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Penghu

The Penghu (/ˈpʌŋˈh/ PUNG-HOO,[1] Hokkien POJ: Phîⁿ-ô͘  or Phêⁿ-ô͘ ) or Pescadores Islands are an archipelago of 90 islands and islets in the Taiwan Strait, located approximately 50 km (31 mi) west from the main island of Taiwan across the Penghu Channel, covering an area of 141 square kilometers (54 sq mi). The archipelago collectively forms Penghu County of Taiwan and is the smallest county of Taiwan. The largest city is Magong, located on the largest island, which is also named Magong.

Penghu Islands
澎湖縣
Pescadores
Penghu County
Clockwise from the top: A night view of Xiying Rainbow Bridge, Zhongyang Old Street, Qimei Double-Heart of Stacked Stones, Baisha Beach, Penghu Tianhou Temple, Budai Harbor
Coordinates: 23°34′03″N 119°34′39″E / 23.56750°N 119.57750°E / 23.56750; 119.57750
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
ProvinceTaiwan Province (streamlined)
SeatMagong City
Largest cityMagong
BoroughsOne city, five rural townships
Government
 • Body
 • County MagistrateChen Kuang-fu (DPP)
Area
 • Total141.052 km2 (54.460 sq mi)
 • Rank22 of 22
Population
 (December 2014)
 • Total101,758
 • Rank21 of 22
 • Density720/km2 (1,900/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (National Standard Time)
ISO 3166 codeTW-PEN
Websitewww.penghu.gov.tw
Symbols
BirdSmall Skylark (Alauda gulgula)
FlowerFirewheel (Gaillardia pulchella)
TreeChinese Banyan (Ficus microcarpa)
Penghu Islands
Traditional Chinese澎湖群島
PostalPescadores Islands
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinPénghú Qúndǎo
Bopomofoㄆㄥˊ   ㄏㄨˊ
ㄑㄩㄣˊ   ㄉㄠˇ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu Chyundao
Wade–GilesPʻêng2-hu2 Chʻün2-tao3
Tongyong PinyinPénghú Cyúndǎo
Yale RomanizationPénghú Chyúndǎu
MPS2Pénghú Chiúndǎu
IPA[pʰə̌ŋ.xǔ tɕʰy̌n.tàʊ]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJPhîⁿ-ô͘-kûn-tó or
Phêⁿ-ô͘-kûn-tó
Tâi-lôPhînn-ôo-kûn-tó or
Phênn-ôo-kûn-tó
Penghu Island
Traditional Chinese澎湖島
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinPénghú Dǎo
Bopomofoㄆㄥˊ   ㄏㄨˊ   ㄉㄠˇ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu Dao
Wade–GilesPʻêng2-hu2 Tao3
Tongyong PinyinPénghú Dǎo
Yale RomanizationPénghú Dǎu
MPS2Pénghú Dǎu
IPA[pʰə̌ŋ.xǔ tàʊ]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJPhîⁿ-ô͘-tó or
Phêⁿ-ô͘-tó
Tâi-lôPhînn-ôo-tó or
Phênn-ôo-tó
Penghu County
Traditional Chinese澎湖縣
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinPénghú Xiàn
Bopomofoㄆㄥˊ   ㄏㄨˊ   ㄒㄧㄢˋ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu Shiann
Wade–GilesPʻêng2-hu2 Hsien4
Tongyong PinyinPénghú Siàn
Yale RomanizationPénghú Syàn
MPS2Pénghú Shiàn
IPA[pʰə̌ŋ.xǔ ɕjɛ̂n]
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳPhàng-fù-yen
Southern Min
Hokkien POJPhîⁿ-ô͘-koān or
Phêⁿ-ô͘-koān
Tâi-lôPhînn-ôo-kuān or
Phênn-ôo-kuān
Historical affiliations

Song dynasty (1170–1279)
Great Yuan Empire (1281–1368)
Great Ming Empire (1368–1622, 1624–1644)
Dutch Empire (1622–1624)
Kingdom of Tungning (1661–1683)
Great Qing Empire (1683–1895)
Empire of Japan (1895–1945)
Republic of China (1945–present)

Northern islands of Penghu (the Pescadores)

The Penghu islands first appear in the historical record during the Tang dynasty and were inhabited by Chinese people by the Southern Song dynasty, during which they were attached to Jinjiang County of Fujian.[2] The archipelago was formally incorporated as an administrative unit of China in 1281 under Tong'an County of Jiangzhe Province during the Yuan dynasty.[3] It continued to be controlled by Imperial China with brief European occupations by the Dutch (1622–1624) and French (1885), until it was ceded to the Japanese Empire in 1895. Since the end of World War II, Penghu has been governed by the Republic of China (ROC). Under the terms of the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty and the subsequent Taiwan Relations Act between the ROC and the United States, Penghu is defined and geographically acknowledged as part of Taiwan.[4][5]

Penghu Islands rely solely on sea and air transportation, with air transport taking a significant part for outside access. The islands are served by three local domestic airports: Penghu Airport, Qimei Airport, and Wang-an Airport. The Penghu National Scenic Area comprises most of the islands and islets of the archipelago, it is also renowned for its unique natural feature of columnar basalt landscape. Tourism is one of the main sources of income to the county.

Name edit

The "Penghu" islands were mentioned in a series of poems during the Tang dynasty (618–907). During the Song dynasty (960–1279), it was mentioned that during the Tang period, "Pinghu" barbarians from beyond Quanzhou laid siege to Fuzhou, now the capital of Fujian Province.[2] In 1171, the poet Lou Yue described a place across the sea from Quanzhou, identified as Penghu, that had thousands of sandbars called "Pinghu" (flat lake) because of the "encircling shape of its inner coastline".[6] Song sources describe migrants from Fujian cultivating land on Pinghu.[7] In 1225, the Song historian Zhao Rukuo called the islands attached to Jinjiang County "Penghu".[8] In 1227, Wang Xiangzhi described Penghu as a group of 36 islands in an "outlying region" which took three days to reach by sailing from Jinjiang.[9] In the Southern Min language, both Pinghu and Penghu are pronounced similarly, and scholars in Taiwan believe them to be the same place.[8] In Southern Min it is pronounced Phêⁿ-ô·.[10]

According to official Penghu County Chronicle, Penghu's original name had been "Pinghu"(平湖), but as "Ping"(平) sounded similar to "Peng"(彭) in Hokkien, "Pinghu"(平湖) was also written as "Penghu"(彭湖), and ultimately upon consensus, it is written as "Penghu"(澎湖).[11][12]

The name "Pescadores" comes from the Portuguese name Ilhas dos Pescadores ("Fishermen Islands"). The European Portuguese pronunciation is [pɨʃkɐˈðoɾɨʃ] but, in English, it is typically closer to /ˌpɛskəˈdɔːrɪz, -z/.[10] The islands have also been called Pehoe from the Minnan name Phêⁿ-ô·.[10]

History edit

Prehistory edit

Penghu 1, a fossil jaw (mandible) dating to the Middle or Late Pleistocene that belonged to a member of an extinct hominin species, possibly a Denisovan, was discovered in the Penghu Channel c. 2008.[13]

Finds of fine red cord-marked pottery at Guoye, Huxi, indicate that Penghu was visited by Austronesians from southwestern Taiwan around 5,000 years ago, though not settled permanently.[14]

Song dynasty edit

Han Chinese from southern Fujian began to establish fishing communities on the islands in the 9th and 10th centuries,[14] and representatives were intermittently stationed there by the Southern Song and Yuan governments from c. 1170.[15] Chinese fishermen had settled on the Penghu Islands by 1171, when a group of "Bisheye" bandits with dark skin speaking a foreign language landed on Penghu and plundered the fields planted by Chinese migrants. The Song government sent soldiers after them and from that time on, Song patrols regularly visited Penghu in the spring and summer. A local official, Wang Dayou, had houses built on Penghu and stationed troops there to prevent depredations from the Bisheye.[16][17][15] Coins dating to the Xining (1068-1077) and Zhenghe (1111-1117) reign periods as well as many Song pottery and porcelain shards have been unearthed in Penghu.[9]

In 1225, the Book of Barbarian Nations anecdotally indicated that Penghu was attached to Jinjiang, Quanzhou Prefecture.[3] A group of Quanzhou immigrants lived on Penghu.[18]

Yuan dynasty edit

In November 1281, the Yuan dynasty under Emperor Shizu officially established the Penghu Patrol and Inspection Agency under the jurisdiction of Tong'an County, incorporating Penghu into China's borders 403 years earlier than Taiwan.[3]

Wang Dayuan gave a detailed first-hand account of the islands in his Daoyi Zhilüe (1349).[19]

There are thirty-six islands, large and small, so close together that the slopes of one are visible from another. Among them are seven harbors which are named. With a favoring wind they can be reached from Ch'üan-chou in two days and nights. There is grass but no trees ; the land is barren and not suited for growing rice. The Ch'üan-chou people make their houses by thatching grass. The weather is always warm. The customs [of the residents] are rustic. Many of the people are long-lived [or, the people are mostly old]. Men and women both wear long cloth gowns girded with local cotton cloth. They boil sea [water] to get salt, and ferment millet to make liquor. They gather fish, shrimp, snails, and clams to supplement their [staple of grain]. They burn ox dung to cook fish fat for use as oil. The land produces sesame and green beans. The goats multiply into flocks of several tens of thousands. A family [which owns some goats] brands their hair and cuts their horns as marks of identification, but does not gather them in during the day or night, so that they all forage for themselves. Their workmen and merchants enjoy the profits of a flourishing trade.
The territory is attached to Chin-chiang county [hsien] of Ch'üan-chou [prefecture]. During the reign-period Chih-yüan 至元[1280-1294] a sub-county magistrate was assigned there to be in charge of the annual tax fixed on salt; during the Chung-t'ung 中統 reign-period [1260-1279] this amounted to ten ingots [ting 錠] and twenty-five ounces. No other tax or corvée is levied.[20]

