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{{short description|Ethnic enclave of expatriate Chinese persons}}
{{article issues
{{Redirect|Little China|the ideology|Little China (ideology)}}
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{{other uses}}
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{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2024}}
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{{Infobox Chinese
| original research=August 2009
| pic = Chinatown - East Broadway.jpg
}}
| piccap = ]'s Manhattan ] has the highest concentration of ] outside of ].<ref name="Manhattan Chinatown Largest Concentration Chinese Western Hemisphere" /><ref name="fact-sheet" /><ref name="NYC Twelve Chinatowns" />
{{For|specific Chinatowns|List of Chinatowns}}
| c = {{linktext|唐人街}}
{{article issues
| p = Tángrénjiē
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| w = Tʻang<sup>2</sup> jen<sup>2</sup> chieh<sup>1</sup>
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| mi = {{IPAc-cmn|t|ang|2|.|r|en|2|.|j|ie|1}}
| copyedit=November 2008
| bpmf = ㄊㄤˊ ㄖㄣˊ ㄐㄧㄝ
| refimprove=November 2008
| l = "] people street"
| original research=August 2009
| j = Tong4 jan4 gaai1
| y = Tòhngyàhngāai
| ci = {{IPAc-yue|t|ong|4|-|j|an|4|-|g|aai|1}}
| wuu = Daon<sup>平</sup> nin<sup>平</sup> ka<sup>平</sup>
| poj = Tông-jîn-ke
| buc = Tòng-ìng-kĕ
| s2 = 中国城
| t2 = {{linktext|中國城}}
| p2 = Zhōngguóchéng
| w2 = Chung<sup>1</sup>-kuo<sup>2</sup> chʻeng<sup>2</sup>
| mi2 = {{IPAc-cmn|zh|ong|1|.|g|uo|2|.|ch|eng|2}}
| bpmf2 = ㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄔㄥˊ
| l2 = "China-town"
| j2 = Zung1 gwok3 sing4
| y2 = Jūnggwoksìhng
| ci2 = {{IPAc-yue|z|ung|1|.|gw|ok|3|.|s|ing|4}}
| wuu2 = Tson<sup>平</sup> koh<sup>入</sup> zen<sup>平</sup>
| poj2 = Tiong-kok-siânn
| buc2 = Dŭng-guók-siàng
| s3 = 华埠
| t3 = {{linktext|華埠}}
| p3 = Huábù
| w3 = Hua<sup>2</sup> pu<sup>4</sup>
| mi3 = {{IPAc-cmn|h|ua|2|.|b|u|4}}
| bpmf3 = ㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄅㄨˋ
| l3 = "] district"
| j3 = Waa4 fau6
| y3 = Wàhfauh
| ci3 = {{IPAc-yue|w|aa|4|-|f|au|6}}
| wuu3 = Gho<sup>平</sup> bu<sup>去</sup>
| poj3 = Hôa-bú
| buc3 = Huà-pú
}} }}
{{Chinatown}}
'''Chinatown''' ({{zh|t=唐人街}}) is the catch-all name for an ] of ] located outside ], most often in an urban setting. Areas known as "Chinatown" exist throughout the world, including Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and the Americas.


The development of most Chinatowns typically resulted from ] to an area without any or with few Chinese residents. ] in ], established in 1594, is recognized as the world's oldest Chinatown. Notable early examples outside Asia include ]'s ] in the United States and ]'s ] in Australia, which were founded in the early 1850s during the ] and ] gold rushes, respectively. A more modern example, in ], was caused by the displacement of Chinese workers in ] following the ] in 2001.<ref>{{cite AV media|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2dbKSxna6k|title=Connecticut's Unexpected Chinatowns|via=]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161031214821/http://www.citylab.com/amp/article/440190/|archive-date=2016-10-31}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.norwichbulletin.com/news/20160722/fortune-friction-and-decline-as-casino-chinatown-matures|title=Fortune, friction and decline as casino 'Chinatown' matures|author=Philip Marcelo |agency=The Associated Press|website=The Bulletin}}{{Dead link|date=December 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
{{Otheruses}}
]. The oldest and one of the largest Chinatowns in North America.]]
In modern usage, a '''Chinatown''' is an ethnic enclave of overseas ] by accepted definition. Chinatowns are present throughout the world, including those in ], ], the ], ], and ].


==Definition==
In the past, crowded Chinatowns in urban areas were places of cultural insularity. Nowadays, many old and new Chinatowns are considered significant centers of ] and ]. Some of them also serve, to varying degrees, as centers of ].{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}
] defines "Chinatown" as "...{{nbsp}}a district of any non-Asian town, especially a city or ], in which the population is predominantly of Chinese origin".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/Chinatown|title=Definition of Chinatown|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140228215015/http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/Chinatown|archive-date=2014-02-28}}</ref> However, some Chinatowns may have little to do with China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kitv.com/news/hawaii/where-you-live/where-you-live-chinatown/24595340 |title=Where You Live Chinatown |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140301230646/https://www.kitv.com/news/hawaii/where-you-live/where-you-live-chinatown/24595340 |archive-date=2014-03-01 }}</ref> Some "Vietnamese" enclaves are in fact a city's "second Chinatown", and some Chinatowns are in fact ], meaning they could also be counted as a ] or ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/littlesaigonssta0000agui |url-access=registration |page= |title=Little Saigons: Staying Vietnamese in America|publisher=U of Minnesota Press |isbn=9780816654857|last1=Juan|first1=Karin Aguilar-San|year=2009}}</ref> One example includes ] in ], ]. It was initially referred to as a ] but was subsequently renamed due to the influx of non-Chinese ] who opened businesses there. Today the district acts as a unifying factor for the Chinese, Taiwanese, Korean, Japanese, Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Laotian, Nepalese and Thai communities of Cleveland.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.unmiserable.com/cleveland/archive/?p%3D713 |title=Archived copy |access-date=2016-02-21 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304101411/http://www.unmiserable.com/cleveland/archive/?p=713 |archive-date=2016-03-04 }}</ref>


