Penang Conurbation Penang forms the heart of the Greater Penang Conurbation Malaysia s second biggest conurbation Centred in George Town the metropolitan area encompasses the entire State of Penang southern Kedah and northern Perak As of 2010 update Greater Penang had nearly 2 5 million residents second only to Greater Kuala Lumpur Klang Valley 123 Greater Penang also generated a GDP of US 13 596 418 in 2010 making the conurbation the second biggest contributor of Malaysia s GDP after Greater Kuala Lumpur 124 Governance and law Edit The Residency the official residence of the governor of Penang Main article Government of PenangSee also Constitution of the State of Penang Penang being a former British crown colony is one of only four Malaysian states without hereditary monarchies The head of state of Penang is the Governor Malay Yang di Pertua Negeri who is appointed by the King of Malaysia Malay Yang di Pertuan Agong The present Governor of Penang Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak assumed office on 1 May 2021 In practice the Governor is a figurehead whose functions are chiefly symbolic and ceremonial 125 The Penang state government has its own executive council and legislature but they have relatively limited powers in comparison with those of the Malaysian federal government According to the Malaysian Federal Constitution the state may legislate on matters pertaining to Malay customs land agriculture and forestry local government civil and water works and state administration whereas matters that fall under the joint purview of both state and federal authorities include social welfare wildlife protection and national parks scholarships husbandry town planning drainage and irrigation and public health and health regulations 126 The Constitution of Penang codified in 1957 embodies the state s highest laws 127 Consisting of 42 articles the constitution pertains to the proceedings and powers of the state government Executive Edit The 68 storey Komtar Tower centre in George Town also houses the Office of the Chief Minister of Penang Main article Penang State Executive CouncilSee also Chief Minister of Penang The Penang State Executive Council is the executive authority of the Penang state government similar in function to the national Cabinet It is led by the Chief Minister who serves as the head of government in Penang To this day Penang remains the only Malaysian state where the position of the head of government has been continuously held by an ethnic Chinese since the nation s independence in 1957 91 The current Chief Minister of Penang is Chow Kon Yeow of the Democratic Action Party DAP who assumed office after the 2018 State Election 128 Following the 2008 State Election the Pakatan Rakyat coalition now Pakatan Harapan which at the time consisted of the DAP the People s Justice Party PKR and the Malaysian Islamic Party PAS formed the Penang state government with the head of government going to the former for being the single largest party in the state legislature Legislature Edit Main article Penang State Legislative AssemblySee also Constituencies of Penang The State Assembly Building in George Town where the Penang State Legislative Assembly convenes Political Party Alliance State Legislative Assembly Malaysian ParliamentPakatan Harapan 37 92 5 11 84 6 Barisan Nasional 2 5 0 2 15 4 PAS 1 2 5 0The unicameral 40 seat Penang State Legislative Assembly whose members are called State Assemblymen convenes at the neoclassical Penang State Assembly Building in George Town Penang practises the Westminster system whereby members of the Penang State Executive Council are appointed from amongst the elected State Assemblymen Moreover the dissolution of the Penang State Legislative Assembly typically conducted prior to a State Election requires the consent of the governor of Penang Following the 2018 State Election the Pakatan Harapan PH coalition commands a supermajority in the legislature by controlling 37 seats Out of the 37 PH seats 19 are retained by the Democratic Action Party DAP 14 by the People s Justice Party PKR two by the Malaysian United Indigenous Party Bersatu and two by the National Trust Party Amanah The state opposition is formed by the Barisan Nasional BN coalition which holds two seats and the Malaysian Islamic Party PAS which occupies one seat Amendments to Penang s Constitution require the support of two thirds of the Penang State Legislative Assembly 127 Affiliation Coalition Party Leader Status Seats2018 election Current Pakatan Harapan Chow Kon Yeow Government 37 33 Perikatan NasionalBarisan Nasional Muhamad Yusoff Mohd Noor Opposition 3 7Total 40 40Government majority 34 26Local governments Edit The City Hall in George Town serves as the headquarters of the Penang Island City Council There are currently two local governments in Penang The Penang Island City Council administers the entirety of Penang Island which includes the city of George Town It is made up of a mayor a city secretary and 24 councillors The Seberang Perai City Council is in charge of Seberang Perai It also consists of a mayor a city secretary and 24 councillors Both the mayor of Penang Island and Seberang Perai are appointed by the Penang state government for a two year term while the councillors are appointed for one year terms of office 129 The local councils are responsible among others for regulating traffic and parking maintaining cleanliness and drainage managing waste disposal issuing business licenses and overseeing public health citation needed Penang is also divided into five administrative districts two on Penang Island and three in Seberang Perai Each district is headed by a district officer The lands and district office in each district deals with land administration and revenue thus it differs from the local governments city council which oversee the provision and maintenance of urban infrastructure 130 Judiciary Edit The Penang High Court building in George Town The Malaysian legal system had its roots in 19th century George Town In 1807 a Royal Charter was granted to Penang which provided for the establishment of a Supreme Court The Supreme Court of Penang then sited at Fort Cornwallis was opened in 1808 131 Sir Edmond Stanley assumed office as the First Recorder of the Supreme Court in 1808 thus serving as the first Superior Court Judge in British Malaya 131 The legal establishment in Penang was progressively extended to the whole of Malaya by 1951 131 Today the Penang High Court in George Town sits at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of courts within Penang There are also four Magistrates Courts and two Sessions Courts scattered throughout the state 132 Foreign relations Edit A total of 24 countries have either established their consulates or appointed honorary consuls within Penang 133 The State of Penang has also ratified a sister state agreement with Japan s Kanagawa Prefecture and a friendship state agreement with China s Hainan Province 134 135 In addition George Town is twinned with eight sister cities and five friendship cities while Seberang Perai has four sister cities 136 137 Consulates Edit Australia 138 Austria 139 Bangladesh 140 Brazil 141 China 142 Denmark 143 France 144 Finland 145 Germany 146 Hungary 147 Indonesia 148 Japan 149 Nepal 150 Norway 151 Pakistan 152 Poland 153 Russia 154 Sweden 155 South Africa 156 Thailand 157 United Kingdom 158 Ukraine 159 Sister cities Edit Jakarta Indonesia Bangkok Thailand Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Singapore Adelaide AustraliaDemographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1970776 124 1980900 772 16 1 19911 064 166 18 1 20001 231 209 15 7 20101 526 324 24 0 20201 740 405 14 0 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Source 160 Source of interstate immigrants to Penang in 2016 161 Perak 28 22 Selangor 20 86 Kedah 19 63 Johor 10 43 Kuala Lumpur 10 43 Sarawak 3 68 Negeri Sembilan 3 68 Other states 3 07 Penang with an estimated population of 1 774 400 as of 2021 update has the 3rd highest population density of all Malaysian states