Chianan Irrigation

A control gate photographed in Japanese era.
The main streams of Chianan Canal.

Chianan Irrigation (Chinese: 嘉南大圳; pinyin: Jianán Dàzùn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ka-lâm Tōa-chùn; literally: "The Great Ditch of Chianan"; kana: かなんたいしゅう; rōmaji: Kanan Taishuu), also known as the Kanan Irrigation System,[1] was built for promoting the agricultural productions of Chianan Plain of Taiwan. The name "chia-nan" was derived from two place names among its surrounding area called Chiayi and Tainan. Although it includes some assistant facilities, such as the Wushantou Reservoir, the term "Chianan Canal", in a narrow sense, would only means the canals of this system.

The main designer of the Chianan Canal is Yoichi Hatta, a civil engineer of the Japanese colonial government. Its main streams pass through today's Tainan, Chiayi and Yunlin, formerly parts of Tainan Prefecture. The architectural work of canal was launched in 1920 and completed in 1930, during Japanese rule. Chianan Canal improved the planting area of rice from 5000 to 150,000 hectares, and made the rice crops in its irrigated area can harvest three times annually.[2]

See also

References

  1. Office of the Chief of Naval Operations (1944). Civil Affairs Handbook: Taiwan (Formosa) Taina Province.
  2. Liu, Alexandra (June 2001). "Country Travel, New Style". Taiwan Panorama.


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