Further ambiguities with the term can include Chinese ]s which by definition are "...{{nbsp}}] ethnic clusters of residential areas and business districts in large metropolitan areas<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu/p-5743-9780824836719.aspx|title=Ethnoburb: The New Ethnic Community in Urban America|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140303214959/http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu/p-5743-9780824836719.aspx|archive-date=2014-03-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-26/asians-in-thriving-enclaves-keep-distance-from-whites.html|title=Asians in Thriving Enclaves Keep Distance From Whites|newspaper=Bloomberg.com |date=26 June 2013 |access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150122212519/http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-26/asians-in-thriving-enclaves-keep-distance-from-whites.html|archive-date=22 January 2015}}</ref> An article in '']'' blurs the line further by categorizing very different Chinatowns such as ], which exists in an urban setting as "traditional"; ], which exists in a "suburban" setting (and labeled as such); and ], which is in essence a "fabricated" Chinese-themed mall. This contrasts with narrower definitions, where the term only described Chinatown in a city setting.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/travel/chinatown-revisited.html|title=Chinatown Revisited|newspaper=The New York Times |date=24 January 2014 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170706171445/https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/travel/chinatown-revisited.html?_r=0|archive-date=2017-07-06|last1=Tsui |first1=Bonnie }}</ref>
While some Chinatowns are focused on commercial tourism, others are actual living and working communities; many are in fact a synergetic synthesis of both. Chinatowns also range from slum ghettos to modern sites of up-to-date development. In some, recent investments have revitalized rundown and blighted areas and turned them into centers of buzzing economic and social activity. In certain cases, this has led to ] and a reduction in the specifically Chinese character of the neighborhoods.


==History==
Some Chinatowns have a long history, such as the Chinatown in ], ], or ] in ], ], both of which were founded by Chinese traders more than 200 years ago. ] being the oldest was established even earlier. ] Chinatown is the first Chinatown to be created outside Asia.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} ] was not only the first, but also is one of the largest Chinatowns to be established in North America. Other cities in ] where Chinatowns were founded in the mid-nineteenth century include almost every major settlement along the West Coast from ] to ]. By the second half of the nineteenth century, bustling Chinatowns were also established in ], ], ], ], ], and ]. The discovery of gold in ] caused the establishment of relatively small Chinatowns in cities there, and similar migrations of Chinese resulted in tiny settlements termed "Chinatowns" being established in ] and even ]. European Chinatowns, such as those in ], the ], and the ], are for the most part smaller and of more recent history than their North American counterparts. Newer Chinatowns , such as ] in 1995, ] and ] have also received official recognition recently.
{{See also|Chinese emigration}}
] populated predominantly by Chinese men and their native spouses have long existed throughout ]. ] to other parts of the world from China accelerated in the 1860s with the signing of the ] (1860), which opened China's borders to free movement. Early emigrants came primarily from the coastal ] of ] (Canton, Kwangtung) and ] (Fukien, Hokkien) in ] – where the people generally speak ], ], ], ] (Chiuchow) and ]. In the late 19th century and early 20th century, a significant amount of ] to North America originated from four counties called ], located west of the ] in ] province, making Toishanese a dominant ] of the ] spoken in ].


As conditions in China have improved in recent decades, many Chinatowns have lost their initial mission, which was to provide a transitional place into a new culture. As net migration has slowed into them, the smaller Chinatowns have slowly decayed, often to the point of becoming purely historical and no longer serving as ]s.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://nhpr.org/post/chinatown-ghost-town |title=From Chinatown to Ghost Town |publisher=NHPR |date=2011-11-14 |access-date=2013-05-26 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101042729/http://nhpr.org/post/chinatown-ghost-town |archive-date=2013-11-01 }}</ref>
]]]


===In Asia===
In the past, '''Chinatown''' had also been used to refer to the Chinese sections of <!--pre-dominantly--> non-Chinese-administered cities within Greater China. For example, the walled city of Shanghai was referred to as a "Chinatown" because it was surrounded by foreign concessions administered by European powers.<ref>See, e.g. and </ref>
], ], home to the world's oldest Chinatown]]
In the ], where the oldest surviving Chinatowns are located, the district where Chinese migrants ('']es'') were required to live is called a ], which were also often a marketplace for trade goods. Most of them were established in the late 16th century to house Chinese migrants as part of the early Spanish colonial policy of ethnic segregation. There were numerous pariáns throughout the Philippines in various locations, the names of which still survive into modern district names. This include the ] of ], ] (which was eventually moved several times, ending up in ]). The term was also carried into ] by Filipino migrants.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dela Cerna |first1=Madrilena |title=Parian in Cebu |url=http://www.ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/articles-on-c-n-a/article.php?igm=2&i=188 |website=National Commission for Culture and the Arts |publisher=Republic of the Philippines |access-date=12 October 2023 |archive-date=24 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140224131510/http://www.ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/articles-on-c-n-a/article.php?igm=2&i=188 |url-status=bot: unknown }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Parian and the Spanish Colonial Economy |url=https://intramuros.gov.ph/2020/10/16/the-parian-and-the-spanish-colonial-economy/ |website=Intramuros Administration, Republic of the Philippines |access-date=12 October 2023 |archive-date=October 29, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231029214134/https://intramuros.gov.ph/2020/10/16/the-parian-and-the-spanish-colonial-economy/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="pacs.ph">{{cite journal |last1=Burton |first1=John William |title=The Word Parian: An Etymological and Historical Adventure |journal=The Ethnic Chinese as Filipinos (Part III) |date=2000 |volume=8 |pages=67–72 |url=https://www.pacs.ph/the-ethnic-chinese-as-filipinos-part-3-2000/ |access-date=October 12, 2023 |archive-date=October 29, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231029214132/https://www.pacs.ph/the-ethnic-chinese-as-filipinos-part-3-2000/ |url-status=live }}</ref> The central market place of ] (now part of ]) selling imported goods from the ] in the 18th and early 19th centuries was called "Parián de Manila" (or just "Parián").<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fish |first1=Shirley |title=The Manila-Acapulco galleons: the treasure ships of the Pacific ; with an annotated list of the transpacific galleons 1565 - 1815 |date=2011 |publisher=AuthorHouse |location=Central Milton Keynes |isbn=9781456775438 |page=438}}</ref>


Along the coastal areas of ], several Chinese settlements existed as early as the 16th century according to ] and ]' travel accounts. Melaka during the Portuguese colonial period, for instance, had a large Chinese population in Campo China. They settled down at port towns under the authority's approval for trading. After the European colonial powers seized and ruled the port towns in the 16th century, Chinese supported European traders and colonists, and created autonomous settlements.
Chinatown's are often noted for their decorative ], the largest of which outside of China is located in ], ].<ref>http://www.visitliverpool.com/site/chinese-arch-p54681</ref>