excluding Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya at 1 774 4 km2 4 596 sq mi In addition Penang is one of the most urbanised Malaysian states with an urbanisation level of 90 8 as of 2015 update 162 Due to its vibrant economy Penang is also one of the major recipients of interstate migrants within Malaysia 163 Between 2015 and 2016 Penang achieved the highest migration effectiveness ratio among Malaysian states for every 100 Malaysians that migrated into and out of Penang the state s population increased by 58 persons 161 164 The bulk of the interstate immigrants came from Perak Selangor Kedah Johor and Kuala Lumpur 161 Penang s population is almost equally distributed between the island and the mainland Penang Island had a population of 722 384 as of 2010 update and a population density of 2 465 47 km2 6 385 5 sq mi 165 Seberang Perai had a population of 838 999 as of 2010 update and a population density of 1 117 18 km2 2 893 5 sq mi 165 The Greater Penang Conurbation which also covers parts of neighbouring Kedah and Perak is the second largest metropolitan area in the nation with almost 2 5 million inhabitants as of 2010 update citation needed Ethnicities Edit Ethnic composition of Penang 2020 4 Ethnicities Nationality PercentageChinese 41 3 Malay 41 Indians 8 9 Others 0 7 Non Malaysians 8 1 Penang has been regarded as a Chinese state because of their high population but in recent years the proportion of Bumiputeras within the state which include ethnic Malays and East Malaysian indigenous races has reached parity with that of the Chinese 166 2021 estimates from Malaysia s Department of Statistics showed that the Bumiputeras constituted more than 45 of Penang s population whereas the Chinese made up another 45 4 Ethnic Indians comprised nearly 10 of the state s populace citation needed Pinang Peranakan Mansion in George TownIn particular George Town remains a Chinese majority city with the Chinese making up over half of the city s population as of 2010 update 165 George Town s Chinese populace includes the Peranakan a hybrid ethnicity whose rich legacies can still be seen to this day in the form of distinctive architectures costumes and cuisine 167 168 169 Moreover the city is also renowned for its more cosmopolitan population which also comprises indigenous East Malaysians the Eurasians and the Siamese 7 166 170 Meanwhile the Malays have formed the plurality in Seberang Perai 165 In addition Penang is home to a sizeable expatriate population especially from Singapore Japan and various Asian countries as well as other Commonwealth nations Almost 9 of Penang s population consisted of foreigners reflecting the well established allure of Penang amongst expatriates 4 Most expatriates settle within the vicinity of George Town the city s northern suburbs such as Tanjung Tokong Tanjung Bungah and Batu Ferringhi are particularly popular 9 165 Languages Edit Major languages spoken in Penang are Malay English Hokkien Mandarin and Tamil In particular Penang is well known for its distinctive Hokkien language known as Penang Hokkien 171 Under British rule English was the official language in Penang The mushrooming of English and missionary schools throughout George Town contributed greatly to the widespread use of the language in the state 44 172 As in the rest of Malaysia Malay is currently the official language in Penang The Malays in Penang also use a variant of the Kedah Malay dialect with slight modifications made to the original dialect to suit the conditions of an urban cosmopolitan society 173 Tamil is the most widely spoken language amongst Penang s Indian community There are also other Indian languages spoken by minority Indians such as Telugu Malayalam and Punjabi who hailed from diverse ancestries in the Indian subcontinent 174 175 Meanwhile Penang s Chinese population uses a variety of Chinese dialects including Teochew Hakka and Cantonese Mandarin more commonly used by youths has been the medium of instruction in Chinese schools throughout the state 176 Penang Hokkien serves as the lingua franca among the various ethnic Chinese communities in Penang 177 Originally a variant of the Minnan language Penang Hokkien has absorbed numerous loanwords from Malay and English yet another legacy of the Peranakan culture It is spoken by many Penangites irrespective of race for communication purposes 171 178 179 Greater emphasis has been placed on preserving the language s relevance in the face of the increasing influence of Mandarin and English among the youth 180 181 Religions Edit Religions in Penang 2010 165 Religion PercentageIslam 44 63 Buddhism 35 63 Hinduism 8 70 Christianity 5 13 Chinese folk religion 4 55 Other 0 31 No religion 1 05 As with other Peninsular states Islam is the official religion of the State of Penang 127 Even so other religions are allowed to be practised within the state contributing to its cosmopolitan society Penang is unique among Malaysian states in that no single religion commands an absolute majority among the populace Built in 1818 St George s Church in George Town is the oldest Anglican church in Southeast Asia As of 2010 update Muslims constituted over 44 of Penang s population followed by Buddhists at nearly 36 and Hindus at almost 9 Notably smaller communities of Chinese Muslims and Indian Muslims have long existed within George Town while most Buddhists in Penang follow either Theravada Mahayana or Vajrayana traditions 182 183 184 A significant multiracial community of Christians of both Catholic and Protestant sects also exist in Penang consisting of ethnic Chinese Indians Eurasians East Malaysian migrants and expatriates 165 Meanwhile more than 10 of the state s Chinese populace adhere to Taoism and other Chinese folk religions citation needed One particular street in George Town exemplifies the harmonious coexistence of the various religions in Penang Along Pitt Street Muslim Taoist Hindu and Christian places of worship are situated just metres away from one another earning the street its nickname the Street of Harmony 185 186 This reflects Penang s diverse ethnic and socio cultural amalgamation There was once a tiny community of Jews in George Town who mainly resided along Jalan Zainal Abidin formerly Yahudi Road 55 The last known native Jew died in 2011 rendering the centuries old Jewish community in Penang effectively extinct 187 Economy EditEconomic indicatorsNominal GDP RM77 641 billion 2017 16 GDP per capita RM49 873 2017 16 Real GDP growth 5 3 2017 16 CPI inflation 1 4 February 2018 188 Unemployment 2 1 2017 16 Labour forceparticipation rate 67 5 2017 16 Government debt nil 2016 189 Economic sectors in Penang by GDP share 2017 16 Services 49 3 Manufacturing 44 8 Construction 2 6 Agriculture 2 0 Mining 0 1 In spite of its tiny size Penang regarded as the Silicon Valley of the East has one of the largest economies in Malaysia contributing as much as RM7 billion of the country s tax income in 2015 190 191 Penang has the highest Gross Domestic Product GDP per capita among Malaysian states With a GDP per capita of RM49 873 as of 2017 update Penang has also surpassed the World Bank s threshold to be considered a high income economy which was set at US 12 056 within the same year 16 192 Furthermore Penang consistently records one of the lowest unemployment rates within the nation 2 1 as of 2017 update 16 193 The state has experienced one of the largest reductions in Gini coefficient within Malaysia as well at 0 356 in 2016 193 Penang is the top destination within Malaysia for foreign investors the state held the largest share of Malaysia s foreign direct investment FDI in 2017 gaining nearly 2 5 of the nation s overall FDI 194 In addition George Town was ranked Malaysia s most attractive destination for commercial property investment by Knight Frank in 2016 surpassing even Kuala Lumpur 195 The bulk of Penang s FDI as of 2017 update originated from Switzerland Germany Hong Kong the Netherlands Ireland and Singapore 16 It is an attractive destination for FDI as it continued to receive investment during the Coronavirus disease 2019 