TAN-SHUI


Meaning of TAN-SHUI in English

also spelled Tamshui, or Tamsui, coastal chen (town) in T'ai-pei hsien (county), northern Taiwan, on the northern bank of the Tan-shui Ho (river), northwest of Taipei. Tan-shui is the oldest of the port settlements in northern Taiwan. The area was occupied by the Spanish in the 1620s after they had seized Chi-lung (q.v.) farther east. In 1642 the Spanish were driven out by the Dutch, and in 1662 the Dutch in their turn were expelled by Koxinga (Cheng Ch'eng-kung), a man of mixed ChineseJapanese parentage who ruled the island for a time; the port was restored to Chinese control in 1683. In the early 18th century, trade began with the interior of the island, and strong links were built up with the merchant communities in Foochow and Ch'an-chou in Fukien Province (sheng) on the Chinese mainland. In 1860 the port was opened to foreign trade as a treaty port. For the next few years Tan-shui became a centre of the growing Taiwan tea industry, founded by settlers from Fukien. This tea was shipped to Foochow and thence to Europe; by the end of the 19th century, Foochow was shipping more tea from Tan-shui than from Fukien itself. Occupied by the French during the Sino-French War of 188385, Tan-shui was further developed in the late 1880s, when a shipping route was opened from Tan-shui to Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Upon the completion of the railway line to the port of Chi-lung, however, and the increasingly serious silting of the Tan-shui Estuary, the port declined. It is now a seaside resort for the nearby capital city of Taipei. Pop. (1982 est.) township, 66,589.

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