Several Asian Chinatowns, although not yet called by that name, have a long history. Those in ], ], and ], Japan,<ref>{{cite book|last=Takekoshi|first=Yosaburo|title=economic aspects of the history of the civilization of Japan, Vol. 2|year=2004|publisher=Routledge|location=London|page=124}}</ref> ] in Manila, ] and Bao Vinh in central Vietnam<ref>{{cite book|last=Li|first=Qingxin|title=Maritime Silk Road|year=2006|publisher=China International Press|page=157}}</ref> all existed in 1600. ], the Chinese quarter of ], dates to 1740.<ref>{{cite book|last=Abeyesekere |first=Susan |title=Jakarta: A History|year=1987|publisher=Oxford University Press. All rights reserved|page=6 }}</ref>
==History of the earliest Chinatowns by region==
{{Unreferenced section|date=April 2009}}
] in ], ]]]
] area is home to at least ] Chinatowns. The oldest Chinatown in New York City is centered on ] in ].]]
], ] ]]
Trading centres populated predominantly by Chinese men and their native spouses had long existed throughout ]. Emigration to other parts of the world from China accelerated in the ] with the enactment of the ], which opened the border for free movement. Early emigrants came primarily from the coastal provinces of ] and ] (Fukien, Hokkien)—where ], ], and ] (Teochew, Chiu Chow) are largely spoken—in southeastern China. Initially, the ] government of China was unconcerned by the emigration of this population as they were likely considered socially undesirable and "traitorous" to China. Trading and moneymaking was considered vulgar and consequently frowned upon in ] {{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}, in which Chinese migrants were intending to earn wages as sojourners. However, the Chinese were not strictly united as a group but were divided along sub-ethnic/linguistic lines and friction between those of Cantonese (]) and Hakka stocks were common occurrences{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. Generally, there were also mild but recognisable sub-divisions based on Chinese ]s/]s.


Chinese presence in India dates back to the 5th century CE, with the first recorded Chinese settler in ] named Young Atchew around 1780.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2004/07/31/2003181147|title=Calcutta's Chinatown facing extinction over new rule |newspaper=Taipei Times |date=31 July 2004|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110513234646/http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2004/07/31/2003181147|archive-date=13 May 2011}}</ref> Chinatowns first appeared in the Indian cities of ], ], and ].
]ese and ] settled in the first ]n (], ]), ]n, and ]n Chinatowns (], ], ]){{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. Most of them were brought as ]s to build the railroad, but many had come originally in pursuit of gold. As a group, the Cantonese are linguistically and ethnically distinct from other groups in China with migrants especially coming mostly from the ] and ] regions (with various variations of spoken Cantonese) of Guangdong{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}; Cantonese remained the dominant language and heritage of many Chinatowns in Western countries until the ]{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. Due to laws in some countries barring the importation of Chinese wives {{Citation needed|date=November 2007}} (for fear of the perceived ]), some Chinatowns emerged as bachelor's societies where males dominated and the male-to-female ratio population was generally skewed. In Latin America, many Cantonese-speaking migrants arrived as indentured labourers particularly in Peru (to work in the deadly ] fields) and Cuba (to labor in sugar ]s) giving those countries substantial Chinatowns{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}.


The ] centered on ] in ], ], was founded at the same time as the city itself, in 1782.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=]|url=http://www.tour-bangkok-legacies.com/yaowarat-heritage-centre.html|title=The History of Chinatown Bangkok|access-date=2 October 2011|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110920194046/http://www.tour-bangkok-legacies.com/yaowarat-heritage-centre.html|archive-date=20 September 2011}}</ref>
The Hokkien and Chaozhou (both groups speaking the ] sub-group of Chinese dialects), along with Cantonese are the dominant group in Southeast Asian Chinatowns{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. Chinese migrants also pioneered some major Southeast Asian cities, such as ] and hence Chinese influence is felt there. The Hakka groups established Chinatowns in ] (particularly ]){{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}, ] and the ]. Northern Chinese settled in ] in the ]{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}.


===Outside of Asia===
In ], early Chinese were generally seamen who jumped ship and began to provide services for other Chinese mariners{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. In the nineteenth century and early twentieth century the ] treated China as part of its unofficial ] employing Chinese in its ] in significant numbers. Consequently, from the ] onwards, significant Chinese communities grew up in ] and ] — the main ports for the China trade. However, these communities were a mixture of Chinese men, their British wives and their ] children. Moreover, they were generally inhabited by those Chinese catering for Chinese seamen. The majority spread throughout these cities usually operating laundries at this time.
] is the longest continuous Chinese settlement in the ] and the oldest Chinatown in the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://chinatownmelbourne.com.au/|title=Chinatown Melbourne|access-date=23 January 2014|archive-date=January 25, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140125022815/http://chinatownmelbourne.com.au/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/ABOUTMELBOURNE/HISTORY/Pages/multiculturalhistory.aspxt|title=Melbourne's multicultural history|publisher=]|access-date=23 January 2014|archive-date=September 30, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230930190838/https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/about-melbourne/melbourne-heritage/Pages/melbourne-heritage.aspx|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://matadornetwork.com/trips/worlds-8-most-colorful-chinatowns/|title=World's 8 most colourful Chinatowns|access-date=23 January 2014|archive-date=January 31, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140131130906/http://matadornetwork.com/trips/worlds-8-most-colorful-chinatowns/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The essential guide to Chinatown |url=https://www.melbournefoodandwine.com.au/read-watch/latest-news/news/the-essential-guide-to-chinatown-920 |website=Melbourne Food and Wine Festival |date=3 February 2021 |publisher=Food + Drink Victoria |access-date=11 February 2022 |archive-date=February 14, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220214234525/https://www.melbournefoodandwine.com.au/read-watch/latest-news/news/the-essential-guide-to-chinatown-920 |url-status=live }}</ref>]] Many Chinese immigrants arrived in Liverpool in the late 1850s in the employ of the ], a ] company established by ]. The ] ] created strong ] links between the cities of ], ], and Liverpool, mainly in the importation of silk, cotton, and ].<ref name="LCBA">{{cite web|title=History of Liverpool Chinatown |publisher=The Liverpool Chinatown Business Association |url=http://web.ukonline.co.uk/lcba/ba/history.html |access-date=31 January 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100124032329/http://web.ukonline.co.uk/lcba/ba/history.html |archive-date=24 January 2010 }}</ref> They settled near the docks in south Liverpool, this area was heavily bombed during World War II, causing the Chinese community moving to the current location ] on Nelson Street.