when it received the second highest level of investment in Q1 2020 196 Penang s economic growth particularly since 2008 was described by Bloomberg as Malaysia s biggest economic success despite the federal government s focus on other states such as Johor and Sarawak 197 Penang s economic performance also allowed the Penang state government to completely eradicate the state s public debt by 2016 189 Manufacturing Edit Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone known as the Silicon Valley of the East 190 Since the 1970s manufacturing has formed the backbone of Penang s economy contributing 44 8 of the state s GDP as of 2017 update and attracting as many as 3 000 firms to set up operations within the state 16 198 Machinery and transport equipment accounted for 71 of Penang s total exports during the first nine months of 2014 199 The Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone now regarded as the Silicon Valley of the East is the main electronics manufacturing hub within Malaysia 12 13 190 Located at the southeastern corner of Penang Island the zone is home to several high tech multinational firms including Dell Intel AMD Motorola Agilent Renesas Osram Bosch Sony and Seagate and othersSeberang Perai has witnessed massive industrialisation as well with industrial estates and oil refineries being established in the late 20th century in areas like Mak Mandin and Perai 200 The major local firms currently operating in Perai including Malayan Sugar Malayawata Steel Southern Steel Harvik Rubber and Soon Soon Oilmills have been joined by multinational companies such as Mattel Pensonic Hitachi Mitsuoka Chevron and Honeywell Aerospace 200 In recent years Batu Kawan has also been rapidly industrialised with a number of international firms such as Boston Scientific and Bose Corporation setting up manufacturing plants in the town 201 Aside from electronics and engineering manufacturing Penang is Malaysia s main jewellery finishing hub contributing 85 of the nation s gold and jewellery exports as of 2016 update 202 Penang s gold and jewellery industry is relatively well established dating back to the founding of the Penang Goldsmith Association in 1832 202 Jewellery from Penang is exported to over 20 foreign markets including Singapore Hong Kong Japan Canada and the United States 202 Services Edit Design Village in Batu Kawan is the largest outlet mall in Malaysia The services sector has overtaken the manufacturing sector as the largest economic sector in Penang with the former accounting for 49 3 of Penang s GDP as of 2017 update 16 In addition almost 3 5 of Penang s workforce are employed in services related industries which include retail accommodation medical tourism and food and beverages F amp B sub sectors 199 Medical tourism has emerged as an integral component of Penang s services sector George Town in particular has become the centre of medical tourism within Malaysia attracting approximately half of the nation s medical tourist arrivals in 2013 and generating about 70 of the country s medical tourism revenue 203 204 Shophouses in George Town s Little India sell Indian fabrics and textile as well as Hindu prayer paraphernalia Penang also has a vibrant retail sub sector which employs as many as 24 of Penang s workforce 199 As the main shopping destination in northern Malaysia Penang is home to several shopping malls such as Gurney Plaza Gurney Paragon 1st Avenue Mall Straits Quay Queensbay Mall and Design Village and other shopping centre in Mainland and Island Penang While shopping malls now dominate the retail scene centuries old shophouses are still operating alongside George Town s flea markets and wet markets all of which cater more to local products including spices nutmegs and tau sar pneah a famous Penang delicacy 205 206 Due to the efforts of the Penang state government to promote the state as a shared services and outsourcing SSO hub Penang has attracted the second largest share of investments for Global Business Services GBS within Malaysia after Kuala Lumpur 198 207 Penang s SSO industry which includes international corporations such as AirAsia Citigroup Jabil and Dell has provided more than 8 000 high income jobs and contributed RM12 79 billion of revenue in 2013 198 208 In addition to these a startup community has been growing within Penang including the likes of Piktochart and DeliverEat 12 Attracted by the cheaper living costs and the presence of several multinational technology firms Penang s startups are also being actively encouraged by the public and private sectors with initiatives to encourage entrepreneurship and promote the Internet of Things IoT 209 210 Furthermore George Town is Malaysia s second most popular centre for meetings incentives conferences and exhibitions MICE after Kuala Lumpur 211 In 2017 Penang hosted 2 511 business events with an estimated economic impact of RM1 002 billion 212 Among the major MICE venues within Penang are the SPICE Arena Straits Quay and Prangin Mall 213 214 Commerce Edit Standard Chartered and HSBC at Beach Street George Town s main Central Business District George Town was formerly the financial centre of British Malaya The first international bank to open a branch in George Town and by extension Malaysia was Standard Chartered in 1875 55 63 This was followed by HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland in 1885 and 1888 respectively 55 63 To this day George Town still serves as the financial centre of northern Malaysia The city contains various Malaysian and international banks including Standard Chartered HSBC Citibank UOB OCBC Bank of China and Bank Negara Malaysia Most of the international banks still retain their offices at Beach Street which also serves as the city s main Central Business District citation needed Since the 1990s Northam Road along with Gurney Drive has also emerged as the George Town s second Central Business District 215 Northam Road in particular hosts an array of financial services including the Malaysian Employees Provident Fund as well as accounting auditing and insurance offices 216 217 Finance and its related activities such as insurance auditing and real estate transactions accounted for more than 8 of Penang s Gross Domestic Product GDP as of 2017 update 16 Tourism Edit See also International rankings of Penang and List of tourist attractions in Penang A beach at Batu Ferringhi Penang has always been one of the most popular tourist destinations in Malaysia Throughout history the state welcomed some of the most influential personalities including W Somerset Maugham Rudyard Kipling Lee Kuan Yew Queen Elizabeth II and King Charles III 218 219 220 Penang is known for its rich heritage and architecture its vibrant multicultural society a wide range of modern entertainment and retail choices natural features such as beaches and hills and the world famous Penang cuisine 221 Unlike other Malaysian states Penang does not rely only on air transportation for tourist arrivals Aside from the Penang International Airport Swettenham Pier conveniently located within the heart of George Town has emerged as one of the major tourist entry points into the state As of 2017 update Penang attracted nearly 8 6 million tourists with the airport posting a record 7 2 million passenger arrivals and the pier registering another 1 35 million tourist arrivals 222 223 Within the same year Penang which contributed close to RM3 9 million of tourism tax revenue was Malaysia s third largest tourism tax contributor after Kuala Lumpur and Sabah 224 Penang Port worker working on the control tower overseeing North Butterworth Container Terminal NBCT In recent years George Town has received numerous international accolades The city has been listed by several publications including the Lonely Planet CNN Forbes and Time as one of Asia s top travel destinations 225 226 227 228 229 These are in addition to George Town s reputation as a gastronomic haven with the CNN placing George Town as one of Asia s best street food cities 230 Entrepot trade and shipping Edit Formerly a vital British entrepot