Ming dynasty edit

In the 15th century, the Ming ordered the evacuation of the islands as part of their maritime ban. When these restrictions were removed in the late 16th century, legal fishing communities, most of which hailed from Tong'an County,[21] were re-established on the islands. These fishermen worshiped at the Mazu Temple that gave Magong its name and themselves gave rise to the Portuguese and English name Pescadores.[15] The Ming established a permanent military presence starting in 1597.[22]

At this time, the Dutch East India Company was trying to force China to open a port in Fujian to Dutch trade and expel the Portuguese from Macau.[23][24][25] When the Dutch were defeated by the Portuguese at the Battle of Macau in 1622, they seized Penghu, built a fort there, and threatened raids on Chinese ports and shipping unless the Chinese allowed trading with them on Penghu and that China not trade with Manila.[26] In response, the Chinese governor of Fujian demanded that the Dutch withdraw from Penghu to Taiwan, where the Chinese would permit them to engage in trade.[27][28] The Dutch continued to raid the Fujian coast between October 1622 and January 1624 to force their demands, but were unsuccessful.[29] In 1624, the new governor of Fujian sent a fleet of 40–50 warships with 5,000 troops to Penghu and expelled the Dutch, who moved to Fort Zeelandia on Taiwan.[30][31]

Qing dynasty edit

 
Map of Penghu, 1752

For a period in the mid-17th century, Taiwan and the archipelago were ruled by the Kingdom of Tungning under the Zheng family, which was overthrown by the Qing dynasty in 1683 after the Battle of Penghu. Military personnel were stationed on Penghu afterwards. Penghu became a sub-prefecture of Taiwan Prefecture, Fujian Province, during the Qing period.[32]

The Penghu archipelago was captured by the French in March 1885, in the closing weeks of the Sino-French War, and evacuated four months later. The Pescadores Campaign was the last campaign of Admiral Amédée Courbet, whose naval victories during the war had made him a national hero in France. Courbet was among several French soldiers and sailors who succumbed to cholera during the French occupation of Penghu. He died aboard his flagship Bayard in Makung harbour on 11 June 1885.[33][non-primary source needed]

Empire of Japan edit

 
Hōko Prefecture Government building

Towards the end of the First Sino-Japanese War, having defeated the Qing in northern China, Japan sought to ensure that it obtained Penghu and Taiwan in the final settlement. In March 1895, the Japanese defeated the Chinese garrison on the islands and occupied Makung. The Japanese occupation of Penghu, with its fine harbor, gave the Imperial Japanese Navy an advanced base from which their short-range coal-burning ships could control the Taiwan Straits and thus prevent more Chinese troops from being sent to Taiwan. This action persuaded the Chinese negotiators at Shimonoseki that Japan was determined to annex Taiwan, and, after Penghu, Taiwan and the Liaodong Peninsula had been ceded to Japan in the Sino-Japanese Treaty of Shimonoseki in April, helped to ensure the success of the Japanese invasion of Taiwan in May.[34][non-primary source needed]

Penghu County was then called the Hōko Prefecture by the Japanese government of Taiwan. During World War II, Makō (Makung) was a major base for the Imperial Japanese Navy and the embarkation point for the invasion of the Philippines.[citation needed]

Republic of China edit

 
The Pescadores (1950)

In the Cairo Declaration of 1943, the United States, the United Kingdom and China stated it to be their purpose that "all the territories that Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Formosa and The Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China". On 26 July 1945, the three governments issued the Potsdam Declaration, declaring that "the terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried out". However, the United States and the United Kingdom have regarded the aforementioned documents as merely wartime statements of intention with no binding force in law.[35]

Following the surrender of Japan on 2 September 1945, Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers Douglas MacArthur issued General Order No. 1, which directed Japanese forces to surrender to the Allied Powers and facilitate the occupation of Japanese territories by the Allied Powers. The Office of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers ordered Japanese forces in China and Taiwan to surrender to Chiang Kai-shek, who the Allied Powers delegated to accept the surrender. On 25 October 1945, Governor-General Rikichi Andō handed over the administration of Taiwan and the Penghu islands to the head of the Taiwan Investigation Commission, Chen Yi.[36][37]

The Republic of China and Japan signed the Treaty of Taipei on April 28, 1952, and the treaty came into force on August 5, which is considered by some as giving a legal support to the Republic of China's claim to Taiwan as "de jure" territory. The treaty stipulates that all treaties, conventions, and agreements between China and Japan prior to 9 December 1941 were null and void, which according to Hungdah Chiu, abolishes the Treaty of Shimonoseki ceding Taiwan to Japan. In the 1956 Japan v. Lai Chin Jung case, it was stated that Taiwan and the Penghu islands came to belong to the ROC on the date the Treaty of Taipei came into force.[37]

However, in 1954, the United States denied that the sovereignty over Taiwan and the Penghu islands had been settled by the Treaty of Taipei.[38] In the following year, the United States also stated its position that Taiwan and Penghu were handed over to the Allied Powers, and that the Republic of China was merely asked to administer these territories for the Allied Powers pending a final decision as to their ownership. [39] In the 1960 Sheng v. Rogers case, it was stated that, in the view of the U.S. State Department, no agreement has purported to transfer the sovereignty of Taiwan to the ROC, though it accepted the exercise of Chinese authority over Taiwan and recognized the Government of the Republic of China as the legal government of China at the time.[40]

Boat people fleeing Vietnam in the 1970s and 1980s who were rescued by Taiwan's ships in the South China Sea were sent to Penghu.[41]

On 25 May 2002, China Airlines Flight 611, a Boeing 747-200 aircraft flying from Taipei to Hong Kong, disintegrated and exploded over the Islands. The wreckage slammed into the Taiwan Strait, a couple of miles off the coast. All 225 passengers and crew on board were killed.[42]

Climate edit

Penghu County has a dry-winter humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification: Cwa), bordering on a regular humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfa).

Climate data for Penghu (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1897–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 28.6
(83.5)
29.5
(85.1)
30.8
(87.4)
33.0
(91.4)
34.2
(93.6)
35.9
(96.6)
36.7
(98.1)
35.2
(95.4)
35.1
(95.2)
35.3
(95.5)
31.1
(88.0)
30.0
(86.0)
36.7
(98.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 19.4
(66.9)
20.0
(68.0)
22.9
(73.2)
26.3
(79.3)
29.1
(84.4)
30.9
(87.6)
32.2
(90.0)
31.8
(89.2)
31.0
(87.8)
28.2
(82.8)
25.1
(77.2)
21.3
(70.3)
26.5
(79.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 17.1
(62.8)
17.4
(63.3)
19.9
(67.8)
23.2
(73.8)
25.9
(78.6)
27.9
(82.2)
28.9
(84.0)
28.6
(83.5)
28.0
(82.4)
25.5
(77.9)
22.7
(72.9)
19.1
(66.4)
23.7
(74.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 15.5
(59.9)
15.6
(60.1)
17.8
(64.0)
21.1
(70.0)
24.0
(75.2)
25.9
(78.6)
26.7
(80.1)
26.6
(79.9)
26.1
(79.0)
24.0
(75.2)
21.3
(70.3)
17.7
(63.9)
21.9
(71.4)
Record low °C (°F) 7.7
(45.9)
7.2
(45.0)
7.4
(45.3)
10.5
(50.9)
16.6
(61.9)
19.3
(66.7)
21.8
(71.2)
21.1
(70.0)
19.2
(66.6)
15.0
(59.0)
9.6
(49.3)
9.0
(48.2)
7.2
(45.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 20.9
(0.82)
38.1
(1.50)
50.7
(2.00)
77.9
(3.07)
117.8
(4.64)
148.0
(5.83)
163.2
(6.43)
229.4
(9.03)
100.3
(3.95)
30.1
(1.19)
26.0
(1.02)
28.1
(1.11)
1,030.5
(40.59)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 5.2 6.2 7.6 8.7 9.3 10.2 8.1 9.4 5.6 2.4 3.6 4.8 81.1
Average relative humidity (%) 78.7 80.7 80.0 80.9 82.8 85.2 83.6 84.4 79.6 75.2 76.8 76.8 80.4
Mean monthly sunshine hours 102.9 98.7 131.1 153.1 183.6 211.2 265.3 231.4 214.9 186.4 129.2 111.4 2,019.2
Source: Central Weather Bureau[43][44][45][46][47]

Geology edit

 
Columnar basalt at South Penghu Marine National Park

Penghu is the remnant of a Miocene aged shield volcano, the stratigraphy of the island is dominated by two to four layers of basalt interbedded with sandstone and mudstone deposited in shallow marine conditions.[48]

Demographics edit

Ethnicities edit

The majority of the populace (72%+) in Penghu are descendants of settlers from Tong'an in Fujian.[21]

Population edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1985 102,282—    
1990 95,932−6.2%
1995 90,937−5.2%
2000 89,496−1.6%
2005 91,785+2.6%
2010 96,918+5.6%
2015 102,304+5.6%
Source: . Ministry of the Interior. May 2018. Archived from the original on 16 December 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2016.

Language edit

In Penghu, the native language is Taiwanese Hokkien, with Tong'an dialect being the most prevalent speech.[49]

Government edit

 
Lai Feng-wei, the incumbent Magistrate of Penghu County.
 