The ] is one of the largest in North America and the oldest north of Mexico. It served as a port of entry for early Chinese immigrants from the 1850s to the 1900s.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140106231830/https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/191373 |date=2014-01-06 }}, KPIX-TV, 1963.</ref> The area was the one geographical region deeded by the city government and private property owners which allowed Chinese persons to inherit and inhabit dwellings within the city. Many Chinese found jobs working for large companies seeking a source of labor, most famously as part of the ]<ref name="Foster 2001">{{cite book|author=Lee Foster|title=Northern California History Weekends|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8VA0GAmdjK4C|access-date=26 December 2011|date=1 October 2001|publisher=Globe Pequot|isbn=978-0-7627-1076-8|page=13}}{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> on the ]. Since it started in ], that city had a notable Chinatown for almost a century.<ref>Roenfeld, R. (2019) {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190306044231/https://northomahahistory.com/2019/03/05/a-history-of-omahas-chinatown-by-ryan-roenfeld/ |date=March 6, 2019 }}, NorthOmahaHistory.com. Retrieved March 5, 2019.</ref> Other cities in North America where Chinatowns were founded in the mid-nineteenth century include almost every major settlement along the West Coast from ] to ]. Other early immigrants worked as mine workers or independent prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the 1849 ].
] received a large settlement of Chinese immigrant laborers, mostly from the city of ], ] province of China (to this day, France continues to attract many Chinese immigrants from this particular province; ]' newest Chinatown in ] is heavily influenced by such immigrants){{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}. Chinatowns are also found in the ]n cities of ] (once Hakka influenced) and ]{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}.


Economic opportunity drove the building of further Chinatowns in the United States. The initial Chinatowns were built in the ] in states such as ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. As the ] was built, more Chinatowns started to appear in railroad towns such as ], ], ], ] and ]. Chinatowns then subsequently emerged in many ], including ], ], ], ] and ]. With the passage of the ], many ] such as ], ] and ] began to hire Chinese for work in place of slave labor.<ref name="Okihiro 2015">{{cite book|last=Okihiro|first=Gary Y.|title=American History Unbound: Asians and Pacific Islanders|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WaowDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA201|year=2015|publisher=University of California Press|location=Berkeley|isbn=978-0-520-27435-8|page=201|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180502225136/https://books.google.com/books?id=WaowDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA201|archive-date=2018-05-02}}</ref>
By the late 1970s, the ] also played a significant part in the development and redevelopment of various Chinatowns in developed Western countries. As a result, many Chinatowns have become pan-Asian business districts and residential neighborhoods. By contrast, most Chinatowns in the past were solely inhabited by Chinese from southeastern ].


The history of Chinatowns was not always peaceful, especially when ]s arose. Racial tensions flared when lower-paid Chinese workers replaced white miners in many mountain-area Chinatowns, such as in Wyoming with the ]. Many of these frontier Chinatowns became extinct as American racism surged and the ] was passed.
Historic Chinatowns such as San Francisco (see ]) has had a significant influence on the perception of Chinatowns in ]. Although, in reality it and other North American Chinatowns fall outside the tradition of Chinese settlement in having significant numbers of Chinese women.


In Australia, the ], which began in 1851, attracted Chinese prospectors from the ] area. A community began to form in the eastern end of ], ] by the mid-1850s; the area is still the center of the ], making it the oldest continuously occupied Chinatown in a western city (since the San Francisco one was destroyed and rebuilt). Gradually expanding, it reached a peak in the early 20th century, with Chinese business, mainly furniture workshops, occupying a block wide swath of the city, overlapping into the adjacent ]' red light district. With restricted immigration it shrunk again, becoming a strip of Chinese restaurants by the late 1970s, when it was celebrated with decorative arches. However, with a recent huge influx of students from mainland China, it is now the center of a much larger area of noodle shops, travel agents, restaurants, and groceries. The ] also saw the development of a Chinatown in ], at first around ], near the docks, but it has moved twice, first in the 1890s to the east side of the Haymarket area, near the new markets, then in the 1920s concentrating on the west side.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/chinatown|title=Chinatown|website=Dictionary of Sydney|access-date=2019-10-26|archive-date=April 27, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190427115045/https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/chinatown|url-status=live}}</ref> Nowadays, ] is centered on Dixon Street.
===Asia===
]'s Goodwill Gate]]
]


Other Chinatowns in European capitals, including ] and ], were established at the turn of the 20th century. The first Chinatown in London was located in the ] area of the ]<ref>Sales, Rosemary; d'Angelo, Alessio; Liang, Xiujing; Montagna, Nicola. "London's Chinatown" in Donald, Stephanie; Kohman, Eleonore; Kevin, Catherine. (eds) (2009). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240212165201/https://books.google.com/books?id=wVJkryx7cJAC&pg=PA45 |date=February 12, 2024 }}. ]. pp. 45–58.</ref> at the start of the 20th century. The Chinese population engaged in business which catered to the Chinese sailors who frequented the ]. The area acquired a bad reputation from exaggerated reports of ]s and ].
{{Main|Chinatowns in Asia}}