Penang s maritime trade has greatly declined due to the loss of George Town s free port status in 1969 and the concurrent development of Port Klang near the federal capital Kuala Lumpur 73 In spite of this the Port of Penang remains the main harbour within northern Malaysia The Port of Penang handled more than 1 52 million TEUs of cargo in 2017 making it the third busiest seaport by volume in the country 231 The Port s strategic location enabled it to service not just northern Malaysia but also southern Thailand 231 Culture EditMain article Culture of Penang Public Holidays in Penang Holiday DateNew Year s Day 1 JanThaipusam variableChinese New Year 2 days in Jan FebLabour Day 1 MayWesak Day variableKing s Birthday 1st Sat of JunGeorge Town World Heritage City Day 7 JulGovernor s Birthday 2nd Sat of JulRevelation of the Koran Day variableAidilfitri 2 days variable National Day 31 AugMalaysia Day 16 SepHari Raya Haji variableAwal Muharram variableDeepavali variableProphet Muhammad s Birthday variableChristmas 25 DecFestivals Edit Penang s diverse cosmopolitan society means that there are a great many celebrations and festivities in any given year The major cultural and religious festivities in the state include but not limited to the Chinese New Year Eid ul Fitri Deepavali Thaipusam Vaisakhi Christmas Vesak Day and Songkran 232 233 Expatriates residing in Penang have also introduced a host of other celebrations Bon Odori is celebrated yearly by the Japanese in George Town while St Patrick s Day and Oktoberfest traditionally celebrated by the Irish and the Germans respectively have also been gaining popularity amongst the locals 234 235 236 Moreover Penang hosts several major festivals in any given year The George Town Festival first held in 2010 has evolved into one of the largest arts events in Southeast Asia while the Penang Hot Air Balloon Fiesta attracts close to 200 000 visitors from all over the world 237 238 Performance arts Edit A Chingay troupe in George Town George Town is the birthplace of a unique form of the Chingay procession Introduced in 1919 Penang s variant of Chingay includes the act of balancing gigantic flags on one s forehead or hands 239 A yearly Chingay parade is held in the city every December though Chingay performances are also a common feature of Chinese festivities and major state celebrations in Penang 239 Bangsawan which was also developed in Penang is a type of Malay theatre that incorporates Indian Western Islamic Chinese and Indonesian influences 240 241 Boria is also indigenous to Penang featuring singing accompanied by violin maracas and tabla 242 Aside from these the state has orchestras based in George Town the Penang Philharmonic Orchestra Penang Symphony Orchestra as well as several chamber and musical organisations including the 243 award winning social enterprise The Rondo Production 244 Dewan Sri Pinang and Penangpac within Straits Quay are two of the major performing venues in the city citation needed Street art Edit Ernest Zacharevic s Children on a Bicycle in George Town In 2012 as part of the George Town Festival Lithuanian artist Ernest Zacharevic created a series of 6 wall paintings depicting local culture inhabitants and lifestyles 245 In addition several wrought iron caricatures have been installed within George Town with each caricature detailing the city s history and the daily lives of its inhabitants 246 In recent years the street art scene has also begun to grow out of the city in areas such as Balik Pulau and Butterworth 247 248 In addition art exhibitions are frequently held at cultural centres within George Town such as the Hin Bus Depot 249 Museums Edit The Penang State Museum and Art Gallery in George Town is the state s primary public museum it houses relics photographs maps and other artefacts that document the history and culture of Penang 250 Other museums in the city focus on religious and cultural aspects as well as famous personalities including the Penang Islamic Museum Sun Yat sen Museum Batik Painting Museum and Universiti Sains Malaysia Museum and Gallery 251 Besides that the birthplace of Malaysia s legendary singer actor P Ramlee has been restored and turned into a museum 252 In recent years private run museums have sprung up throughout the city such as the Camera Museum and the Penang Toy Museum A handful of newer 3D visual and interactive museums have also been established such as the Made in Penang Interactive Museum and the Penang Time Tunnel 253 254 Architecture Edit Wat Chaiyamangkalaram is a Thai Buddhist temple at Pulau Tikus Main article Architecture of PenangSee also List of tallest buildings in George Town PenangPenang is home to a relatively wide variety of architectures both historical and modern The historical core of George Town has been inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to its unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia 99 Skyscrapers at Gurney Drive in George Town Fort Cornwallis in George Town was the first structure built by the British in Penang The city s UNESCO World Heritage Site also covers several important landmarks including the City Hall the Penang High Court St George s Church the Eastern amp Oriental Hotel and the Central Business District at Beach Street Aside from European architecture a huge assortment of Asian architectural styles also exists throughout George Town exemplified by buildings like the Kong Hock Keong Temple Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion the Pinang Peranakan Mansion Khoo Kongsi Snake Temple Kapitan Keling Mosque and Sri Mahamariamman Temple Meanwhile the Siamese and the Burmese have also left a visible impact on certain landmarks within the city such as Wat Chaiyamangkalaram Dhammikarama Burmese Temple and Kek Lok Si citation needed Aside from the colonial era architecture Penang Island contains most of the skyscrapers within Penang with the state s tallest buildings all located within the island The tallest skyscrapers in George Town and by extension Penang include the Komtar Tower Setia V Gurney Paragon and Arte S citation needed Cuisine Edit Main article Penang cuisine A bowl of Penang Hokkien mee George Town popularly regarded as the food capital of Malaysia is renowned for its good and varied cuisine which incorporates Malay Chinese Indian Peranakan Thai and European influences 255 The city has been recognised by various publications such as Time Magazine CNN and Lonely Planet as one of the Asian cities with the best street cuisine 230 256 257 According to Time Magazine in 2004 nowhere else can such great tasting food be so cheap whilst Robin Barton of the Lonely Planet described George Town as the culinary epicentre of the many cultures that arrived after it was set up as a trading port in 1786 from Malays to Indians Acehenese to Chinese Burmese to Thais 256 257 The various street dishes and delicacies of Penang include but not limited to asam laksa Nasi Lemuni char kway teow curry mee Hokkien mee nasi kandar oh chien fried oyster omelette lor bak rojak pasembur chendol ais kacang and tau sar pneah bean paste biscuit 258 206 In art and literature Edit In her poetical illustration Pulo Penang to a drawing by Samuel Austin Letitia Elizabeth Landon compares the beauties of the island with those of the speaker s beloved 259 Education EditMain article Education in PenangSee also List of schools in Penang Universiti Sains Malaysia Penang s premier public universityPenang s literacy rate stood at 98 2 as of 2010 update whilst specifically the literacy rate of Penang s youth between 15 and 24 years of age rose to 99 5 in 2014 after Selangor and Kuala Lumpur 260 261 Correspondingly Penang has the third highest Human Development Index within Malaysia 15 As of 2017 update Penang including both the mainland and the island contains a total of 48 tertiary institutions including universities colleges medical colleges industrial training institutes and teaching schools 12 international schools 110 secondary schools 271 primary schools and 602 kindergartens 262 263 264 Penang Free School founded in 1816 