Penghu County Hall

Penghu County is administered by Penghu County Government headed by Magistrate Lai Feng-wei of the Kuomintang and headquartered at the Penghu County Hall.

Administrative divisions edit

 
Administrative subdivisions of Penghu County

Penghu County is divided into one city and five rural townships. It is further divided into 97 villages.[50] Like Lienchiang County, Penghu County has no urban townships. The county seat is located at Magong City where it houses the Penghu County Hall and Penghu County Council.

Type Name Chinese Taiwanese Hakka English translation
City Magong City 馬公市 Má-keng Mâ-kûng Originally Mazu Temple (媽宮)
Rural
townships
Baisha 白沙鄉 Pe̍h-soa Pha̍k-sâ White Sand
Cimei (Qimei) 七美鄉 Chhit-bí Tshit-mî Seven Beauties (大嶼)
Huxi 湖西鄉 Ô͘-sai Fù-sî Lake West
Wangan (Wang-an, Wang'an) 望安鄉 Bāng-oaⁿ Mong-ôn Hope Safe (網垵)
Xiyu 西嶼鄉 Sai-sū Sî-yí Western Isle

The main island (comprising Magong City and Huxi Township), Baisha and Xiyu are the three most populous islands and are connected via bridges. The Penghu Great Bridge connecting Baisha and Xiyu is the longest bridge in Taiwan. Two shorter bridges connect Huxi and Baisha via the small island of Zhongtun.

Politics edit

The county elects a single representative to the Legislative Yuan. In the 2016 Republic of China legislative election, this seat was won by the Democratic Progressive Party with 55.4% of the vote.[51]

Political dispute edit

Despite the controversy over the political status of Taiwan, both the Republic of China and the People's Republic of China agree that Penghu is a county in (their own respective) "Taiwan Province" (Taiwan Province, Republic of China and Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China). Yet, geographically, the island of Taiwan does not include Penghu, although it is closer to Taiwan than mainland China. Thus, Penghu is listed separately from "Taiwan" in some contexts, e.g. the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu (the official WTO name for the Republic of China) and in the Treaty of Shimonoseki, the Cairo Declaration, and the Treaty of San Francisco.[52][53][54]

Economy edit

Due to its restricted geography, fisheries have been the main industry for Penghu.[55] The Agriculture and Fisheries Bureau of the Penghu County Government governs matters related to agriculture and fisheries in Penghu. In 2016, the bureau placed a ban on the harvesting of sea urchins due to their declining population. However, the ban was lifted in 2017 but catches are limited only to those species larger than 8 cm (3.1 in) in diameter.[56]

Education edit

 
National Penghu University of Science and Technology

Education-related matters in Penghu County are administered under the Education Department of the Penghu County Government. The county houses the National Penghu University of Science and Technology.

Energy edit

 
Chienshan Power Plant

Penghu is powered by the Chienshan Power Plant, a 140 MW diesel-fired power plant commissioned in 2001, and the Hujing Power Plant on Table Island. On 24 December 2010, the Taiwan-Penghu Undersea Cable Project of Taipower was approved by the Executive Yuan to connect the electrical grid in Taiwan Island to Penghu.[57]

Under a wind power development project approved in 2002 by the Executive Yuan, the ROC government plans to set up a total of 200 wind turbines in Penghu within 10 years. However, only 14 turbines have been set up as of 2015. On 1 October 2015, Taipower announced the construction of another 11 new wind turbines across the island, of which six will be constructed in Huxi Township and five in Baisha Township.[58]

The current total desalination capacity of the county to provide clean water to its residents is 15,500 m3 per day. To reduce its groundwater use, in November 2015 the county secured a contract of building an additional desalination plant with 4,000 m3 capacity per day, construction of which is expected to be completed by May 2018.[59]

Tourism edit

The Penghu National Scenic Area was established in the early 1990s, comprising most of the islands and islets of the archipelago. Tourism has since become one of the main sources of income of the county.

Historical sites include Central Street, Erdai Art Hall, Tianhou Temple, Four-eyed Well, Penghu Reclamation Hall, Qimei Lighthouse, Xiyu Eastern Fort, Jinguitou Fortress and Xiyu Western Fort. Museums in the county are Chuwan Crab Museum, Ocean Resources Museum, Chang Yu-sheng Memorial Museum and Penghu Living Museum. Other attractions in the county include the Double-Heart of Stacked Stones, Fenggui Cave, Little Taiwan, Whale Cave, Xiaomen Geology Gallery and South Penghu Marine National Park.[60]

Since 1 January 2015, tourists from Mainland China can directly apply for the Exit & Entry Permit upon arrival in Penghu. This privilege also applies to Kinmen and the Matsu Islands as a means to boost tourism in the outlying islands of Taiwan.[61]

The county welcomed 1.8 million tourists in 2018 with an average annual growth of around 10%.[62]

Drug trafficking edit

As a lightly populated outlying island, Penghu lends itself to being used as a trans-shipment hub for drug smuggling into Taiwan from China and the Philippines. Beginning in 2016, the area became the focus of a major drug trafficking crackdown by the Taiwanese police.[63][64][65]

In 2016, Chou Meng-hsiang (周盟翔), chief prosecutor of the Penghu District Prosecutors Office, "led an investigation team in Taiwan, including officers from the Coast Guard Administration, in a bid to bring (a) drug trafficking ring to justice." A joint investigation with Philippine and Chinese authorities spanning one and a half years resulted in the seizure of "22.6 kilograms of amphetamine, 11.4 kilograms of ephedrine, and about 40 kilograms of calcium chloride" with an estimated value of NT$123 million. Eight suspects were arrested in Cagayan, a small island in northern Philippines, but no Taiwanese nationals were charged in relation to the importation scheme.[66]

In 2017, media reported "the biggest-ever haul of drugs in the county's history" when 506 kg of ephedrine was seized from a Chinese fishing boat off Penghu "as part of an ongoing crackdown on the area drug trade".[63] Ephedrine smuggling has increased in recent years as it has a similar structure to amphetamines and can be easily converted into methamphetamine. According to a Focus Taiwan report, "(It) can then be sold for ten times the price, in this case that would be more than NT$1 billion (US$33.33 million)."[64]

Despite the size of the drug seizure, only the five crew members of the Chinese fishing boat were detained in the operation, with authorities "unable to find the Taiwanese ship which should have turned up to take delivery of the drugs". It was unclear from media reports how the Taiwanese side of the smuggling operation knew to abort the rendezvous. The suppliers of the shipment also evaded capture. It was believed that the drugs were destined to be transported from Penghu for distribution on Taiwan.[67]

Transport edit

 
Qimei Airport

Air edit

Penghu is served by Penghu Airport in Magong City and Qimei Airport in Cimei Township. Both airports opened in 1977. Daily Air operates flights between Penghu to Kaohsiung.