France received a large settlement of Chinese immigrant laborers, mostly from the city of ], in the ] province of China. Significant Chinatowns sprung up in ] and the ].
{{Travel guide|section|date=July 2009}}
{{Gallery |align=center
|File:Chinatown manhattan 2009.JPG|], the largest concentration of ] in the ]<ref name="Manhattan Chinatown Largest Concentration Chinese Western Hemisphere">{{cite web|url=https://www.introducingnewyork.com/chinatown|title=Chinatown New York|publisher=Civitatis New York|quote=As its name suggests, Chinatown is where the largest population of Chinese people live in the Western Hemisphere.|access-date=November 30, 2020|archive-date=April 4, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200404164227/https://www.introducingnewyork.com/chinatown|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="fact-sheet" /> and one of ],<ref name="NYC Twelve Chinatowns">{{cite web|url=https://ny.eater.com/2019/2/25/18236523/chinatowns-restaurants-elmhurst-homecrest-bensonhurst-east-village-little-neck-forest-hills-nyc|title=Believe It or Not, New York City Has Nine Chinatowns|author=Stefanie Tuder|publisher=EATER NY|date=February 25, 2019|access-date=November 30, 2020|archive-date=February 26, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190226081349/https://ny.eater.com/2019/2/25/18236523/chinatowns-restaurants-elmhurst-homecrest-bensonhurst-east-village-little-neck-forest-hills-nyc|url-status=live}}</ref> as well as one of twelve in the surrounding ]|File: Brooklyn_Chinatown.png|], the ] with the highest number of ]
|File:San Francisco Chinatown.jpg|], the oldest Chinatown in the US
|File:Boston Chinatown Paifang.jpg|], a Chinatown inspired and developed on the basis of modern ] concepts
|File:Friendship Gate Chinatown Philadelphia from west.jpg|], the recipient of significant ] from both ]<ref name="Chinese NYC to Philadelphia">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/20/nyregion/philadelphia-new-york-migration-immigrants.html|title=Leaving New York to Find the American Dream in Philadelphia|author=Matt Katz|newspaper=The New York Times|date=July 20, 2018|access-date=November 10, 2019|archive-date=August 7, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180807001508/https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/20/nyregion/philadelphia-new-york-migration-immigrants.html|url-status=live}}</ref> and China<ref name="Philadelphia Foreign Born">{{cite news|url=https://www.philly.com/news/immigrants-philly-population-growth-foreign-born-20190510.html|title=Welcome to Philly: Percentage of foreign-born city residents has doubled since 1990|author=Jeff Gammage|newspaper=The Philadelphia Inquirer|date=May 10, 2019|access-date=November 10, 2019|quote=China is, far and away, the primary sending country, with 22,140 city residents who make up about 11 percent of the foreign-born population, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts analysis of Census data.|archive-date=May 10, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190510180258/https://www.philly.com/news/immigrants-philly-population-growth-foreign-born-20190510.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
|File:Chinese Arch - geograph.org.uk - 1021559.jpg|], the oldest Chinatown in Europe
}}


====Singapore==== ===1970s to the present===
By the late 1970s, refugees and exiles from the ] played a significant part in the redevelopment of Chinatowns in developed Western countries. As a result, many existing Chinatowns have become pan-Asian business districts and residential neighborhoods. By contrast, most Chinatowns in the past had been largely inhabited by Chinese from southeastern China.
] of Singapore.]]
]'s Chinatown centers around the major ] and branches out over a large area onto side streets. It is served by Chinatown ] (Chinese: 牛车水 literally meaning "bullcart waters"). Near the station is a large covered shopping area primarily geared at tourists, although not far from this one can find local markets, bakeries, full-blown Chinese malls, plenty of restaurants, the night market on ], and several temples including the recently completed ]. A curiosity of the Singapore Chinatown is that in the middle of it is the large ] ] ]. Unlike other countries with Chinatowns, in which the population of Chinese origin is relatively low in number, Singapore's population is dominated by over 70 percent Chinese descendants. Hence, the "Chinatown" is not a center of immigration and inexpensive food but rather a center of celebration of Chinese culture and often ''more'' upscale in taste than outside it.


In 2001, the events of ] resulted in a mass migration of about 14,000 Chinese workers from ] to ], due to the fall of the garment industry. Chinese workers transitioned to ] jobs fueled by the development of the ] casino.
====Kuala Lumpur====
] is the center of ]'s original Chinatown. It features restaurants and night-market style shopping with counterfeit designer handbags and sunglasses at bargain prices. Other products available are shoes, cosmetics, and clothes.


