Naozhou Island (French: Île Nau-Chau; Chinese: 硇洲岛; pinyin: Náozhōu Dǎo) (Nao Chow) is an island in South China Sea. Administratively, the island is organized as Naozhou Town (硇洲镇) within Mazhang District of Zhanjiang City of Guangdong Province of China.
Geography
editNaozhou Island is a fairly small rocky island (10 km long by 6 km across). It is located near the southeastern corner of the larger Donghai Island, to which it is connected by a ferry line.
Naozhou is described as China's largest island of volcanic origin.[1]
History
editNaozhou's early recorded history is fairly sparse. During the Qing Dynasty, the island was included into Wuchuan County. According to a 1684 report, the island's population had been evacuated to the mainland some years earlier, as part of the Qing's campaign against the Taiwan-based Kingdom of Tungning.[2] Since 1704, Qing troops were stationed in the island as part of anti-pirate operations.[2]
From 1899 to 1945, Naozhou Island was part of the French leased territory Guangzhouwan. French maps and documents referred to the island as Nao-Tchéo or Nau-Chau. The French had a lighthouse constructed near the island's highest point. The Naozhou Lighthouse (硇洲灯塔) still exists; it is included on the List of Major National Historical and Cultural Sites.
References
edit- ^ The Naozhou Island
- ^ a b He, Xi (2016), "Gods adrift: religious ritual and local society on Naozhou Island", in He, Xi; Faure, David (eds.), The Fisher Folk of Late Imperial and Modern China: An Historical Anthropology of Boat-and-Shed Living, The Historical Anthropology of Chinese Society, Routledge, ISBN 978-1317409656
External links
edit20°54′25″N 110°35′42″E / 20.907°N 110.595°E