Water edit

The county has Magong Harbor and Longmen Jianshan Pier. Magong Harbor hosts ferry connections with Kaohsiung, Tainan, Chiayi and Kinmen.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Penghu". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  2. ^ a b Liu 2012, p. 167-168.
  3. ^ a b c "歷史沿革". Penghu County Government. 13 July 2017. from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Taiwan Relations Act". ait.org.tw. American Institute in Taiwan. 30 March 2022. from the original on 19 August 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022. ...Section. 15. For purposes of this Act- 2. the term "Taiwan" includes, as the context may require, the islands of Taiwan and the Pescadores (Penghu).
  5. ^ "Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty". ait.org.tw. American Institute in Taiwan. 1954. from the original on 24 December 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022. ARTICLE VI. For the purposes of Articles II and V, the terms "territorial" and "territories" shall mean in respect of the Republic of China, Taiwan and the Pescadores: and in respect of the United States of America, the island territories in the West Pacific under its jurisdiction.
  6. ^ Asian & Pacific Quarterly of Cultural and Social Affairs:15-16, p. 43
  7. ^ Liu 2012, p. 168.
  8. ^ a b 方豪,1994,《台灣早期史綱》,頁33-34,台北:學生書局. ISBN 957-15-0631-1.
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  10. ^ a b c Campbell, William (1903). "Explanatory Notes". Formosa under the Dutch: described from contemporary records, with explanatory notes and a bibliography of the island. London: Kegan Paul. p. 546. ISBN 978-957-638-083-9.
  11. ^ 中央研究院臺灣史研究所, 顏尚文 (ed.), , 《續修澎湖縣志‧地理志》, pp. 92–93, archived from the original on 11 February 2022, retrieved 11 February 2022, 大正6年(1917),日人藤田豊八在〈南蠻之來襲〉中,認為「平湖」與「澎湖」為同音異字。毛一波由音韻解釋:「平」可作「旁」音讀之。「彭」音「滂」,本與「旁」通,「旁」即是「滂」。「澎」之字音也是從「旁」字而來,是故「平」與「澎」為同音異字。
  12. ^ 曹永和, 〈早期臺灣的開發與經營〉,《臺灣早期歷史研究》, pp. 91–92
  13. ^ Chang, Chun-Hsiang; Kaifu, Yousuke; Takai, Masanaru; Kono, Reiko T.; Grün, Rainer; Matsu’ura, Shuji; Kinsley, Les; Lin, Liang-Kong (2015). "The first archaic Homo from Taiwan". Nature Communications. 6: 6037. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.6037C. doi:10.1038/ncomms7037. PMC 4316746. PMID 25625212. Older low-sea-level events, 225, 240–280, ?300, 335–360 and 425–450 ka cannot be completely excluded as the age for Penghu 1, but such a situation requires explanation for preservation through repeated sedimentary events and the unusual distribution of Crocuta crocuta ultima. Therefore, Penghu 1 is younger than 450 ka, and most likely 10–70 ka or 130–190 ka.
  14. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  15. ^ a b c Wills (2006), p. 86.
  16. ^ Liu 2012, p. 170-171.
  17. ^ Hsu (1980), p. 6.
  18. ^ Thompson 1964, p. 164.
  19. ^ Thompson (1964), pp. 167–168.
  20. ^ Knapp 1980, p. 167-168.
  21. ^ a b 明萬曆年以後,澎湖第二次有移住民,以福建泉州府屬同安縣金門人遷來最早; 其後接踵而至者,亦以同安縣人為最多。彼等捷足先至者,得以優先選擇良好地區定居之,澎湖本島即多被同安人所先占; 尤其素稱土地沃之湖西鄉,完全成為同安人之區域。 13 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine 李紹章《澎湖縣誌》,《續修澎湖縣志(卷三)|人民志》
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  23. ^ Cooper (1979), p. 658.
  24. ^ Freeman (2003), p. 132.
  25. ^ Thomson (1996), p. 39.
  26. ^ Shepherd (1993), p. 49.
  27. ^ Covell (1998), p. 70.
  28. ^ Wright (1908), p. 817.
  29. ^ Wills (1998), pp. 368–369.
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  36. ^ Tsai 2009, p. 173.
  37. ^ a b Henckaerts, Jean-Marie (1996). The international status of Taiwan in the new world order: legal and political considerations. Kluwer Law International. p. 337. ISBN 90-411-0929-3. from the original on 8 April 2023. Retrieved 5 October 2022. p7. "In any case, there appears to be strong legal ground to support the view that since the entry into force of the 1952 ROC-Japan bilateral peace treaty, Taiwan has become the de jure territory of the ROC. This interpretation of the legal status of Taiwan is confirmed by several Japanese court decisions. For instance, in the case of Japan v. Lai Chin Jung, decided by the Tokyo High Court on December 24, 1956, it was stated that 'Formosa and the Pescadores came to belong to the Republic of China, at any rate on August 5, 1952, when the [Peace] Treaty between Japan and the Republic of China came into force…'"
    p8. "the principles of prescription and occupation that may justify the ROC's claim to Taiwan certainly are not applicable to the PRC because the application of these two principles to the Taiwan situation presupposes the validity of the two peace treaties by which Japan renounce its claim to Taiwan and thus makes the island terra nullius."
  38. ^ Department of State (13 December 1954). "News Conference Statements: Purpose of treaty with Republic of China". Department of State Bulletin. Vol. XXXI, no. 807. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. p. 896. The legal position is different, as I think I pointed out in my last press conference, by virtue of the fact that technical sovereignty over Formosa and the Pescadores has never been settled. That is because the Japanese peace treaty merely involves a renunciation by Japan of its right and title to these island. But the future title is not determined by the Japanese peace treaty, nor is it determined by the peace treaty which was concluded between the Republic of China and Japan. Therefore, the juridical status of these islands, Formosa and the Pescadores, is different from the juridical status of the offshore islands which have always been Chinese territory.
  39. ^ James Reston (6 February 1955). "New Formosa Bid". New York Times. New York City. from the original on 8 March 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2015. The position of the Administration is that these territories were handed over to the Allied and associated powers of World War II by Japan, which had held them since 1895, and that General Chiang was merely asked to administer them for the Allied and associated powers pending a final decision as to their ownership......
  40. ^ "William P. Rogers, Attorney General of the United States, Appellant v. Cheng Fu Sheng and Lin Fu Mei, Appellees, 280 F.2d 663 (D.C. Cir. 1960)". 1960. from the original on 30 September 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022. But in the view of our State Department, no agreement has 'purported to transfer the sovereignty of Formosa to (the Republic of) China. At the present time, we accept the exercise of Chinese authority over Formosa, and recognize the Government of the Republic of China (the Nationalist Government) as the legal Government of China.
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Works cited edit

  • Cooper, J. P., ed. (1979). The New Cambridge Modern History IV: The Decline of Spain and the Thirty Years War, 1609–59. Vol. 4 (reprint ed.). CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-29713-4.
  • Covell, Ralph R. (1998). Pentecost of the Hills in Taiwan: The Christian Faith Among the Original Inhabitants (illustrated ed.). Hope Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-93-272-790-9.
  • Freeman, Donald B. (2003). Straits of Malacca: Gateway or Gauntlet?. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-2515-3.
  • Hsu, Wen-hsiung (1980). "From Aboriginal Island to Chinese Frontier: The Development of Taiwan before 1683". In Knapp, Ronald G. (ed.). China's Island Frontier: Studies in the Historical Geography of Taiwan. The University of Hawaii. pp. 3–28. hdl:10125/62865. ISBN 978-0-8248-8005-7.
  • Knapp, Ronald G. (1980), China's Island Frontier: Studies in the Historical Geography of Taiwan, The University of Hawaii
  • Liu, Yingsheng (2012), The Taiwan Strait between the Twelfth and Sixteenth Centuries and the Maritime Route to Luzon, Harrassowitz Verlag
  • Loir, Maurice (1886). L'escadre de l'amiral Courbet. Paris: Berger-Levrault. LCCN 03013530. OCLC 23421595.
  • Shepherd, John Robert (1993). Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier, 1600–1800 (illustrated ed.). Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-2066-3. OCLC 25025794.
  • Takekoshi, Yosaburō (1907). Japanese rule in Formosa. London, New York, Bombay and Calcutta: Longmans, Green, and co. OCLC 753129. OL 6986981M.
  • Thompson, Lawrence G. (1964). "The earliest eyewitness accounts of the Formosan aborigines". Monumenta Serica. 23: 163–204. doi:10.1080/02549948.1964.11731044. JSTOR 40726116.
  • Thomson, Janice E. (1996). Mercenaries, Pirates, and Sovereigns: State-Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe (reprint ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-2124-2.
  • Tsai, Shih-shan Henry (2009), Maritime Taiwan: Historical Encounters with the East and West, M.E. Sharpe, Inc.
  • Wills, John E. Jr. (1998). "Relations with maritime Europeans, 1514–1662". In Twitchett, Denis C.; Mote, Frederick W. (eds.). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 8, The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part 2. Cambridge University Press. pp. 333–375. ISBN 978-0-521-24333-9.
  • —— (2006). "The Seventeenth-century Transformation: Taiwan under the Dutch and the Cheng Regime". In Rubinstein, Murray A. (ed.). Taiwan: A New History. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 84–106. ISBN 978-0-7656-1495-7.
  • —— (2010). "Maritime Europe and the Ming". In Wills, John E. Jr. (ed.). China and Maritime Europe, 1500–1800: Trade, Settlement, Diplomacy, and Missions. Cambridge University Press. pp. 24–77. ISBN 978-0-521-43260-3. OL 24524224M.
  • Wong, Young-tsu (2017). China's Conquest of Taiwan in the Seventeenth Century: Victory at Full Moon. Singapore: Springer. ISBN 978-981-10-2248-7.
  • Wright, Arnold (1908). Cartwright, H. A. (ed.). Twentieth century impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other treaty ports of China: their history, people, commerce, industries, and resources, Volume 1. Lloyds Greater Britain publishing company. OL 13518413M.

Further reading edit

  • Cook, Harold John (2007). Matters of Exchange: Commerce, Medicine, and Science in the Dutch Golden Age. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13492-6.
  • Deng, Gang (1999). Maritime Sector, Institutions, and Sea Power of Premodern China. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-30712-6.
  • Idema, Wilt Lukas, ed. (1981). Leyden Studies in Sinology: Papers Presented at the Conference Held in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Sinological Institute of Leyden University, December 8-12, 1980. Sinica Leidensia. Vol. 15. Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden. Sinologisch instituut (illustrated ed.). BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-06529-1.
  • Li, Qingxin (2006). Maritime Silk Road. Translated by William W. Wang. China Intercontinental Press. ISBN 978-7-5085-0932-7.
  • Parker, Edward Harper, ed. (1917). China, Her History, Diplomacy, and Commerce: From the Earliest Times to the Present Day (2nd ed.). J. Murray. LCCN 17030891. OL 6603922M.

External links edit

  • Penghu County Government (in English)
  • Penghu Tour Official Website
  • (Traditional Chinese)
  • (Copyright © 2012 Culture Taiwan)
  •   Geographic data related to Penghu at OpenStreetMap

