Hualien County

Hualien County
花蓮縣
Clockwise, from top: Liyu Lake; a section of the Cross Island Highway in Taroko Gorge National Park; Hualien Railroad Station; a paddy field in Shoufeng with a Central Mountain Range backdrop; Qingshui Cliffs near Suhua Highway; Qixingtan Beach in Xincheng; a cigarette production house in Fenglin
Clockwise, from top: Liyu Lake; a section of the Cross Island Highway in Taroko Gorge National Park; Hualien Railroad Station; a paddy field in Shoufeng with a Central Mountain Range backdrop; Qingshui Cliffs near Suhua Highway; Qixingtan Beach in Xincheng; a cigarette production house in Fenglin
Flag of Hualien County
Official seal of Hualien County
Coordinates: 23°58′34″N 121°36′17″E / 23.97611°N 121.60472°E / 23.97611; 121.60472
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
RegionEastern Taiwan
SeatHualien City
Largest cityHualien City
Boroughs1 cities, 12 (2 urban, 10 rural) townships
Government
 • County MagistrateHsu Chen-wei (KMT)
Area
 • Total4,628.5714 km2 (1,787.1014 sq mi)
 • Rank1 of 22
Population
 (March 2023)
 • Total318,736[1]
 • Rank20 of 22
Time zoneUTC+8 (National Standard Time)
ISO 3166 codeTW-HUA
Websitewww.hl.gov.tw
Symbols
BirdMaroon Oriole (Oriolus traillii)
FlowerLotus (Nymphaeaceae)
TreePeepul (Ficus religiosa)
Hualien County
Traditional Chinese花蓮

Hualien County (Mandarin Wade–Giles: Hua¹-lien² Hsien⁴; Pīnyīn: Huālián Xiàn; Hokkien POJ: Hoa-lian-koān or Hoa-liân-koān; Hakka PFS: Fâ-lièn-yen; Amis: Kalingko) is a county on the east coast of Taiwan. It is Taiwan's largest county by area, yet due to its mountainous terrain, has one of the lowest populations in the country. The county seat and largest city is Hualien City. Hualien County is located in the eastern part of Taiwan—the Pacific Ocean lies to its east and the Central Mountain Range lies to its west. Narrow and long, Hualien is the largest county in Taiwan in terms of area.

Most of its population resides in the Huadong Valley, which runs north to south between the Central and Hai'an mountain ranges. Hualien's natural beauty attracts many visitors and some of its natural attractions include Taroko Gorge, Qingshui Cliff, and Qixingtan Beach.

Much of modern-day Hualien County was populated by the Sakizaya people before the arrival of the Spanish, Dutch, and Han Chinese under Qing annexation. The region was renamed Karenkō Prefecture in 1895 during Japanese colonial rule. In 1945, after the end of World War II, the Republic of China took control of Taiwan and renamed the former Karenkō Prefecture as Hualien County of Taiwan Province. Taiwan Province would be reorganized once again in 1998 and Hualien County fell under the direct jurisdiction of the Executive Yuan.

As of February 2023, Hualien's organic cultivation area was 3,175 hectares (7,850 acres), the largest of any county in the country. Hualien is the largest organic agricultural production base in Taiwan.[2]

  1. ^ Yu, Tai-lang; Pan, Jason (17 February 2014). "Aborigines Now Make up 28% of Hualien County". Taipei Times. Archived from the original on 2015-02-16. Retrieved 2014-02-17.
  2. ^ "國內有機及友善耕作種植面積概況". www.afa.gov.tw (in Chinese). 2013-05-14. Retrieved 2023-03-25.

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