Yanshuei
English
Alternative forms
- Yen-shui, Yenshui (Wade–Giles)
- Yanshui (Hanyu Pinyin)
Etymology
From the Tongyong Pinyin[1] romanization of the Mandarin 鹽水 (Yánshuěi).
Pronunciation
- enPR: yěnʹshwāʹ[2]
Proper noun
Yanshuei
- A district of Tainan, Taiwan.
- 2009, Taiwan Business Topics[5], volume 39, American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 65:
- In some smaller towns in Taiwan, the Lantern Festival has taken uniquely local forms, including the gentle floating sky lanterns of Pingsin, Taipei County, and the high-intensity beehive rocket displays at Yanshuei in Tainan County.
- 2010, Lesley Reader, Lucy Ridout, First-Time Asia (Rough Guides)[6], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 321:
- January/February Lantern Festival. Nationwide celebration marking the end of the Chinese New Year festivities that varies from area to area but reliably includes fireworks, paper lanterns, lion and dragon dances. It is especially picturesque in Pingsi, where paper lanterns are launched into the sky and in Yanshuei near Chiayi where huge fireworks the size of trucks are part of the fun.
- 2016, “FESTIVALS YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS!”, in Travel Weekly[7]:
- The Yanshuei Beehive Fireworks Festival in the south of Taiwan is the third largest folk celebration in the world. A parade of palanquins circling the city, setting off thousands of rockets that create a deafening bee-like buzzing sound. This ‘baptism of fireworks’ is supposed to ward off troubles and bring good fortune for the year.
- 2019 November 24, George Liao, “Street exhibition lights up old Yanshuei in S. Taiwan”, in Taiwan News[8], archived from the original on 29 January 2021, Travel & Cuisine[9]:
- Taiwan’s southwestern city of Tainan has decorated six old streets and alleys in the historic town of Yanshuei with works of art lit at night, to extend the brand benefit of the annual Yuejin Lantern Festival, according to a CNA report on Sunday (Nov. 24).
- 2022 January 21, Steven Crook, “Highways & Byways: Charming antiquity: Tainan’s Yanshuei District”, in Taipei Times[10], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 20 January 2022, Features, page 13[11]:
- Like Taiwan’s other old settlements, Yanshuei used to be a walled town. The defensive barrier is long gone, but there’s a reminder of the gates through which humans, horses and bullock carts entered and left in the form of street names.
- 2023 January 19, Tim Wu, “The Lunar New Year Attractions to See at Once, Lantern Festivals and Markets in Taiwan”, in National Immigration Agency[12], archived from the original on 28 May 2023[13]:
- The Yanshuei District, Tainan, is once more in the public limelight because to tales and fantasies about the moon. The post-epidemic period is illuminated by sound and light art.
- 2025 February 10, “Yanshuei Beehive Fireworks Festival Ignites Tainan with Over a Century of Tradition and Spectacular Celebrations”, in Travel And Tour World[14], archived from the original on 13 June 2025, Taiwan Travel News[15]:
- A century-old, two-day fireworks event kicks off tomorrow in Tainan’s Yanshuei District, drawing thousands of local and international visitors for a unique religious celebration hosted by the Yanshui Wu Temple.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Yanshuei.
Translations
district in south Taiwan
References
- ^ “Taiwan place names”, in Pinyin.info[1], 2006, archived from the original on 1 October 2006[2]: “鄉鎮市區別 / Hanyu Pinyin (recommended) / Hanyu Pinyin (with tones) / Tongyong Pinyin / old forms […] 鹽水鎮 / Yanshui / Yánshuǐ / Yanshuei / Yanshui”
- ^ Leon E. Seltzer, editor (1952), “Yenshui”, in The Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World[3], Morningside Heights, NY: Columbia University Press, →OCLC, page 2122, column 2