penghu, pescadores, redirects, here, ecuadorian, socio, ethnic, group, cholos, pescadores, 1938, mexican, film, pescadores, perlas, confused, with, pescador, pescador, island, pung, hokkien, phîⁿ, phêⁿ, pescadores, islands, archipelago, islands, islets, taiwan. Pescadores redirects here For the Ecuadorian socio ethnic group see Cholos pescadores For the 1938 Mexican film see Pescadores de perlas It is not to be confused with Pescador or Pescador Island The Penghu ˈ p ʌ ŋ ˈ h uː PUNG HOO 1 Hokkien POJ Phiⁿ o or Pheⁿ o or Pescadores Islands are an archipelago of 90 islands and islets in the Taiwan Strait located approximately 50 km 31 mi west from the main island of Taiwan across the Penghu Channel covering an area of 141 square kilometers 54 sq mi The archipelago collectively forms Penghu County of Taiwan and is the smallest county of Taiwan The largest city is Magong located on the largest island which is also named Magong Penghu Islands 澎湖縣PescadoresCountyPenghu CountyClockwise from the top A night view of Xiying Rainbow Bridge Zhongyang Old Street Qimei Double Heart of Stacked Stones Baisha Beach Penghu Tianhou Temple Budai HarborFlagLogoCoordinates 23 34 03 N 119 34 39 E 23 56750 N 119 57750 E 23 56750 119 57750Country Republic of China Taiwan ProvinceTaiwan Province streamlined SeatMagong CityLargest cityMagongBoroughsOne city five rural townshipsGovernment BodyPenghu County GovernmentPenghu County Council County MagistrateChen Kuang fu DPP Area Total141 052 km2 54 460 sq mi Rank22 of 22Population December 2014 Total101 758 Rank21 of 22 Density720 km2 1 900 sq mi Time zoneUTC 8 National Standard Time ISO 3166 codeTW PENWebsitewww penghu gov twSymbolsBirdSmall Skylark Alauda gulgula FlowerFirewheel Gaillardia pulchella TreeChinese Banyan Ficus microcarpa Penghu IslandsTraditional Chinese澎湖群島PostalPescadores IslandsTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinPenghu QundǎoBopomofoㄆㄥˊ ㄏㄨˊㄑㄩㄣˊ ㄉㄠˇGwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu ChyundaoWade GilesPʻeng2 hu2 Chʻun2 tao3Tongyong PinyinPenghu CyundǎoYale RomanizationPenghu ChyundǎuMPS2Penghu ChiundǎuIPA pʰe ŋ xu tɕʰy n ta ʊ Southern MinHokkien POJPhiⁿ o kun to orPheⁿ o kun toTai loPhinn oo kun to orPhenn oo kun toPenghu IslandTraditional Chinese澎湖島TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinPenghu DǎoBopomofoㄆㄥˊ ㄏㄨˊ ㄉㄠˇGwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu DaoWade GilesPʻeng2 hu2 Tao3Tongyong PinyinPenghu DǎoYale RomanizationPenghu DǎuMPS2Penghu DǎuIPA pʰe ŋ xu ta ʊ Southern MinHokkien POJPhiⁿ o to orPheⁿ o toTai loPhinn oo to orPhenn oo toPenghu CountyTraditional Chinese澎湖縣TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinPenghu XianBopomofoㄆㄥˊ ㄏㄨˊ ㄒㄧㄢˋGwoyeu RomatzyhPernghwu ShiannWade GilesPʻeng2 hu2 Hsien4Tongyong PinyinPenghu SianYale RomanizationPenghu SyanMPS2Penghu ShianIPA pʰe ŋ xu ɕjɛ n HakkaPha k fa sṳPhang fu yenSouthern MinHokkien POJPhiⁿ o koan orPheⁿ o koanTai loPhinn oo kuan orPhenn oo kuanHistorical affiliations Song dynasty 1170 1279 Great Yuan Empire 1281 1368 Great Ming Empire 1368 1622 1624 1644 Dutch Empire 1622 1624 Kingdom of Tungning 1661 1683 Great Qing Empire 1683 1895 Empire of Japan 1895 1945 Republic of China 1945 present Northern islands of Penghu the Pescadores The Penghu islands first appear in the historical record during the Tang dynasty and were inhabited by Chinese people by the Southern Song dynasty during which they were attached to Jinjiang County of Fujian 2 The archipelago was formally incorporated as an administrative unit of China in 1281 under Tong an County of Jiangzhe Province during the Yuan dynasty 3 It continued to be controlled by Imperial China with brief European occupations by the Dutch 1622 1624 and French 1885 until it was ceded to the Japanese Empire in 1895 Since the end of World War II Penghu has been governed by the Republic of China ROC Under the terms of the Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty and the subsequent Taiwan Relations Act between the ROC and the United States Penghu is defined and geographically acknowledged as part of Taiwan 4 5 Penghu Islands rely solely on sea and air transportation with air transport taking a significant part for outside access The islands are served by three local domestic airports Penghu Airport Qimei Airport and Wang an Airport The Penghu National Scenic Area comprises most of the islands and islets of the archipelago it is also renowned for its unique natural feature of columnar basalt landscape Tourism is one of the main sources of income to the county Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Song dynasty 2 3 Yuan dynasty 2 4 Ming dynasty 2 5 Qing dynasty 2 6 Empire of Japan 2 7 Republic of China 3 Climate 4 Geology 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnicities 5 2 Population 5 3 Language 6 Government 6 1 Administrative divisions 6 2 Politics 7 Political dispute 8 Economy 9 Education 10 Energy 11 Tourism 12 Drug trafficking 13 Transport 13 1 Air 13 2 Water 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Citations 15 2 Works cited 16 Further reading 17 External linksName editThe Penghu islands were mentioned in a series of poems during the Tang dynasty 618 907 During the Song dynasty 960 1279 it was mentioned that during the Tang period Pinghu barbarians from beyond Quanzhou laid siege to Fuzhou now the capital of Fujian Province 2 In 1171 the poet Lou Yue described a place across the sea from Quanzhou identified as Penghu that had thousands of sandbars called Pinghu flat lake because of the encircling shape of its inner coastline 6 Song sources describe migrants from Fujian cultivating land on Pinghu 7 In 1225 the Song historian Zhao Rukuo called the islands attached to Jinjiang County Penghu 8 In 1227 Wang Xiangzhi described Penghu as a group of 36 islands in an outlying region which took three days to reach by sailing from Jinjiang 9 In the Southern Min language both Pinghu and Penghu are pronounced similarly and scholars in Taiwan believe them to be the same place 8 In Southern Min it is pronounced Pheⁿ o 10 According to official Penghu County Chronicle Penghu s original name had been Pinghu 平湖 but as Ping 平 sounded similar to Peng 彭 in Hokkien Pinghu 平湖 was also written as Penghu 彭湖 and ultimately upon consensus it is written as Penghu 澎湖 11 12 The name Pescadores comes from the Portuguese name Ilhas dos Pescadores Fishermen Islands The European Portuguese pronunciation is pɨʃkɐˈdoɾɨʃ but in English it is typically closer to ˌ p ɛ s k e ˈ d ɔː r ɪ z iː z 10 The islands have also been called Pehoe from the Minnan name Pheⁿ o 10 History editPrehistory edit Penghu 1 a fossil jaw mandible dating to the Middle or Late Pleistocene that belonged to a member of an extinct hominin species possibly a Denisovan was discovered in the Penghu Channel c 2008 13 Finds of fine red cord marked pottery at Guoye Huxi indicate that Penghu was visited by Austronesians from southwestern Taiwan around 5 000 years ago though not settled permanently 14 Song dynasty edit Han Chinese from southern Fujian began to establish fishing communities on the islands in the 9th and 10th centuries 14 and representatives were intermittently stationed there by the Southern Song and Yuan governments from c 1170 15 Chinese fishermen had settled on the Penghu Islands by 1171 when a group of Bisheye bandits with dark skin speaking a foreign language landed on Penghu and plundered the fields planted by Chinese migrants The Song government sent soldiers after them and from that time on Song patrols regularly visited Penghu in the spring and summer A local official Wang Dayou had houses built on Penghu and stationed troops there to prevent depredations from the Bisheye 16 17 15 Coins dating to the Xining 1068 1077 and Zhenghe 1111 1117 reign periods as well as many Song pottery and porcelain shards have been unearthed in Penghu 9 In 1225 the Book of Barbarian Nations anecdotally indicated that Penghu was attached to Jinjiang Quanzhou Prefecture 3 A group of Quanzhou immigrants lived on Penghu 18 Yuan dynasty edit In November 1281 the Yuan dynasty under Emperor Shizu officially established the Penghu Patrol and Inspection Agency under the jurisdiction of Tong an County incorporating Penghu into China s borders 403 years earlier than Taiwan 3 Wang Dayuan gave a detailed first hand account of the islands in his Daoyi Zhilue 1349 19 There are thirty six islands large and small so close together that the slopes of one are visible from another Among them are seven harbors which are named With a favoring wind they can be reached from Ch uan chou in two days and nights There is grass but no trees the land is barren and not suited for growing rice The Ch uan chou people make their houses by thatching grass The weather is always warm The customs of the residents are rustic Many of the people are long lived or the people are mostly old Men and women both wear long cloth gowns girded with local cotton cloth They boil sea water to get salt and ferment millet to make liquor They gather fish shrimp snails and clams to supplement their staple of grain They burn ox dung to cook fish fat for use as oil The land produces sesame and green beans The goats multiply into flocks of several tens of thousands A family which owns some goats brands their hair and cuts their horns as marks of identification but does not gather them in during the day or night so that they all forage for themselves Their workmen and merchants enjoy the profits of a flourishing trade The territory is attached to Chin chiang county hsien of Ch uan chou prefecture During the reign period Chih yuan 至元 1280 1294 a sub county magistrate was assigned there to be in charge of the annual tax fixed on salt during the Chung t ung 中統 reign period 1260 1279 this amounted to ten ingots ting 錠 and twenty five ounces No other tax or corvee is levied 20 Wang Dayuan Ming dynasty edit Further information Sino Dutch conflicts In the 15th century the Ming ordered the evacuation of the islands as part of their maritime ban When these restrictions were removed in the late 16th century legal fishing communities most of which hailed from Tong an County 21 were re established on the islands These fishermen worshiped at the Mazu Temple that gave Magong its name and themselves gave rise to the Portuguese and English name Pescadores 15 The Ming established a permanent military presence starting in 1597 22 At this time the Dutch East India