'Fuerte Santo Domingo' or 'Fort San Domingo' (;
POJ: Âng-mn̂g-siâⁿ) was originally a wooden fort built by the Spanish in
1629 at
Tamsui on the northwestern coast of
Taiwan.
On a night in
1636, a group of local people, angered by the taxes that the Spanish governor had imposed, successfully attacked the fort and demolished it. In
1637 the Spanish rebuilt the fort using stone and raised the walls' height to twenty feet or more. In
1642 the
Dutch expelled the Spaniards from nearby
Keelung. The Spanish fort in Tamsui had by then already been razed by the Spanish themselves. The Dutch built a new fort on the site, called Fort Anthonio. In 1644 they replaced it by the structure still standing today, also called Fort Anthonio. The locals called the Dutch "the red-haired people", which led to the compound's Chinese name, 'Hong-Mao Cheng' (;
POJ: Âng-mn̂g-siâⁿ; literally, the Fortress of the Red-haired). From 1683 to 1867 the
Qing Dynasty Chinese government controlled the fort and during this time (
1724) built a stone wall with four gates around it, of which only one (main) gate survives.

Consular Residence. Museum Fort San Domingo
Following the
opium wars in
1868 the
British took over the fort, made it their trade
consulate, and painted it red (it was previously white). The linguist
Herbert Allen Giles resided in the fort from 1885 to 1888 and completed some of his work on the
Wade-Giles system of romanization of
Standard Mandarin Chinese there. Next to the fort the British built their consular residence in
1891. The consulate closed during
World War II and reopened after the end of the war. The British handed the site over to the
Republic of China (ROC) government in
1972 when they broke diplomatic relations with the ROC. The ROC government has classified the Fort a grade one listed historical site and it is now a museum with the interior recreated from photographs. It was recently reopened after refurbishment in 2005.
The Fort is adjacent to
Aletheia University, which traces its origins back to 1872 when the Reverend Dr.
George Leslie Mackay, a Canadian
Presbyterian, established a mission and then a medical service and a school.
Open Tue - Sun. 9am - 5pm. Entrance
NT$60 (adults) NT$40 (Students).
See also
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Fort Provintia
★
Fort Zeelandia (Taiwan)
★
Cape of San Diego
★
Eternal Golden Castle
★
Taiwan under Dutch rule
★
History of Taiwan
External Links
★
Exhibition in the museum about the fort