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The Republic of China (ROC) is divided into eight provincial-level divisions which consists of two streamlined provinces of Taiwan and Fujian along with six special municipalities. This is a list of townships / cities and districts in statistical order.
List of all cities and townships in the Republic of China, consisting of six special municipalities and two provinces without administrative function. For the subdivisions under special municipalities and cities, see District (Taiwan) For the subdivisions sort by county, see Township (Taiwan)
In the hierarchy of administrative divisions of Taiwan, districts are under a special municipality or a provincial city; while townships and county-administered cities are under a county. Despite the wide range of codes, there are only 368 postal codes are actively in use, some codes are omitted due to changes on administrative divisions.
The address of Chunghwa Post, which is located directly on a main street in Taipei, is written in Chinese as [1] (old 3+2 postal code: 10603): 106409 臺北市大安區 金山南路2段55號 Reversing the order, the English address, [2] also with 3+3 postal code: No.55, Sec. 2, Jinshan S. Rd., Da-an District, Taipei City 106409, Taiwan (R.O.C.)
The following is a list of administrative divisions of the Republic of China (Taiwan), including 6 special municipalities and 2 nominal provinces [a] as the de jure first-level administrative divisions. 11 counties and 3 cities were nominally under the jurisdiction of the Taiwan Province, and 2 additional counties being part of the ROC's Fujian Province.
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With provinces non-functional in practice, Taiwan is divided into 22 subnational divisions (6 special municipalities, 3 cities, and 13 counties), each with a local government led by an elected head and a local council. Special municipalities and cities are further divided into districts for local administration.
Township names are now transliterated using the Hanyu Pinyin romanization system without tone marks. The county names do not necessarily use Hanyu Pinyin or special case such as Lukang. [3] Colors indicate the common language status of Formosan languages, Hakka or Matsu dialect within each division.