is the oldest English school in Southeast Asia In particular George Town is home to some of Malaysia s oldest schools Established in 1816 Penang Free School is the oldest English school in Southeast Asia while numerous public schools originally founded during the colonial era in Penang include St Xavier s Institution St George s Girls School and Methodist Boys School In addition the city is a pioneer in Chinese education within the region following the establishment of Chung Hwa Confucian High School in 1904 several prominent Chinese schools were built such as Chung Ling High School Penang Chinese Girls High School Heng Ee High School Jit Sin High School and Phor Tay High School citation needed As a popular destination for expatriates George Town contains a number of international schools as well such as Uplands International School Dalat International School Tenby International School and Hua Xia International School 265 These schools offer primary and secondary education up to A Levels and International Baccalaureate 265 A few of these schools such as Penang Japanese School and Chinese Taipei School cater to expatriates of specific nationalities 263 266 Universiti Sains Malaysia USM is the premier public university within Penang Established in 1969 as Malaysia s second university it was originally named Universiti Pulau Pinang University of Penang 267 The main campus is situated at Gelugor while an engineering campus has been built in Nibong Tebal As of 2018 update it was ranked 207th in the QS World University Rankings the fourth highest within the country 268 RCSI amp UCD Malaysia Campus is a medical university in George Town with teaching hospitals in Penang and Perak Founded as a private medical school in 1996 RUMC gained university status in 2018 and is the only Irish university branch campus in Malaysia Graduates of RUMC are conferred degrees awarded and recognised by the National University of Ireland Other tertiary institutions within Penang include Wawasan Open University Han Chiang University College of Communication DISTED College Sentral College SEGi College KDU College INTI International College Equator Academy of Arts Penang Skills and Development Centre and Lam Wah Ee Nursing College 262 Aside from these institutions RECSAM a research and training facility aimed at the enhancement of the science and mathematics education in Southeast Asia is sited within Penang as well The state also contains 107 libraries including the Penang State Library and the Penang Digital Library 269 The latter launched by the Penang state government in 2016 is the first digital library in Malaysia 270 Health care Edit Penang General Hospital in George Town Health care in Penang is adequately provided by the numerous public and private hospitals throughout the state These hospitals have also helped Penang to emerge as the centre of Medical tourism in Malaysia The Penang General Hospital administered and funded by the Malaysian Ministry of Health is the main tertiary referral hospital within northern Malaysia It is supported by five other public hospitals within Penang all of which also come under the administration of the country s Ministry of Health 271 Aside from public hospitals Penang is home to 15 private hospitals including Penang Adventist Hospital Lam Wah Ee Hospital Mount Miriam Cancer Hospital Gleneagles Medical Centre Island Hospital Loh Guan Lye Specialists Centre and Pantai Hospital 272 These hospitals cater not only to the local population but also to patients from other states and foreign health tourists 204 273 Infant mortality rate within Penang dropped by 85 between 1970 and 2000 to 5 7 per 1 000 live births while neonatal mortality rate also decreased by 84 7 within this corresponding period to 4 1 per 1 000 live births 92 As of 2017 update Penang s life expectancy at birth stood at 72 5 years for men and 77 7 years for women 16 Media EditGeorge Town was once the nucleus of Malaysia s print press The nation s first newspaper was founded in the city the Prince of Wales Island Gazette in 1806 274 The Star currently one of Malaysia s top dailies has its origins as a regional newspaper founded in George Town in the 1970s while the country s oldest Chinese newspaper Kwong Wah Yit Poh was also established in the city in 1910 274 In 2011 the then Chief Minister of Penang Lim Guan Eng launched the Penang edition of Time Out 275 This version of the international listings magazine is published in three versions a yearly guide a website and a mobile app 276 The Penang state government also publishes its own multi lingual newspaper Buletin Mutiara which is distributed for free every fortnight 277 The Penang centric newspaper focuses on the current issues within Penang 277 Film and television Edit Due to its well preserved colonial era cityscape a number of movies have been filmed within George Town such as Crazy Rich Asians Anna and the King Lust Caution and You Mean the World to Me the latter of which is the first movie to be filmed entirely in Penang Hokkien 278 Singaporean drama series The Little Nyonya and The Journey Tumultuous Times were also filmed within the city s UNESCO World Heritage Site In addition the city became one of the pit stops of The Amazing Race 16 The Amazing Race Asia 4 and The Amazing Race Asia 5 citation needed Radio broadcasting Edit The history of Penang radio broadcasting began in 1925 when the Penang Wireless Association was established With the issuance of the first shortwave radio broadcast licence on 24 August 1934 Station ZHJ Malaya s first radio station was launched and went on the air from Khoo Sian Ewe s house at Perak Road It was transmitted via 493 meter waves from 7 p m to 10 p m everyday in Malay English Chinese Hokkien and Tamil During the Japanese occupation period from 19 December 1941 until 2 September 1945 the Imperial Army used Penang Chinese Recreation Club at Burmah Road in George Town as radio station to transmit propaganda and renamed the station as Penang Hoso Kyoku Penang Broadcasting Corporation Following the surrender of the Japanese Army the British came back into power and reclaimed the station and the building which later became the state branch of Radio Malaya on 1 April 1946 While news programmes were produced in Singapore the state branch in Penang produces regional programmings for the radio station 279 Radio Malaya Penang moved its headquarters from Chinese Recreational Club to United Engineers Building at Bishop Street in 1948 and established its temporary studio in a temporary office building in Gelugor which moved to Sepoy Lines Road in 1955 In 1961 it moved into its present building at Burmah Road which was officially opened by Governor Raja Uda on 30 October 1965 Penang state radio station became part of the Radio Malaysia network on 16 September 1963 when Malaysia was established and the larger Radio Televisyen Malaysia RTM on 11 October 1969 following the merger of the nation s Radio and Television operations Today RTM Penang state branch operates one radio channel Mutiara FM 280 Transportation EditMain article Transport in Penang Land Edit See also List of streets in George Town Penang The Second Penang Bridge 24 km long 15 mi is the longest bridge in Southeast Asia Penang Island is connected to the mainland by two bridges The 13 5 km 8 4 mi Penang Bridge completed in 1985 spans the Penang Strait between Gelugor on the island and Perai on the mainland Spanning 24 km 15 mi the Second Penang Bridge is located further south linking Batu Maung on the island to Batu Kawan on the mainland The latter was opened to the public in 2014 and is currently the second longest bridge in Southeast Asia citation needed The North South Expressway a 966 km long 600 mi expressway along the western part of Peninsular Malaysia passes through Seberang Perai In addition about 34 9 km 21 7 mi of the Malayan Railway s West Coast Line also lies within Seberang Perai with the Butterworth railway station serving as the main railway station within northern Malaysia Aside from the regular Malayan Railway services the Butterworth railway