Company was trying to force China to open a port in Fujian to Dutch trade and expel the Portuguese from Macau 23 24 25 When the Dutch were defeated by the Portuguese at the Battle of Macau in 1622 they seized Penghu built a fort there and threatened raids on Chinese ports and shipping unless the Chinese allowed trading with them on Penghu and that China not trade with Manila 26 In response the Chinese governor of Fujian demanded that the Dutch withdraw from Penghu to Taiwan where the Chinese would permit them to engage in trade 27 28 The Dutch continued to raid the Fujian coast between October 1622 and January 1624 to force their demands but were unsuccessful 29 In 1624 the new governor of Fujian sent a fleet of 40 50 warships with 5 000 troops to Penghu and expelled the Dutch who moved to Fort Zeelandia on Taiwan 30 31 Qing dynasty edit nbsp Map of Penghu 1752For a period in the mid 17th century Taiwan and the archipelago were ruled by the Kingdom of Tungning under the Zheng family which was overthrown by the Qing dynasty in 1683 after the Battle of Penghu Military personnel were stationed on Penghu afterwards Penghu became a sub prefecture of Taiwan Prefecture Fujian Province during the Qing period 32 The Penghu archipelago was captured by the French in March 1885 in the closing weeks of the Sino French War and evacuated four months later The Pescadores Campaign was the last campaign of Admiral Amedee Courbet whose naval victories during the war had made him a national hero in France Courbet was among several French soldiers and sailors who succumbed to cholera during the French occupation of Penghu He died aboard his flagship Bayard in Makung harbour on 11 June 1885 33 non primary source needed Empire of Japan edit Main article Hōko Prefecture nbsp Hōko Prefecture Government buildingTowards the end of the First Sino Japanese War having defeated the Qing in northern China Japan sought to ensure that it obtained Penghu and Taiwan in the final settlement In March 1895 the Japanese defeated the Chinese garrison on the islands and occupied Makung The Japanese occupation of Penghu with its fine harbor gave the Imperial Japanese Navy an advanced base from which their short range coal burning ships could control the Taiwan Straits and thus prevent more Chinese troops from being sent to Taiwan This action persuaded the Chinese negotiators at Shimonoseki that Japan was determined to annex Taiwan and after Penghu Taiwan and the Liaodong Peninsula had been ceded to Japan in the Sino Japanese Treaty of Shimonoseki in April helped to ensure the success of the Japanese invasion of Taiwan in May 34 non primary source needed Penghu County was then called the Hōko Prefecture by the Japanese government of Taiwan During World War II Makō Makung was a major base for the Imperial Japanese Navy and the embarkation point for the invasion of the Philippines citation needed Republic of China edit nbsp The Pescadores 1950 In the Cairo Declaration of 1943 the United States the United Kingdom and China stated it to be their purpose that all the territories that Japan has stolen from the Chinese such as Formosa and The Pescadores shall be restored to the Republic of China On 26 July 1945 the three governments issued the Potsdam Declaration declaring that the terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried out However the United States and the United Kingdom have regarded the aforementioned documents as merely wartime statements of intention with no binding force in law 35 Following the surrender of Japan on 2 September 1945 Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers Douglas MacArthur issued General Order No 1 which directed Japanese forces to surrender to the Allied Powers and facilitate the occupation of Japanese territories by the Allied Powers The Office of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers ordered Japanese forces in China and Taiwan to surrender to Chiang Kai shek who the Allied Powers delegated to accept the surrender On 25 October 1945 Governor General Rikichi Andō handed over the administration of Taiwan and the Penghu islands to the head of the Taiwan Investigation Commission Chen Yi 36 37 The Republic of China and Japan signed the Treaty of Taipei on April 28 1952 and the treaty came into force on August 5 which is considered by some as giving a legal support to the Republic of China s claim to Taiwan as de jure territory The treaty stipulates that all treaties conventions and agreements between China and Japan prior to 9 December 1941 were null and void which according to Hungdah Chiu abolishes the Treaty of Shimonoseki ceding Taiwan to Japan In the 1956 Japan v Lai Chin Jung case it was stated that Taiwan and the Penghu islands came to belong to the ROC on the date the Treaty of Taipei came into force 37 However in 1954 the United States denied that the sovereignty over Taiwan and the Penghu islands had been settled by the Treaty of Taipei 38 In the following year the United States also stated its position that Taiwan and Penghu were handed over to the Allied Powers and that the Republic of China was merely asked to administer these territories for the Allied Powers pending a final decision as to their ownership 39 In the 1960 Sheng v Rogers case it was stated that in the view of the U S State Department no agreement has purported to transfer the sovereignty of Taiwan to the ROC though it accepted the exercise of Chinese authority over Taiwan and recognized the Government of the Republic of China as the legal government of China at the time 40 Boat people fleeing Vietnam in the 1970s and 1980s who were rescued by Taiwan s ships in the South China Sea were sent to Penghu 41 On 25 May 2002 China Airlines Flight 611 a Boeing 747 200 aircraft flying from Taipei to Hong Kong disintegrated and exploded over the Islands The wreckage slammed into the Taiwan Strait a couple of miles off the coast All 225 passengers and crew on board were killed 42 Climate editPenghu County has a dry winter humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cwa bordering on a regular humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cfa Climate data for Penghu 1991 2020 normals extremes 1897 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 28 6 83 5 29 5 85 1 30 8 87 4 33 0 91 4 34 2 93 6 35 9 96 6 36 7 98 1 35 2 95 4 35 1 95 2 35 3 95 5 31 1 88 0 30 0 86 0 36 7 98 1 Mean daily maximum C F 19 4 66 9 20 0 68 0 22 9 73 2 26 3 79 3 29 1 84 4 30 9 87 6 32 2 90 0 31 8 89 2 31 0 87 8 28 2 82 8 25 1 77 2 21 3 70 3 26 5 79 7 Daily mean C F 17 1 62 8 17 4 63 3 19 9 67 8 23 2 73 8 25 9 78 6 27 9 82 2 28 9 84 0 28 6 83 5 28 0 82 4 25 5 77 9 22 7 72 9 19 1 66 4 23 7 74 6 Mean daily minimum C F 15 5 59 9 15 6 60 1 17 8 64 0 21 1 70 0 24 0 75 2 25 9 78 6 26 7 80 1 26 6 79 9 26 1 79 0 24 0 75 2 21 3 70 3 17 7 63 9 21 9 71 4 Record low C F 7 7 45 9 7 2 45 0 7 4 45 3 10 5 50 9 16 6 61 9 19 3 66 7 21 8 71 2 21 1 70 0 19 2 66 6 15 0 59 0 9 6 49 3 9 0 48 2 7 2 45 0 Average precipitation mm inches 20 9 0 82 38 1 1 50 50 7 2 00 77 9 3 07 117 8 4 64 148 0 5 83 163 2 6 43 229 4 9 03 100 3 3 95 30 1 1 19 26 0 1 02 28 1 1 11 1 030 5 40 59 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 5 2 6 2 7 6 8 7 9 3 10 2 8 1 9 4 5 6 2 4 3 6 4 8 81 1Average relative humidity 78 7 80 7 80 0 80 9 82 8 85 2 83 6 84 4 79 6 75 2 76 8 76 8 80 4Mean monthly sunshine hours 102 9 98 7 131 1 153 1 183 6 211 2 265 3 231 4 214 9 186 4 129 2 111 4 2 019 2Source Central Weather Bureau 43 44 45 46 47 Geology edit nbsp Columnar basalt at South Penghu Marine National ParkPenghu is the remnant of a Miocene aged shield volcano the stratigraphy of the island is dominated by two to four layers of basalt interbedded with sandstone and mudstone deposited in shallow marine conditions 48 Demographics editEthnicities edit The majority of the populace 72 in Penghu are descendants of settlers from Tong an in Fujian 21 Population edit Historical populationYearPop 1985102 282 199095 932 6 2 199590 937 5 2 200089 496 1 6 200591 785 2 6 201096 918 5 6 2015102 304 5 6 Source Populations by city and country in Taiwan Ministry of the Interior May 2018 Archived from the original on 16 December 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2016 Language edit In Penghu the native language is Taiwanese Hokkien with Tong an dialect being the most prevalent speech 49 Government editMain article Penghu County Government nbsp Lai Feng wei the incumbent Magistrate of Penghu County nbsp Penghu County HallPenghu County is administered by Penghu County Government headed by Magistrate Lai Feng wei of the Kuomintang and headquartered at the Penghu County Hall Administrative divisions edit Main article Administrative divisions of Taiwan nbsp Administrative subdivisions of Penghu CountyPenghu County is divided into one city and five rural townships It is further divided into 97 villages 50 Like Lienchiang County Penghu County has no urban townships The county seat is located at Magong City where it houses the Penghu County Hall and Penghu County Council Type Name Chinese Taiwanese Hakka English translationCity Magong City 馬公市 Ma keng Ma kung Originally Mazu Temple 媽宮 Ruraltownships Baisha 白沙鄉 Pe h soa Pha k sa White SandCimei Qimei 七美鄉 Chhit bi Tshit mi Seven Beauties 大嶼 Huxi 湖西鄉 O sai Fu si Lake WestWangan Wang an Wang an 望安鄉 Bang oaⁿ Mong on Hope Safe 網垵 Xiyu 西嶼鄉 Sai su Si yi Western IsleThe main island comprising Magong City and Huxi Township Baisha and Xiyu are the three most populous islands and are connected via bridges The Penghu Great Bridge connecting Baisha and Xiyu is the longest bridge in Taiwan Two shorter bridges connect Huxi and Baisha via the small island of Zhongtun Politics edit The county elects a single representative to the Legislative Yuan In the 2016 Republic of China legislative election this seat was won by the Democratic Progressive Party with 55 4 of the vote 51 Political dispute editDespite the controversy over the political status of Taiwan both the Republic of China and the People s Republic of China agree that Penghu is a county in their own respective Taiwan Province Taiwan Province Republic of China and Taiwan Province People s Republic of China Yet geographically the island of Taiwan does not include Penghu although it is closer to Taiwan than mainland China Thus Penghu is listed separately from Taiwan in some contexts e g the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan Penghu Kinmen and