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The cultural center building spans over a floor area of 1.6 hectares with four floors above ground and one underground. It has a capacity of 600 people. [3] It consists of a performance hall, a library and a community college.
2023 Tainan International Travel Fair 4 [137] 2023 Tainan Pet Products and Services Exhibition [138] 24–26 November 2023 Smart Life in Tainan 3 [139] 21 December 2023 Shalun Gala 1 [140] 2024: 20–21 January 1st Designer Toy Tainan 2 [141] [142] 26–29 January 2024 Tainan Autoshow 4 [143] [144] 24–25 February 1624 (Taiwanese opera show) 2 ...
The Tsung-Yeh Arts and Cultural Center (traditional Chinese: 總爺藝文中心; simplified Chinese: 总爷艺文中心; pinyin: Zǒngyé Yìwén Zhōngxīn) is an arts and cultural center in Madou District, Tainan, Taiwan.
The National Tainan Living Arts Center (traditional Chinese: 國立台南生活美學館; simplified Chinese: 国立台南生活美学; pinyin: Guólì Táinán Shēnghuó Měixuéguǎn) is an arts center in West Central District, Tainan, Taiwan. It handles the cultural-related affairs among communities for the counties in southern Taiwan.
The Tainan Confucian Temple (traditional Chinese: 臺南孔子廟; simplified Chinese: 台南孔子庙; pinyin: Táinán Kǒngzǐ Miào) or Quan Tai Shou Xue (Chinese: 全臺首學, lit. "First Academy of Taiwan"), is a Confucian temple on Nanmen Road ( 南門路 ) in West Central District , Tainan , Taiwan .
By May 1955 there were eighteen Baháʼís in six localities across Taiwan. The first Local Spiritual Assembly in Taiwan was established in Tainan in 1956. With a growing number of Local Spiritual Assemblies (Taipei, Tainan, Hualien and Pingtung), the Taiwanese National Spiritual Assembly was established in 1967. In the 2005 official statistics ...
The cultural park was originally built as Jiali Sugar Factory or Soulangh Sugar Refinery in 1906 during the Japanese rule of Taiwan. [1] [2] The factory was closed down in 1995. [3]
Tainan Shrine (Japanese: 台南神社, romanized: tainan jinja) was a Shinto shrine made outside of Japan by the Empire of Japan. [1]: 101 It was linked to imperialism and State Shinto rather than local support for Shintoism [2]: 30 It was established in 1920 and upgraded in 1925 and its main deity was Prince Kitashirakawa.