In 2012, ] formed as a result of availability of direct flights to China. The ] was formerly a small enclave, but has tripled in size as a result of direct flights to ]. It has an ethnic Chinese population rise from 5,000 in 2009 to roughly 15,000 in 2012, overtaking ]'s Chinatown as the largest Chinese enclave in Mexico.
====Bangkok====
{{Wide image|Chinatown 1.jpg|600px|3=<div align=center>The busy intersection of ] and ] in the ], ], ], ]. The segment of Main Street between ] and Roosevelt Avenue, punctuated by the ] ] ] overpass, represents the cultural heart of Flushing Chinatown. Housing over 30,000 individuals born in China alone, the largest by this metric outside Asia, ] has become home to the largest and one of the fastest-growing Chinatowns in the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.businessinsider.com/i-ate-my-way-through-flushing-queens-and-now-i-get-why-its-the-bigger-and-better-chinatown-2015-5|title=This is what it's like in one of the biggest and fastest growing Chinatowns in the world|author=Melia Robinson|website=Business Insider|date=May 27, 2015|access-date=March 3, 2019|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170730033121/http://www.businessinsider.com/i-ate-my-way-through-flushing-queens-and-now-i-get-why-its-the-bigger-and-better-chinatown-2015-5|archive-date=July 30, 2017}}</ref> Flushing is undergoing rapid ] by Chinese transnational entities,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/13/flushing-queens-gentrification-luxury-developments|title='Not what it used to be': in New York, Flushing's Asian residents brace against gentrification|author=Sarah Ngu|newspaper=]|date=January 29, 2021|access-date=August 13, 2020|quote=The three developers have stressed in public hearings that they are not outsiders to Flushing, which is 69% Asian. 'They've been here, they live here, they work here, they've invested here,' said Ross Moskowitz, an attorney for the developers at a different public hearing in February...Tangram Tower, a luxury mixed-use development built by F&amp;T. Last year, prices for two-bedroom apartments started at $1.15m...The influx of transnational capital and rise of luxury developments in Flushing has displaced longtime immigrant residents and small business owners, as well as disrupted its cultural and culinary landscape. These changes follow the familiar script of gentrification, but with a change of actors: it is Chinese-American developers and wealthy Chinese immigrants who are gentrifying this working-class neighborhood, which is majority Chinese.|archive-date=August 13, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200813091230/https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/13/flushing-queens-gentrification-luxury-developments|url-status=live}}</ref> and the growth of the business activity at the core of ], dominated by the Flushing Chinatown, has continued despite the Covid-19 pandemic.<ref name=FlushingChinatownContinuesGrowth>{{cite web|url=https://www.curbed.com/2022/12/new-new-york-report-review-hochul-adams-doctoroff.html|title=Can the Hochul-Adams New New York Actually Happen?|author=Justin Davidson|publisher=Curbed - New York magazine|date=December 15, 2022|access-date=December 18, 2022|archive-date=December 18, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221218183018/https://www.curbed.com/2022/12/new-new-york-report-review-hochul-adams-doctoroff.html|url-status=live}}</ref> As of 2023, ] to ], and especially to the city's Flushing Chinatown, has accelerated.<ref name=NYCPrimaryChineseDestination>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/24/us/politics/china-migrants-us-border.html|title=Growing Numbers of Chinese Migrants Are Crossing the Southern Border|author=Eileen Sullivan|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 24, 2023|access-date=November 24, 2023|quote=Most who have come to the United States in the past year were middle-class adults who have headed to New York after being released from custody. New York has been a prime destination for migrants from other nations as well, particularly Venezuelans, who rely on the city’s resources, including its shelters. But few of the Chinese migrants are staying in the shelters. Instead, they are going where Chinese citizens have gone for generations: Flushing, Queens. Or to some, the Chinese Manhattan...“New York is a self-sufficient Chinese immigrants community,” said the Rev. Mike Chan, the executive director of the Chinese Christian Herald Crusade, a faith-based group in the neighborhood.|archive-date=November 25, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231125055441/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/24/us/politics/china-migrants-us-border.html?searchResultPosition=1|url-status=live}}</ref>
{{Main|Yaowarat Road}}
</div>|dir=rtl}}
]
The ], consisting of ], ], and nearby areas within the states of ], ], ], and ], is home to the largest Chinese-American population of any ] within the United States and the largest Chinese population outside of China, enumerating an estimated 893,697 in 2017,<ref name="NYC Chinese 1">{{cite web |url=https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|archive-url=https://archive.today/20200214002005/https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|url-status=dead|archive-date=February 14, 2020|title=Selected Population Profile in the United States 2017 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA Chinese alone|publisher=]|access-date=March 3, 2019}}</ref> and including at least 12 Chinatowns, including nine in New York City proper alone.<ref name="NYC Twelve Chinatowns" /> Steady ], both legal<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.dhs.gov/files/statistics/publications/LPR11.shtm|title=Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2011 Supplemental Table 2|date=13 April 2016|publisher=U.S. Department of Homeland Security|access-date=March 3, 2019|archive-date=August 8, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120808080130/http://www.dhs.gov/files/statistics/publications/LPR11.shtm|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.dhs.gov/files/statistics/publications/LPR10.shtm|title=Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2010 Supplemental Table 2|publisher=U.S. Department of Homeland Security|access-date=10 April 2011|archive-date=July 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120712200141/https://www.dhs.gov/files/statistics/publications/LPR10.shtm|url-status=live}}</ref> and illegal,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://articles.nydailynews.com/2011-05-09/news/29541916_1_illegal-chinese-immigrants-qm2-queen-mary|title=Malaysian man smuggled illegal Chinese immigrants into Brooklyn using Queen Mary 2: authorities|author=John Marzulli|newspaper=New York Daily News |date=9 May 2011|access-date=March 3, 2019|location=New York|archive-date=2015-05-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150505034445/http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/malaysian-man-smuggled-illegal-chinese-immigrants-brooklyn-queen-mary-2-authorities-article-1.143516|url-status=dead}}</ref> has fueled Chinese-American population growth in the New York metropolitan area. New York's status as an alpha global city, its extensive mass transit system, and the New York metropolitan area's enormous economic marketplace are among the many reasons it remains a major international immigration hub. The ] contains the largest concentration of ethnic Chinese in the ],<ref name="fact-sheet">* {{cite web |url=http://www.explorechinatown.com/PDF/FactSheet.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.explorechinatown.com/PDF/FactSheet.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |title=Chinatown New York City Fact Sheet |website=Explore Chinatown |access-date=March 2, 2019 }}
Established in the 1700s, Chinatown is located in one of the oldest areas in Bangkok. It was set up by Chinese traders who came in ]s to trade with Thailand (Siam) during the ] period, about 1700s. By the end of 1891, ] had cut many roads, Yaowarat Road is one of them. Therefore Chinatown doesn't consist of only Yaowarat Road, but also covers others such as: ], ], ], ], ] etc. Yaowarat is the centre of the area.
* {{cite web
|url=http://www.ny.com/articles/chinatown.html
|title=The History of New York's Chinatown
|author=Sarah Waxman
|publisher=Mediabridge Infosystems, Inc
|access-date=March 3, 2019
|archive-date=May 25, 2017
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170525014333/https://www.ny.com/articles/chinatown.html
|url-status=live
}}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104 |title=Still the golden door: the Third ...&nbsp;– Google Books |author=David M. Reimers |access-date=April 11, 2016 |isbn=9780231076814 |year=1992 |publisher=Columbia University Press |archive-date=November 3, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231103153044/https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104#v=snippet&q=Flushing%20Chinatown%20Little%20Taiwan&f=false |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web
|url=http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf
|title=Beyond Chinatown: Dual immigration and the Chinese population of metropolitan New York City, 2000, Page 4
|author=Lawrence A. McGlinn, Department of Geography SUNY-New Paltz
|publisher=Middle States Geographer
|year=2002
|volume=35
|pages=110–119
|work=Journal of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers
|access-date=March 3, 2019
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121029075400/http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf
|archive-date=October 29, 2012
}}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104 |title=Still the golden door: the Third ...&nbsp;– Google Books |author=David M. Reimers |access-date=April 11, 2016 |isbn=9780231076814 |year=1992 |publisher=Columbia University Press |archive-date=November 3, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231103153044/https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104#v=snippet&q=Flushing%20Chinatown%20Little%20Taiwan&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref> and the ] in ] has become the world's largest Chinatown.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/behind-illicit-massage-parlors-lie-a-vast-crime-network-and-modern-indentured-servitude/ar-BBUhZgJ?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout|title=Behind Illicit Massage Parlors Lie a Vast Crime Network and Modern Indentured Servitude|first1=Nicholas |last1=Kulish|first2=Frances |last2=Robles|first3=Patricia |last3=Mazzei|newspaper=The New York Times|date=March 2, 2019|access-date=March 3, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190306043138/http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/behind-illicit-massage-parlors-lie-a-vast-crime-network-and-modern-indentured-servitude/ar-BBUhZgJ?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout|archive-date=March 6, 2019|url-status=dead}}</ref>