station is the southernmost terminus of the State Railway of Thailand s Southern Line and the International Express from Bangkok Notably the train station is also one of the main stops of the Eastern and Oriental Express service between Bangkok and Singapore citation needed On Penang Island the Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway is a vital coastal highway that runs along the island s eastern seaboard connecting George Town with the Penang Bridge the Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone the Penang International Airport and the Second Penang Bridge The Federal Route 6 is a pan island trunk road while the two major ring roads within George Town are the George Town Inner Ring Road and the Penang Middle Ring Road In Seberang Perai the major ring roads and expressways include the Butterworth Outer Ring Road BORR and the Butterworth Kulim Expressway citation needed Public transportation Edit See also List of bus routes in Penang Cycling in Penang Island and Trolleybuses in George Town Penang A trishaw known locally as beca on a street in George Town Under British rule George Town served as a pioneer in public transportation within British Malaya The city s first tram system originally powered by steam began operations in the 1880s 281 282 Although the tram lines have since been disused another colonial legacy the trishaw still plies the city s streets albeit catering primarily for tourists 283 The Penang Hill Railway Malaysia s only funicular railway systemBuses now form the backbone of public transportation within Penang Public bus services are mainly provided by Rapid Penang which operates 56 routes within Greater Penang including interstate routes into Kedah and Perak Among the routes are free of charge transit services such as the Central Area Transit the Congestion Alleviation Transport and the Pulau Tikus Loop 284 In addition the Hop On Hop Off bus service which utilises open topped double decker buses has been introduced for tourists within George Town 285 Meanwhile the only rail based transportation system within Penang is the Penang Hill Railway a funicular railway to the peak of Penang Hill Opened in 1923 it is also the sole funicular railway system in Malaysia citation needed The Penang state government has recently drawn up plans to bring in more rail based transport systems throughout Penang as part of the Penang Transport Master Plan 94 126 What are purposed are a Light Rail Transit line between George Town and Bayan Lepas two monorail lines that connect George Town with Air Itam Paya Terubong and Tanjung Tokong 286 287 a tram line limited to within George Town s UNESCO World Heritage Site 288 and a cross strait cable car line linking Komtar in George Town and Penang Sentral in Butterworth 289 Currently the Light Rapid Transit line between George Town and the Penang International Airport also known as the Bayan Lepas LRT line is being allocated the top priority by the Penang state government 290 291 292 In April 2019 the LRT project was received conditional approval from the federal government Construction was expected to commence in June 2020 293 Efforts are also being undertaken to promote pedestrianisation and the use of bicycles as an environmentally friendly mode of transportation 294 295 Dedicated cycling lanes have been paved throughout the city and in 2016 George Town became the first Malaysian city to operate a public bicycle sharing service with the inauguration of LinkBike 296 297 298 The Penang Sentral in Butterworth is the main rapid transit hub within Penang Penang Sentral s location adjacent to the Sultan Abdul Halim Ferry Terminal and the Butterworth railway station allows it to function as a termini for public and interstate buses ferry and train services citation needed Air Edit Main article Penang International Airport View of Penang International Airport and the Second Penang Bridge in 2017 Penang International Airport PEN is located in Bayan Lepas at the southeast of Penang Island 16 km 9 9 mi south of George Town It serves as the main airport for northern Malaysia with frequent links to major regional cities such as Kuala Lumpur Singapore Bangkok Jakarta Ho Chi Minh City Taipei Hong Kong Guangzhou and Doha Penang International Airport is Malaysia s second busiest in terms of cargo traffic and recorded the third highest passenger traffic of all Malaysian airports as of 2013 update 299 The airport is also a hub for two Malaysian low cost carriers AirAsia and Firefly 300 Among the international carriers that operate out of the airport are Scoot Jetstar Asia Airways China Airlines China Southern Airlines Thai Smile and Qatar Airways citation needed Sea Edit Main article Port of PenangSee also Swettenham Pier and Rapid Ferry The Port of Penang with George Town in the background as seen from Butterworth A Rapid Ferry crossing the Penang Strait towards George Town The Port of Penang the main harbour in northern Malaysia is operated by the Penang Port Commission The Port consists of seven facilities with six of them in Butterworth and Perai on the mainland including the North Butterworth Container Terminal Butterworth Deep Water Wharves and the Prai Bulk Cargo Terminal The Port of Penang the third busiest seaport in Malaysia handled more than 1 52 million TEUs of cargo in 2017 231 Meanwhile Swettenham Pier situated in the heart of George Town is the sole Port facility on Penang Island The pier now accommodates cruise ships making it one of the major entry points into Penang As of 2017 update Swettenham Pier recorded 1 35 million tourist arrivals thereby surpassing Port Klang as the busiest cruise shipping terminal in Malaysia the pier has also attracted some of the world s largest cruise liners such as the RMS Queen Mary 2 301 302 223 The pier also serves as a homeport for regional based cruise ships 301 Occasionally the Port of Penang hosts warships as well including those from Singapore the United States and most recently China 303 304 305 The cross strait Rapid Ferry service connects George Town and Butterworth and was formerly the only transportation link between Penang Island and the mainland until the completion of the Penang Bridge in 1985 At the time of writing six ferries ply the Penang Strait between George Town and Butterworth daily 306 Sports Edit The City Stadium in George Town Penang has a relatively well developed sporting infrastructure The Penang State Stadium in Batu Kawan is the main stadium within the state whereas the City Stadium in George Town is the sole stadium within the city Both stadia function as the home ground of the Penang FA citation needed The SPICE Arena in Bayan Baru is another major sporting venue within Penang consisting of an indoor arena and an aquatics centre 307 The SPICE Arena is also one of the major venues in Penang for meetings incentives conferences and exhibitions MICE 213 The Nicol David International Squash Centre at Gelugor is one of the major squash training facilities in Malaysia and was reportedly where squash legend Nicol David first trained during her childhood years 308 George Town is also home to Malaysia s oldest equestrian centre the Penang Turf Club which was established in 1864 In addition Penang contains a total of three golf courses one of which is on Penang Island 309 The major annual sporting events within Penang include the Penang International Dragon Boat Festival and the Penang Bridge International Marathon The former held every December in Teluk Bahang is a dragon boat race that has attracted several international teams including those from Singapore Thailand Brunei China South Korea and Australia 310 The latter is a marathon which includes the Penang Bridge as its route Held every November it attracted a record 35 000 participants from 85 countries in 2017 311 Among the national and international sporting events that were hosted within Penang include the 2000 Sukma Games the 2001 Southeast Asian Games and the 2013 Women s World Open Squash Championship Penang has also hosted the 2018 Asia Pacific Masters Games the first edition of a Masters