Matsu the official WTO name for the Republic of China and in the Treaty of Shimonoseki the Cairo Declaration and the Treaty of San Francisco 52 53 54 Economy editDue to its restricted geography fisheries have been the main industry for Penghu 55 The Agriculture and Fisheries Bureau of the Penghu County Government governs matters related to agriculture and fisheries in Penghu In 2016 the bureau placed a ban on the harvesting of sea urchins due to their declining population However the ban was lifted in 2017 but catches are limited only to those species larger than 8 cm 3 1 in in diameter 56 Education edit nbsp National Penghu University of Science and TechnologyEducation related matters in Penghu County are administered under the Education Department of the Penghu County Government The county houses the National Penghu University of Science and Technology Energy edit nbsp Chienshan Power PlantPenghu is powered by the Chienshan Power Plant a 140 MW diesel fired power plant commissioned in 2001 and the Hujing Power Plant on Table Island On 24 December 2010 the Taiwan Penghu Undersea Cable Project of Taipower was approved by the Executive Yuan to connect the electrical grid in Taiwan Island to Penghu 57 Under a wind power development project approved in 2002 by the Executive Yuan the ROC government plans to set up a total of 200 wind turbines in Penghu within 10 years However only 14 turbines have been set up as of 2015 update On 1 October 2015 Taipower announced the construction of another 11 new wind turbines across the island of which six will be constructed in Huxi Township and five in Baisha Township 58 The current total desalination capacity of the county to provide clean water to its residents is 15 500 m3 per day To reduce its groundwater use in November 2015 the county secured a contract of building an additional desalination plant with 4 000 m3 capacity per day construction of which is expected to be completed by May 2018 59 Tourism editThe Penghu National Scenic Area was established in the early 1990s comprising most of the islands and islets of the archipelago Tourism has since become one of the main sources of income of the county Historical sites include Central Street Erdai Art Hall Tianhou Temple Four eyed Well Penghu Reclamation Hall Qimei Lighthouse Xiyu Eastern Fort Jinguitou Fortress and Xiyu Western Fort Museums in the county are Chuwan Crab Museum Ocean Resources Museum Chang Yu sheng Memorial Museum and Penghu Living Museum Other attractions in the county include the Double Heart of Stacked Stones Fenggui Cave Little Taiwan Whale Cave Xiaomen Geology Gallery and South Penghu Marine National Park 60 Since 1 January 2015 tourists from Mainland China can directly apply for the Exit amp Entry Permit upon arrival in Penghu This privilege also applies to Kinmen and the Matsu Islands as a means to boost tourism in the outlying islands of Taiwan 61 The county welcomed 1 8 million tourists in 2018 with an average annual growth of around 10 62 nbsp Original 1908 memorial to the cruiser Matsushima pictured Modern park memorial in Magong City Penghu Taiwan nbsp Double Heart of Stacked StonesDrug trafficking editAs a lightly populated outlying island Penghu lends itself to being used as a trans shipment hub for drug smuggling into Taiwan from China and the Philippines Beginning in 2016 the area became the focus of a major drug trafficking crackdown by the Taiwanese police 63 64 65 In 2016 Chou Meng hsiang 周盟翔 chief prosecutor of the Penghu District Prosecutors Office led an investigation team in Taiwan including officers from the Coast Guard Administration in a bid to bring a drug trafficking ring to justice A joint investigation with Philippine and Chinese authorities spanning one and a half years resulted in the seizure of 22 6 kilograms of amphetamine 11 4 kilograms of ephedrine and about 40 kilograms of calcium chloride with an estimated value of NT 123 million Eight suspects were arrested in Cagayan a small island in northern Philippines but no Taiwanese nationals were charged in relation to the importation scheme 66 In 2017 media reported the biggest ever haul of drugs in the county s history when 506 kg of ephedrine was seized from a Chinese fishing boat off Penghu as part of an ongoing crackdown on the area drug trade 63 Ephedrine smuggling has increased in recent years as it has a similar structure to amphetamines and can be easily converted into methamphetamine According to a Focus Taiwan report It can then be sold for ten times the price in this case that would be more than NT 1 billion US 33 33 million 64 Despite the size of the drug seizure only the five crew members of the Chinese fishing boat were detained in the operation with authorities unable to find the Taiwanese ship which should have turned up to take delivery of the drugs It was unclear from media reports how the Taiwanese side of the smuggling operation knew to abort the rendezvous The suppliers of the shipment also evaded capture It was believed that the drugs were destined to be transported from Penghu for distribution on Taiwan 67 Transport edit nbsp Qimei AirportAir edit Penghu is served by Penghu Airport in Magong City and Qimei Airport in Cimei Township Both airports opened in 1977 Daily Air operates flights between Penghu to Kaohsiung Water edit The county has Magong Harbor and Longmen Jianshan Pier Magong Harbor hosts ferry connections with Kaohsiung Tainan Chiayi and Kinmen See also edit nbsp Taiwan portal nbsp Islands portalAdministrative divisions of Taiwan List of cities in Taiwan Political status of TaiwanReferences editCitations edit Penghu Merriam Webster com Dictionary a b Liu 2012 p 167 168 a b c 歷史沿革 Penghu County Government 13 July 2017 Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 24 January 2021 Taiwan Relations Act ait org tw American Institute in Taiwan 30 March 2022 Archived from the original on 19 August 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Section 15 For purposes of this Act 2 the term Taiwan includes as the context may require the islands of Taiwan and the Pescadores Penghu Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty ait org tw American Institute in Taiwan 1954 Archived from the original on 24 December 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 ARTICLE VI For the purposes of Articles II and V the terms territorial and territories shall mean in respect of the Republic of China Taiwan and the Pescadores and in respect of the United States of America the island territories in the West Pacific under its jurisdiction Asian amp Pacific Quarterly of Cultural and Social Affairs 15 16 p 43 Liu 2012 p 168 a b 方豪 1994 台灣早期史綱 頁33 34 台北 學生書局 ISBN 957 15 0631 1 a b Knapp 1980 p 6 a b c Campbell William 1903 Explanatory Notes Formosa under the Dutch described from contemporary records with explanatory notes and a bibliography of the island London Kegan Paul p 546 ISBN 978 957 638 083 9 中央研究院臺灣史研究所 顏尚文 ed 宋代對澎湖的認識 續修澎湖縣志 地理志 pp 92 93 archived from the original on 11 February 2022 retrieved 11 February 2022 大正6年 1917 日人藤田豊八在 南蠻之來襲 中 認為 平湖 與 澎湖 為同音異字 毛一波由音韻解釋 平 可作 旁 音讀之 彭 音 滂 本與 旁 通 旁 即是 滂 澎 之字音也是從 旁 字而來 是故 平 與 澎 為同音異字 曹永和 早期臺灣的開發與經營 臺灣早期歷史研究 pp 91 92 Chang Chun Hsiang Kaifu Yousuke Takai Masanaru Kono Reiko T Grun Rainer Matsu ura Shuji Kinsley Les Lin Liang Kong 2015 The first archaic Homo from Taiwan Nature Communications 6 6037 Bibcode 2015NatCo 6 6037C doi 10 1038 ncomms7037 PMC 4316746 PMID 25625212 Older low sea level events 225 240 280 300 335 360 and 425 450 ka cannot be completely excluded as the age for Penghu 1 but such a situation requires explanation for preservation through repeated sedimentary events and the unusual distribution of Crocuta crocuta ultima Therefore Penghu 1 is younger than 450 ka and most likely 10 70 ka or 130 190 ka a b Penghu Reclamation Hall Archived from the original on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 22 December 2012 a b c Wills 2006 p 86 Liu 2012 p 170 171 Hsu 1980 p 6 Thompson 1964 p 164 Thompson 1964 pp 167 168 Knapp 1980 p 167 168 a b 明萬曆年以後 澎湖第二次有移住民 以福建泉州府屬同安縣金門人遷來最早 其後接踵而至者 亦以同安縣人為最多 彼等捷足先至者 得以優先選擇良好地區定居之 澎湖本島即多被同安人所先占 尤其素稱土地沃之湖西鄉 完全成為同安人之區域 Archived 13 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine 李紹章 澎湖縣誌 續修澎湖縣志 卷三 人民志 Wong 2017 p 82 Cooper 1979 p 658 Freeman 2003 p 132 Thomson 1996 p 39 Shepherd 1993 p 49 Covell 1998 p 70 Wright 1908 p 817 Wills 1998 pp 368 369 Wills 1998 p 369 Wills 2010 p 70 Reading Digital Atlas 臺灣府汛塘圖 Archived from the original on 2 September 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Loir 1886 pp 291 317 Takekoshi 1907 pp 80 82 Middleton Drew 2 February 1955 Cairo Formosa Declaration Out of Date Says Churchill New York Times p 1 Archived from the original on 17 March 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2021 Tsai 2009 p 173 a b Henckaerts Jean Marie 1996 The international status of Taiwan in the new world order legal and political considerations Kluwer Law International p 337 ISBN 90 411 0929 3 Archived from the original on 8 April 2023 Retrieved 5 October 2022 p7 In any case there appears to be strong legal ground to support the view that since the entry into force of the 1952 ROC Japan bilateral peace treaty Taiwan has become the de jure territory of the ROC This interpretation of the legal status of Taiwan is confirmed by several Japanese court decisions For instance in the case of Japan v Lai Chin Jung decided by the Tokyo High Court on December 24 1956 it was stated that Formosa and the Pescadores came to belong to the Republic of China at any rate on August 5 1952 when the Peace Treaty between Japan and the Republic of China came into force p8 the principles of prescription and occupation that may justify the ROC s claim to Taiwan certainly are not applicable to the PRC because the application of these two principles to the Taiwan situation presupposes the validity of the two peace treaties by which Japan renounce its claim to Taiwan and thus makes the island terra nullius Department of State 13 December 1954 News Conference Statements Purpose of treaty with Republic of China Department of State Bulletin Vol XXXI no 807 Washington D C United States Government Printing Office p 896 The legal position is different as I think I pointed out in my last press conference by virtue of the fact that technical sovereignty over Formosa and the Pescadores has never been settled That is because the Japanese peace treaty merely involves