The ] has adversely affected tourism and business in Chinatown, San Francisco<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2020/11/30/san-francisco-chinatown-business-covid/|title=The country's oldest Chinatown is fighting for its life in San Francisco Covid-19 has decimated tourism in the neighborhood. Can its historic businesses survive?|author=Jada Chin|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=November 30, 2020|access-date=December 3, 2020|archive-date=December 2, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201202235502/https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2020/11/30/san-francisco-chinatown-business-covid/|url-status=live}}</ref> and ], Illinois<ref>{{cite news|url=https://herald-review.com/news/state-and-regional/chicagos-chinatown-takes-a-hit-as-coronavirus-fears-keep-customers-away-business-is-down-as/article_d7b72df2-d40c-5d30-afce-bb42baccae2e.html|title=Chicago's Chinatown takes a hit as coronavirus fears keep customers away. Business is down as much as 50% at some restaurants|author=Robert Channick|newspaper=Herald & Review|date=February 12, 2020|access-date=December 3, 2020|archive-date=April 27, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210427124131/https://herald-review.com/news/state-and-regional/chicagos-chinatown-takes-a-hit-as-coronavirus-fears-keep-customers-away-business-is-down-as/article_d7b72df2-d40c-5d30-afce-bb42baccae2e.html|url-status=live}}</ref> as well as others worldwide.
====Yangon (Rangoon)====
{{Main|Tayote Tan}}
Meaning Chinese Roads or Quarters in Burmese, Tayote Tan covers almost a fifth of downtown Yangon. The lay-out of Chinatown dates back to the British expansion of Yangon, around the ], thus being as old as the downtown.


==Chinese settlements==
====Manila====
===History===
{{Main|Binondo}}
*People of ] province used to move over the ] from the 14th century to look for more stable jobs, in most cases of trading and fishery, and settled down near the port/jetty under approval of the local authority such as ] (]), ] (]), ] (]), ] (]), ], ], ] (]), ] (the ]), etc. A large number of this kind of settlements was developed along the coastal areal of the ], and was called "Campon China" by Portuguese account<ref>1613 Description of Malaca and Meridional India and Cathay composed by Emanuel Godinho de Eradia.</ref> and "China Town" by English account.<ref>"We firſt paſſed the lower ground, from thence round the Horſe Stable Hill, to the Hermitage, and ſo by the China Town and brick-ſhades," Modern Hiſtory: Bing a Continuation of the Universal History, Book XIV, Chap. VI. Hiſtory of the Engliſh Eaſt India Company, 1759.</ref>
Prior to the arrival of the ] in 1571, trade between ethnic ]s and Chinese traders was already established in pre-colonial ]. Manila's Chinatown is the oldest chinatown in the world, established sometime in the late ]. It is home to many ethnic ] who left the Chinese mainland for a home in the ]. ] is a stone's throw away from the District of ], which was the Philippine's administrative capital under ] rule. The district was within the range of Intramuros' ]s to quell any uprising the ] could have started. ] became a center of commerce during the American colonial era of the Philippines, since the ] were known to be experts in trading and finance. Banks, department stores, restaurants, insurance companies, nearly all giant commercial establishments were built in Binondo, the most prominent of which are located in the ] Avenue, though these are somewhat out of vogue and dilapidated today. ] destroyed much of Binondo's commercial establishments. After the war, most companies relocated to ], the current central business district of ].


====Nagasaki==== ===Settlement pattern===
*The settlement was developed along a jetty and protected by ] temple, which was dedicated for the Goddess of Sea for safe sailing. Market place was open in front of ] temple, and ] were built along the street leading from west side of the ] temple. At the end of the street, ] (Land God) temple was placed. As the settlement prospered as commercial town, ] temple would be added for commercial success, especially by people from Hong Kong and Guangdong province. This core pattern was maintained even the settlement got expanded as a city, and forms historical urban center of the Southeast Asia.<ref>Hideo Izumida, Chinese Settlements and China-towns along Coastal Area of the South China Sea: Asian Urbanization Through Immigration and Colonization, 2006, {{ISBN|4-7615-2383-2}}(Japanese version), {{ISBN|978-89-5933-712-5}}(Korean version)</ref>
{{Main|Shinchimachi}}
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px">
With the overthrow of the ] by the ] in the late ], some Chinese (supporters of the Ming) fled to Japan and formed a Chinatown community in Nagasaki before the start of the ], making it (along with the ] district of ] of the ]) one of the earliest Chinatowns to be established. Under the ] of the ] of Japan, Chinese and ] traders and settlers were confined to Nagasaki. Trade was subsequently resumed with China and Shinchimachi became a trading hub. Shinchimachi has long been the ethnic Chinese cultural and commercial center in Japan, although it size pales in comparison to its counterpart in ].
File:Hoian-settlement-pattern.jpg|Hoian Settlement Pattern, Vietnam, 1991
File:Pengchau-settlement-pattern.jpg|Pengchau Settlement Pattern, Hong Kong, 1991
File:Penang-Settlement-pattern.jpg|Chinese Settlement in Georgetown, Malaysia, 1991
File:Kucing-settlement-pattern.jpg|Chinese Settlement in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991
File:Kucing-Tinhua1991.jpg|Tin Hau (Goddess of Sea) Temple in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991
File:Kucing-Todigong1991.jpg|] at Kuching, 1991
</gallery>


==Characteristics==
====Ho Chi Minh City====
The features described below are characteristic of many modern Chinatowns.
{{Main|Cholon}}
In the early 18th century, Chinese settlers established Chinatowns mainly in Southeast Asia, including the ] district of the former ], ]. Cholon was heavily fortified{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}} by Chinese to protect against frequent harassment by native Vietnamese ] loyalists. It remains largely a bustling Cantonese-speaking enclave, comprising Districts 5 and 6 of the city, now renamed Ho Chi Minh City.


====jakarta==== ===Demographics===
The early Chinatowns such as those in ] and ] in the United States were naturally destinations for people of Chinese descent as ] were the result of opportunities such as the California Gold Rush and the Transcontinental Railroad drawing the population in, creating natural Chinese enclaves that were almost always 100% exclusively Han Chinese, which included both people born in China and in the enclave, in this case ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sf-planning.org/ftp/general_plan/Chinatown.htm#CHI_HOS_4_1 |title=Chinatown Area Plan (San Francisco Chinatown) |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140519123247/http://www.sf-planning.org/ftp/general_plan/Chinatown.htm |archive-date=2014-05-19 }}</ref> In some free countries such as the United States and Canada, housing laws that prevent ] also allows neighborhoods that may have been characterized as "All Chinese" to also allow non-Chinese to reside in these communities. For example, the Chinatown in ] has a sizeable non-Chinese population residing within the community.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.city-data.com/neighborhood/Chinatown-Philadelphia-PA.html|title=Chinatown Philadelphia PA|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140702164650/http://www.city-data.com/neighborhood/Chinatown-Philadelphia-PA.html|archive-date=2014-07-02}}</ref>
{{main|Glodok}}


