Douliu

Douliu
斗六市
County-controlled city
Douliu City [1]
Douliu

Location in the Republic of China

Coordinates: 23°42′27″N 120°32′38″E / 23.70750°N 120.54389°E / 23.70750; 120.54389
Country Taiwan
Province Taiwan Province
County Yunlin County
Government
  Mayor Hsieh Shu-ya (謝淑亞)
Area
  Total 93.7151 km2 (36.1836 sq mi)
Population (December 2014)
  Total 108,098
  Density 1,200/km2 (3,000/sq mi)
Households 34,273
Divisions 38 villages, 747 neighborhoods
Postal code 640
Website www.dl.gov.tw
Douliu
Chinese 斗六市
Douliu City in Yunlin County

Douliu City (also Douliou City) (Chinese: 斗六市) is a county-controlled city and the county seat of Yunlin County, Taiwan. It is also the political and economic center of the county. Douliu City is served by National Highway No. 3.

Name

Its former name (Chinese: 斗六門; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Táu-la̍k-mn̂g) came from a language of the Hoanya people, a tribe of the Taiwanese plains aborigines.

History

Empire of Japan

In 1901, during Japanese rule, Toroku Chō (斗六廳) was one of twenty local administrative offices established. In 1909, part of Toroku was merged into Nanto Chō (南投廳), while the remainder was merged with Kagi Chō (嘉義廳). In 1920, Toroku Town (斗六街) was established and governed under Toroku District (斗六郡), Tainan Prefecture. Toroku Town covered modern-day Douliu and Linnei Township.

Republic of China

On 25 December 1981, Douliu was upgraded from an urban township to county-controlled city.

Administrative divisions

Xinyi, Siwei, Taiping, Zhonghe, Guangxing, Zengxi, Zengtung, Sanping, Mingde, Zengbei, Gongcheng, Zhongxiao, Renai, Bade, Gongzheng, Zhongguang, Lintou, Chenggong, Zengnan, Shekou, Longtan, Jiatung, Lunfeng, Gouju, Jiangcuo, Sanguang, Jiuan, Huxi, Baozhuang, Zhangping, Liuzhong, Liubei, Liunan, Meilin, Hushan, Zhangan, Xizhou and Shisan Village.

Government institutions

Economy

Douliu is home to the Douliu Industrial Park and the Yunlin Science Industrial Park.

Health

Places of Interest

Festivals

Sports

Douliu Baseball Stadium occasionally holds regular CPBL games and was also the venue for 2007 Baseball World Cup and Baseball at the 2008 Summer Olympics' Final Qualifying Tournament.

Education

Notable natives

Transportation

Rail

Bus

Taisi Bus: http://www.taisibus.com/index.php?option=com_productbook&Itemid=61

Solar Bus: http://www.solarbus.com.tw/

Road

See also

References

  1. "Glossary of Names for Admin Divisions" (PDF). placesearch.moi.gov.tw. Ministry of Interior of the ROC. Retrieved 10 August 2015.

Coordinates: 23°42′27″N 120°32′38″E / 23.70750°N 120.54389°E / 23.70750; 120.54389

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.