Games within Asia 312 Utilities EditWater supply which comes under the jurisdiction of the Penang state government is wholly managed by the Penang Water Supply Corporation PBAPP The state enjoys the lowest domestic water tariff in Malaysia at RM0 32 per 1 000 litres 313 Penang s water supply is obtained from several sources namely the Air Itam Dam Teluk Bahang Dam Mengkuang Dam Bukit Panchor Dam Berapit Dam Cherok Tok Kun Dam the Guillemard Reservoir the Penang Botanic Gardens and the Muda River 314 The latter which forms Penang s northern border with Kedah provides up to 80 of Penang s water supply 315 In 1904 George Town became the first city within British Malaya to be supplied with electricity upon the completion of a hydroelectric scheme 316 Currently electricity for industrial and domestic consumption is provided by Tenaga Nasional Berhad TNB which operates a 398MW oil powered power plant at Gelugor 317 As of 2014 update Penang had a recorded broadband penetration rate of 80 3 the highest among all Malaysian states 318 Penang is also the first Malaysian state to provide its citizens with free internet connection 319 Penang Free Wi Fi launched by the Penang state government in 2008 aims to boost internet penetration throughout Penang and is provided free of charge 319 Its bandwidth speeds within the George Town city centre were increased to 3 Mbit s while 1 560 hotspots have been installed throughout the state 320 See also Edit Malaysia portalInternational rankings of PenangReferences Edit a b Laporan Kiraan Permulaan 2010 Jabatan Perangkaan Malaysia p 27 Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2011 Human Development Reports hdr undp org Brunei is Home to Southeast Asia s Longest Oversea Bridge Soon Seasia co Good News from Southeast Asia Retrieved 18 February 2019 a b c d Current Population Estimates Malaysia 2018 Department of Statistics Malaysia July 2018 Massive projects in place to alleviate urbanisation in Penang 29 October 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Population Distribution by Local Authority Areas and Mukims 2010 page 1 amp 8 PDF Department of Statistics Malaysia Archived from the original PDF on 5 February 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2013 a b Julia Tan November 2014 The last Siamese village of Penang Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2017 The History of Penang Eurasians Penang Tourism 2 December 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2017 a b Tanjung Bungah in Numbers Penang Monthly March 2017 Archived from the original on 11 March 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2017 Opalyn Mok 19 August 2017 Has Mandarin replaced Hokkien in Penang Malay Mail a b c Christie Clive 1998 A Modern History of Southeast Asia Decolonization Nationalism and Separatism I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 354 5 a b c Lianne Chia 26 January 2017 A Silicon Valley of the East Penang s thriving start up community Channel NewsAsia Archived from the original on 29 January 2018 Retrieved 27 May 2017 a b Roughneen Simon 15 July 2015 Styling itself as the Silicon Valley of the East Nikkei Asian Review Southeast Asian tech hubs race to become the next Silicon Valley Nikkei Asian Review Nikkei Asian Review 24 October 2018 Retrieved 9 February 2019 a b Idris Imran About Penang Penang International Halal Expo Conference Archived from the original on 16 December 2017 Retrieved 16 December 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n My Local Stats Penang 2017 Department of Statistics Malaysia July 2018 Gardner Simon 2011 Heritage Trees of Penang Penang Areca Books ISBN 978 967 57190 6 6 Penang pearl of the Orient in conservation struggle The Daily Telegraph 8 October 2005 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Pulau Pinang Pulau Mutiara Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia 2000 Archived from the original on 9 April 2008 Retrieved 14 July 2008 Penang Info Penang State Government Archived from the original on 2 March 2018 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Clement Liang Penang s Disappearing Thai Heritage Penang Heritage Trust pinng phneruxngthinaephndinithy odys dr exnk ehlathrrmthsn Press release in Thai Komchadluek Archived from the original on 29 March 2013 Retrieved 13 January 2013 Ooi Kee Beng September 2012 Penang before Francis Light as the English saw it in 1905 Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 3 December 2019 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Betel Nut Island Retrieved 13 September 2014 a b Prehistoric human skeleton found at Penang neolithic site TODAY 19 April 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2017 a b Penang to seek Unesco heritage status for Guar Kepah neolithic site The Star 26 April 2017 Freedman Leonard Rousham Emily 1996 Perspectives In Human Biology Humans In The Australasian Region World Scientific ISBN 9789814497862 Habibu Sira 9 December 2013 Lembah Bujang covers a larger area The Star Sir James Lancaster English merchant Britannica Online Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 13 September 2014 Dr A Murad Merican 12 October 2006 Sejarah dari sudut Timur Utusan Melayu M Bhd Archived from the original on 16 January 2014 Retrieved 14 January 2014 a b c d e f g h The Founding of Penang www sabrizain org Retrieved 25 May 2017 a b c History of Penang Visit Penang 2008 Archived from the original on 2 January 2016 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Swettenham Frank Athelstane 1850 1946 Map to illustrate the Siamese question W amp A K Johnston Limited University of Michigan Library Retrieved 9 January 2016 a b Plan Of Prince Of Wales Island And Province Wellesley www nas gov sg Retrieved 2 September 2017 Map of Prince of Wales Island or Pulo Penang and Province www nas gov sg Retrieved 2 September 2017 a b Map Of Prince Of Wales Island And Province Wellesley www nas gov sg Retrieved 2 September 2017 a b Documents Archive Empire in Asia www fas nus edu sg Retrieved 1 May 2017 a b c d e Lewis Su Lin 2016 Cities in Motion Urban Life and Cosmopolitanism in Southeast Asia 1920 1940 United Kingdom Cambridge University ISBN 9781107108332 a b c Jenkins Gwynn 2008 Contested Space Cultural Heritage and Identity Reconstructions Conservation Strategies Within a Developing Asian City LIT Verlag Munster ISBN 9783825813666 Zabidi Nor Diana 11 August 2014 Fort Cornwallis 228th Anniversary Celebration Penang State Government in Malay Archived from the original on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 15 May 2017 a b Hockton Keith 2012 Penang An Inside Guide to Its Historic Homes Buildings Monuments and Parks Petaling Jaya MPH Group ISBN 978 967 415 303 8 Ooi Keat Gin 2010 The A to Z of Malaysia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780810876415 Everett Heath John 2017 The Concise Dictionary of World Place Names Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192556462 a b Ooi Keat Gin 2015 Disparate Identities Penang from a Historical Perspective 1780 1941 PDF Kajian Malaysia 33 Supp 2 27 52 ISSN 0127 4082 Retrieved 7 March 2023 Light Francis The Light Letters AIM25 Part of The Malay Documents now held by School of Oriental and African Studies Retrieved 29 October 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Blackledge J P 6 July 1950 Province Wellesley Looks Back The Singapore Free Press Singapore p 2 Retrieved 18 April 2021 History Seberang Perai City Council Retrieved 1 May 2017 Marcus Langdon 2013 Penang The Fourth Presidency of India 1805 1830 Volume One Ships Men and Mansions Areca Books pp 219 222 Unconstitutional to wipe Penang off Malaysia s map Kedah told Malay Mail 11 February 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Kedah MB said to be asking RM100m a year for lease of Penang www thesundaily my Retrieved 27 October 2021 1786 Kedah Penang lease agreement a myth says historian The Vibes 28 October 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 After MB s leased remark historical group s Kedah arm renews calls for review of the past The Vibes 24 September 