Village (Taiwan)

Villages are the basic level administrative subdivisions of Taiwan, under townships, county-administered cities or districts. There are two types of villages depending on the divisions it belongs to.[1]

NameChineseMandarin
Pinyin
Taiwanese
Pe̍h-ōe-jī
Administered by
Urban villageUrban township, County-administered city, District, Mountain indigenous district
Rural villagecūnchhunRural township, Mountain indigenous township

Structuring and Sizing

The history of Village in Taiwan could date back to the Hoko system in the Japanese era, which ho () changed into village after Republic of China ruled Taiwan. The formation of village helps to divide area in considerations for transportation and city planning. The formation of village and its size depends largely on the county it is located or the population nature of the local area. In counties or districts of limited population, 100 households could form a village whereas in dense populated New Taipei, 1,000 households are necessary to form a village. In very densely populated areas, a village could comprise a population of up to 4,000 households. (Fushan Village of Kaohsiung City contains a population of 39,800) Thus the sizes of village varies widely.

The following are the statistics of villages in each administrative division in June 2018.

RegionTownship-level
divisions
Village-level
divisions
Types of Villages
UrbanRural
Changhua County26589264325
Chiayi City284840
Chiayi County1835789268
Hsinchu City31221220
Hsinchu County131929696
Hualien County1317772105
Kaohsiung City388918910
Keelung City71571570
Kinmen County6372413
Lienchiang County422022
Miaoli County18275169106
Nantou County13262133129
New Taipei City29103210320
Penghu County6963462
Pingtung County33463139324
Taichung City296256250
Tainan City376496490
Taipei City124564560
Taitung County161476186
Taoyuan City135045040
Yilan County12233111122
Yunlin County20391164227
Total368776158761885

The head of a village is elected by the people of the village every four years, the head is subsidized with 45,000 NT per month for local transportation, stationary, postage and bill fees.

The head of a village holds responsibility to accept complaints and suggestions, initiate and hold meetings, handout certificates of various sorts, encourage bill payments and assist filling out of government documents if required.

Example of villages in Taiwan

Caoling Village in Gukeng Township, Yunlin County.
Region District or TownshipVillage
Kaohsiung City Jiaxin District
Cianjhen District
Zuoying District
Guanshan, Siaolin
Caoya
Fushan
New Taipei City Ruifang District Houtong
Changhua County Fuxing Township Xishi
Chiayi County Alishan Township Leye
Kinmen County Jincheng Township Zhushan
Nantou County Puli Township Taomi
Yunlin County Gukeng Township Caoling

See also

Overview of administrative divisions of Taiwan
Republic of China (Taiwan)
Special municipalities[a][lower-roman 1] Provinces}[lower-roman 2]
Counties[a] Cities[a][lower-roman 3]
Districts[b] Mountain indigenous districts[a] County-administered cities[a] Townships[a][lower-roman 4][b] Districts[b]
Villages[c][lower-roman 5]
Neighborhoods
Notes
[a] Has an elected executive and an elected legislative council
[b] Has an appointed district administrator for managing local affairs and carrying out tasks commissioned by superior agency
[c] Has an elected village administrator for managing local affairs and carrying out tasks commissioned by superior agency

Notes

  1. Special municipalities, cities, and county-administered cities are all called shi (Chinese: ; lit. 'city')
  2. Nominal provinces; provincial governments have been abolished
  3. Sometimes called provincial cities (Chinese: 省轄市) to distinguish them from special municipalities and county-administered cities
  4. There are two types of townships: rural townships or xīang (Chinese: ) and urban townships or zhèng (Chinese: )
  5. Villages in rural townships are known as tsūn (Chinese: ), those in other jurisdictions are known as (Chinese: )

References

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