a renunciation by Japan of its right and title to these island But the future title is not determined by the Japanese peace treaty nor is it determined by the peace treaty which was concluded between the Republic of China and Japan Therefore the juridical status of these islands Formosa and the Pescadores is different from the juridical status of the offshore islands which have always been Chinese territory James Reston 6 February 1955 New Formosa Bid New York Times New York City Archived from the original on 8 March 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2015 The position of the Administration is that these territories were handed over to the Allied and associated powers of World War II by Japan which had held them since 1895 and that General Chiang was merely asked to administer them for the Allied and associated powers pending a final decision as to their ownership William P Rogers Attorney General of the United States Appellant v Cheng Fu Sheng and Lin Fu Mei Appellees 280 F 2d 663 D C Cir 1960 1960 Archived from the original on 30 September 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2022 But in the view of our State Department no agreement has purported to transfer the sovereignty of Formosa to the Republic of China At the present time we accept the exercise of Chinese authority over Formosa and recognize the Government of the Republic of China the Nationalist Government as the legal Government of China Kamm Henry 5 August 1981 Despite Perils Afloat Vietnamese Continue to Flee The New York Times Section A p 2 Archived from the original on 8 October 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2017 Barron Lisa 28 May 2002 China Airlines safety record in the spotlight CNN com Cable News Network LP LLLP Archived from the original on 28 August 2010 Retrieved 25 October 2010 Monthly Mean Central Weather Bureau Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 氣象站各月份最高氣溫統計 PDF in Chinese Central Weather Bureau Archived PDF from the original on 17 October 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 氣象站各月份最高氣溫統計 續 PDF in Chinese Central Weather Bureau Archived PDF from the original on 17 October 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 氣象站各月份最低氣溫統計 PDF in Chinese Central Weather Bureau Archived PDF from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 氣象站各月份最低氣溫統計 續 PDF in Chinese Central Weather Bureau Archived PDF from the original on 19 December 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 Juang W S Chen J C February 1992 Geochronology and geochemistry of Penghu basalts Taiwan Strait and their tectonic significance Journal of Southeast Asian Earth Sciences 7 2 3 185 193 Bibcode 1992JAESc 7 185J doi 10 1016 0743 9547 92 90053 E Archived from the original on 27 June 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2020 在澎湖的最佔優勢的閩南話 是同安腔 Archived 6 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine 張屏生 李仲民 2006 澎湖縣白沙鄉語言地理研究 p36 Precinct Penghu County Government Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2019 Penghu county consists of 1 city and 5 townships which are Magong city Huxi Township Baisha Township Xiyu Township Wang an Township and Qimei Township The city and township comprise 97 villages Constituency Legislator Election Penghu County Constituency Ballots Cast of Candidates The 14th Presidential and Vice Presidential Election and The 9th Legislator Election 2016 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Alsford Niki J P Griffith Ed 14 July 2020 China is Becoming Increasingly Assertive IndraStra Global ISSN 2381 3652 Archived from the original on 16 November 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2020 Treaty of Shimonoseki Archived from the original on 23 April 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 via Taiwan Documents Project Cairo Communique Archived from the original on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2022 via National Diet Library http island giee ntnu edu tw ISISA2004 ISISA8 107 204 2 C 4 20Liu 20Yin 20Yuh pdf permanent dead link Chen Chi ching Lin Ko 11 May 2017 Ban on Sea Urchin Harvesting Temporarily Lifted in Penghu Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 16 June 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 2010 Taipower Events Taiwan Power Company Archived from the original on 17 May 2014 Retrieved 3 June 2014 Chen Chi ching Hung Lauren 1 October 2015 Taipower to Help Build Penghu Into Low Carbon County Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 2 October 2015 Retrieved 2 October 2015 Liu Kay 6 November 2015 Penghu Chief Seeks Support for Desalination Plant Expansion Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 7 November 2015 Retrieved 7 November 2015 Chang Jung hsiang Kuo Chung han 29 May 2016 Ferry Service Between Tainan and Penghu s Dongji Kicks Off Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Huang Hui min Low Y F 30 December 2014 Annual Ridership on Kinmen Fujian Ferry Services Tops 1 5 Million Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 9 May 2015 Retrieved 2 January 2015 Shan Shelley 29 October 2019 Official Clarifies Following Han s Penghu Ferry Vow Taipei Times Archived from the original on 1 October 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b Largest Ever Haul of Drugs Found Off Penghu Police Say Taipei Times 17 December 2017 Archived from the original on 1 October 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b Chen Chih ching Liu Kuan lin 16 December 2017 More Details Revealed About Drug Bust off Penghu Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Hsieh Chia chen Chang S C 28 November 2016 President Orders All Out Effort to Combat Drugs Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Chen Chi ching Huang Frances 4 February 2016 Taiwan China Philippines Bust Drug Trafficking Ring Focus Taiwan News Channel Central News Agency Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Strong Matthew 16 December 2017 Massive Drugs Catch on Chinese Fishing Boat Near Taiwan s Penghu Taiwan News Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 Works cited edit Cooper J P ed 1979 The New Cambridge Modern History IV The Decline of Spain and the Thirty Years War 1609 59 Vol 4 reprint ed CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 29713 4 Covell Ralph R 1998 Pentecost of the Hills in Taiwan The Christian Faith Among the Original Inhabitants illustrated ed Hope Publishing House ISBN 978 0 93 272 790 9 Freeman Donald B 2003 Straits of Malacca Gateway or Gauntlet McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 2515 3 Hsu Wen hsiung 1980 From Aboriginal Island to Chinese Frontier The Development of Taiwan before 1683 In Knapp Ronald G ed China s Island Frontier Studies in the Historical Geography of Taiwan The University of Hawaii pp 3 28 hdl 10125 62865 ISBN 978 0 8248 8005 7 Knapp Ronald G 1980 China s Island Frontier Studies in the Historical Geography of Taiwan The University of Hawaii Liu Yingsheng 2012 The Taiwan Strait between the Twelfth and Sixteenth Centuries and the Maritime Route to Luzon Harrassowitz Verlag Loir Maurice 1886 L escadre de l amiral Courbet Paris Berger Levrault LCCN 03013530 OCLC 23421595 Shepherd John Robert 1993 Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier 1600 1800 illustrated ed Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2066 3 OCLC 25025794 Takekoshi Yosaburō 1907 Japanese rule in Formosa London New York Bombay and Calcutta Longmans Green and co OCLC 753129 OL 6986981M Thompson Lawrence G 1964 The earliest eyewitness accounts of the Formosan aborigines Monumenta Serica 23 163 204 doi 10 1080 02549948 1964 11731044 JSTOR 40726116 Thomson Janice E 1996 Mercenaries Pirates and Sovereigns State Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe reprint ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2124 2 Tsai Shih shan Henry 2009 Maritime Taiwan Historical Encounters with the East and West M E Sharpe Inc Wills John E Jr 1998 Relations with maritime Europeans 1514 1662 In Twitchett Denis C Mote Frederick W eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 8 The Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 Part 2 Cambridge University Press pp 333 375 ISBN 978 0 521 24333 9 2006 The Seventeenth century Transformation Taiwan under the Dutch and the Cheng Regime In Rubinstein Murray A ed Taiwan A New History M E Sharpe pp 84 106 ISBN 978 0 7656 1495 7 2010 Maritime Europe and the Ming In Wills John E Jr ed China and Maritime Europe 1500 1800 Trade Settlement Diplomacy and Missions Cambridge University Press pp 24 77 ISBN 978 0 521 43260 3 OL 24524224M Wong Young tsu 2017 China s Conquest of Taiwan in the Seventeenth Century Victory at Full Moon Singapore Springer ISBN 978 981 10 2248 7 Wright Arnold 1908 Cartwright H A ed Twentieth century impressions of Hongkong Shanghai and other treaty ports of China their history people commerce industries and resources Volume 1 Lloyds Greater Britain publishing company OL 13518413M Further reading editCook Harold John 2007 Matters of Exchange Commerce Medicine and Science in the Dutch Golden Age Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13492 6 Deng Gang 1999 Maritime Sector Institutions and Sea Power of Premodern China Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30712 6 Idema Wilt Lukas ed 1981 Leyden Studies in Sinology Papers Presented at the Conference Held in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Sinological Institute of Leyden University December 8 12 1980 Sinica Leidensia Vol 15 Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden Sinologisch instituut illustrated ed BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 06529 1 Li Qingxin 2006 Maritime Silk Road Translated by William W Wang China Intercontinental Press ISBN 978 7 5085 0932 7 Parker Edward Harper ed 1917 China Her History Diplomacy and Commerce From the Earliest Times to the Present Day 2nd ed J Murray LCCN 17030891 OL 6603922M External links editPenghu at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata Penghu County Government in English Penghu Tour Official Website 澎湖研究學術研討會 第1 8屆論文輯全球資訊網 歷屆論文 Traditional Chinese Living Museum Copyright c 2012 Culture Taiwan nbsp Geographic data related to Penghu at OpenStreetMap Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penghu amp oldid 1180107093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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