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Ashley Jackson November 2013 Buildings of Empire OUP Oxford pp 7 ISBN 978 0 19 958938 8 Ooi Kee Beng 2014 When Penang Became A Spice Island Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 29 May 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2017 a b c d Khoo Su Nin 2007 Streets of George Town Penang Penang Areca Books ISBN 978 983 9886 00 9 Nordin Hussin Malaysian Journal of Society and Space PDF Charting the Early History of Penang Trading Networks and Its Connections with the New ASEAN Growth Triangle Malaysia Indonesia Thailand Nordin Hussin 1 December 2005 Networks of Malay Merchants and the Rise of Penang as a Regional Trading Centre Southeast Asian Studies 43 3 215 237 ISSN 0563 8682 Koay Su Lin Steven Sim 2014 A history of local elections in Penang Part I Democracy Comes Early Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2017 Singapore becomes admin centre of the Straits Settlements Singapore History eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 15 October 2016 a b c Turnbull C M The Penang Story Penang s Changing Role in the Straits Settlements 1826 1946 Khoo Salma Nasution 2009 Penang and Its Region The Story of an Asian Entrepot Singapore National University of Singapore ISBN 978 9971 69 423 4 Wong Yee Tuan 2015 Penang Chinese Commerce in the 19th Century The Rise and Fall of the Big Five Singapore ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute ISBN 978 981 4515 02 3 a b c d e Langdon Marcus 2014 George Town s Historic Commercial and Civic Precincts Penang George Town World Heritage Incorporated Wong Chun Wai 30 March 2013 Transformation of Bayan Lepas into free trade area does not diminish its attractions The Star Archived from the original on 4 March 2018 Retrieved 4 March 2018 Opalyn Mok 1 October 2017 Take a walk around old Butterworth to discover the town s heritage Malay Mail Nicholas Chan June 2015 The history of Bukit Mertajam Part I From agrarian village to economic hub Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 22 September 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2018 Wong Chun Wai 20 April 2013 A cowboy town that was old Penang The Star a b Ooi Giok Ling 2 September 1991 British Colonial Health Care Development and the Persistence of Ethnic Medicine in Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore National University of Singapore Formation of the Straits Settlements Singapore History eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 25 May 2017 Singapore National Library Board Straits Settlements Infopedia eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 25 May 2017 Asian Studies Government Legislation for Chinese Secret Societies in the Straits Settlements in the Late 19th Century Francis Ric amp Ganley Colin Penang trams trolleybuses amp railways municipal transport history 1880s 1963 Areca Books Penang 2006 a b c d e f Daniel Goh P S 2014 Between History and Heritage Post Colonialism Globalisation and the Remaking of Malacca Penang and Singapore PDF Trans Regional and National Studies of Southeast Asia SUN YAT SEN SUN YAT SEN MUSEUM sunyatsenpenang com Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 25 May 2017 Singapore National Library Board Sun Yat Sen Infopedia eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 25 May 2017 Bangkok Barbara Crossette BARBARA CROSSETTE is chief of The Times bureau in 30 June 1985 Correspondent s Choice on Penang Island a Legend Lives The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 10 December 2017 Mucke Hellmuth von The Emden Ayesha Adventure German Raiders in the South Seas and Beyond 1914 Annapolis Naval Institute Press 2000 ISBN 1 55750 873 9 a b Ajay Kamalakaran 20 May 2015 Battle of Penang When Malay fishermen rescued Russian sailors Russia Beyond the Headlines Retrieved 12 January 2016 Penang Evacuated British Garrison Withdrawn NEW JAP THRUSTS IN MALAYA London December 19 Northern Times Carnarvon WA 1905 1952 20 Dec 1941 Trove Retrieved 15 October 2016 a b Bayly Christopher 2005 Forgotten Armies The Fall of British Asia 1941 1945 Harvard University Netto Anil 6 October 2013 Old Penang The Sook Ching massacres of World War II anilnetto com anilnetto com Retrieved 15 October 2016 THE ALLIED REOCCUPATION OF THE ANDAMAN ISLANDS 1945 www iwm org uk Retrieved 25 May 2017 uboat net U boat Operations The Monsun U boats 3 Monsun boats www uboat net Retrieved 15 October 2016 German U Boat Operations in Australian Waters www navy gov au World War II Yanagi Missions Japan s Underwater Convoys HistoryNet www historynet com 12 June 2006 Retrieved 15 October 2016 a b Barber Andrew 2010 Penang At War A History of Penang During and Between the First and Second World Wars 1914 1945 AB amp B Paul H Kratoska 1998 The Japanese Occupation of Malaya A Social and Economic History C Hurst amp Co Publishers pp 296 ISBN 978 1 85065 284 7 Koay Su Lin September 2016 Penang The Rebel State Part One Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 26 November 2017 a b Koay Su Lin 1 October 2016 Penang The Rebel State Part Two Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies The Penang Secession Movement 1948 1951 a b Brash Celeste 2008 Kuala Lumpur Melaka and Penang Lonely Planet ISBN 978 1 74104 485 0 a b Higher Education in Regional and City Development State of Penang Malaysia OECD a b c Ooi Kee Beng December 2009 Tun Lim Chong Eu The past is not passe Penang Monthly Archived from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2017 a b c d e Ooi Kee Beng 2010 Pilot Studies for a New Penang Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 9789814279697 Sue Ching Jou Hsin Huang Michael Hsiao Natacha Aveline Dubach 2014 Globalization and New Intra Urban Dynamics in Asian Cities Taipei National Taiwan University ISBN 9789863500216 Ng Su Ann 7 November 2004 Penang losing its tourism lustre The Star Tsunami impact in Penang Malaysia Our island our world aliran com Retrieved 6 December 2017 Saravanamuttu Jayaratnam Lee Hock Guan Ooi Kee Beng 2008 March 8 Eclipsing May 13 Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 9789812308962 a b Eight new sites from the Straits of Malacca to Papua New Guinea and San Marino added to UNESCO s World Heritage List UNESCO 7 July 2008 Retrieved 7 July 2008 Sandeep Chaurley 27 December 2013 Nine years on Penang s tsunami pain still lingers Malay Mail Retrieved 24 June 2017 Lim H S 2011 TSS Mapping Using THEOS Imagery over Penang Island Malaysia Universiti Sains Malaysia Chau Loon Wai 2005 Probing Different Centralities in City Regions A space syntactic approach Techne Press 1 Abd Rahman Abdul Hadi 2000 Coastal Sedimentation and Recent Coastline Changes Along the Seberang Perai Coast Pulau Pinang Universiti Malaya Arnold Loh 30 December 2016 Gurney Drive s reclamation project will transform the seaside promenade The Star Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2017 E amp O gains more time to finish Seri Tg Pinang reclamation The Star 21 January 2016 Cover Story IJM Land to unveil two much awaited projects The Edge Markets 13 April 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2017 Gurney Wharf Penang s new waterfront park in the city 23 February 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2017 CHOW TAN SIN Makeover for Gurney Drive The Star Gurney Wharf expected to be completed by Aug 2021 2 February 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 GURNEY WHARF A Penang State Project Retrieved 4 May 2020 Nambiar Predeep 23 June 2020 Penang reveals new reclamation project off Bayan Baru Free Malaysia Today Retrieved 7 July 2020 History Penang Botanical Gardens Chow Mei Mei 6 March 2018 Penang s commitment to safeguard its forests Malaysiakini Retrieved 8 March 2018 Ngai Weng Chan 1998 Environmental Hazards Associated with Hill Land Development in Penang Island Malaysia Some Recommendations on Effective Management Disaster Prevention and Management 7 The smallest national park in the world Penang National Park Time Out Penang 27 October 2014 link, 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.