A recent study also suggests that the demographic change is also driven by ] of what were previously Chinatown neighborhoods. The influx of ] is speeding up the gentrification of such neighborhoods. The trend for emergence of these types of natural enclaves is on the decline (with the exceptions being the continued growth and emergence of newer Chinatowns in ] and ] in New York City), only to be replaced by newer "Disneyland-like" attractions, such as a new Chinatown that will be built in the ] region of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ibtimes.com/china-city-america-new-disney-chinese-themed-development-plans-bring-6-billion-catskills-new-York|title=China City Of America: New Disney-Like Chinese-Themed Development Plans To Bring $6 Billion To Catskills In New York State|website=]|date=6 December 2013|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140307120550/http://www.ibtimes.com/china-city-america-new-disney-chinese-themed-development-plans-bring-6-billion-catskills-new-york|archive-date=2014-03-07}}</ref> This includes the endangerment of existing historical Chinatowns that will eventually stop serving the needs of Chinese immigrants.
As shopping center, most of the vendors in Glodok are ]. Glodok is the biggest ] area in Indonesia, and one of the biggest Chinatowns in the world. The Chinese came to Jakarta since the 1600s as traders and laborers. Most of them came from ] and ] provinces in southern China. Centered on Pintu Besar Selatan Road, it has become a commercial hub for the relatively prosperous Chinese community. Assimilation between Chinese and ''pribumi'' made a language known as ]. Administratively, the area is a '']'' under the ] subdistrict, ].


Newer developments like those in ], and the ], which are not necessarily considered "Chinatowns" in the sense that they do not necessarily contain the Chinese architectures or Chinese language signs as signatures of an officially sanctioned area that was designated either in law or signage stating so, differentiate areas that are called "Chinatowns" versus locations that have "significant" populations of people of Chinese descent. For example, ] in the United States has 63,434 people (2010 U.S. Census) of Chinese descent, and yet "does not have a ]". Some "official" Chinatowns have Chinese populations much lower than that.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.census.gov/ |title=U.S. Census website |access-date=2020-04-04 |archive-date=December 27, 1996 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19961227012639/https://www.census.gov/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
====Karachi====
Many Chinese families used to live in the PECHS and Tariq area but have since moved to the higher end Clifton and Defense areas(Karachi-Pakistan).Many Chinese restaurants can be found in these areas.
Chinese dentists can be found in Empress Market area. These dentists can be identified through the text "Chinese Dentist" prominently marked on their sign boards.Less obvious are Chinese operated businesses such as leather, handicraft and trading firms. Unless the owner is around, these businesses look no different from Pakistani operated ones.The Chinese populations tend to keep a low profile and have good relationships with the rest of Pakistan society. Perhaps the site where most of these interactions take place is in a Chinese restaurant.Chinese food is very popular and Chinese restaurants can be found all over the city as well as in almost all of the major hotels such as the Marriott, Pearl Continental, Avari Towers, and Carlton Hotel. Many of these restaurants are managed by Chinese or have a Chinese chef who have adapted to Islamic dietary requirements by offering Halal dishes.
Without clan associations, temples or monasteries, Chinese businesses such as restaurants and dentists have come to symbolize Chinese presence in Karachi and their good relationship with Pakistan society.


===Australia=== ===Town-Scape===
{{Main|Chinese architecture}}
====Melbourne====
Many tourist-destination metropolitan Chinatowns can be distinguished by large red arch entrance structures known in Mandarin Chinese as '']'' (sometimes accompanied by ] statues on either side of the structure, to greet visitors). Other Chinese architectural styles such as the Chinese Garden of Friendship in ] and the ] at the gate to the ] Chinatown are present in some Chinatowns. ], the Chinatown in ], contains many buildings that were constructed in the Chinese architectural style.
{{Main|Chinatown, Melbourne}}


Paifangs usually have special inscriptions in Chinese. Historically, these gateways were donated to a particular city as a gift from the ] and ], or local governments (such as Chinatown, San Francisco) and business organizations. The long-neglected Chinatown in ], ], received materials for its paifang from the People's Republic of China as part of the Chinatown's gradual renaissance. Construction of these red arches is often financed by local financial contributions from the Chinatown community. Some of these structures span an entire intersection, and some are smaller in height and width. Some paifang can be made of ], ] or ] and may incorporate an elaborate or simple design.
Melbourne, Australia's Chinatown is located within the Melbourne Central Business District and is centered near 37°48′42″S 144°58′03″E / 37.8118°S 144.9676°E / -37.8118; 144.9676Coordinates: 37°48′42″S 144°58′03″E / 37.8118°S 144.9676°E / -37.8118; 144.9676 around the eastern end of Little Bourke St. It extends between the corners of Swanston and Exhibition Streets.


{{Gallery |align=center |title=Chinatown landmarks
Melbourne's Chinatown was established during the Victorian gold rush in 1851 when Chinese prospectors joined the rush in search of gold. It is notable as the oldest Chinatown in Australia, the oldest continuous Chinese settlement in Australia, and the longest continuously running Chinatown outside of Asia. San Francisco's Chinatown was built earlier during the California gold rush, but it was rebuilt and repopulated after it was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Melbourne's Chinatown had remained largely unchanged by 1842.
|File:The Sydney Chinatown (16261772672).jpg|Entrance to ]
|File:China Gate, Philadelphia.jpg|Paifang in ]
|File:Chinatown, DC gate.jpg|] in the ] of ]
|File:Nochi.jpg|Paifang in ], ]
|File:Paifang Boston Chinatown 1.jpg|] looking towards the paifang
|File:ChinatownGatePortland.jpg|Gate of Chinatown, ], ]
|File:Chinatown Arch Newcastle UK.jpg|Chinatown entry arch in ], England
|File:Chinese Garden of Friendship.jpg|Chinese Garden of Friendship, part of ]
|File:Chinatown Victoria gate lion hires.jpg|] at the Chinatown gate in ], Canada
|File:Chinatown Gate 1 Compressed.jpg|Harbin Gates in Chinatown of ], Canada
|File:Chinatown Vancouver.JPG|Millennium Gate on Pender Street in Chinatown of ], Canada
|File:ChineseCulturalCentre.JPG|The ] in the ], Canada ]
|File:Toong_on_Church_-_Black_Burn_Lane_-_Kolkata_2013-03-03_5248.JPG|Chinese Temple "Toong On Church" in ], India.
|File:Yokohama Chinatown temple.jpg|Chinese Temple in ], Japan.
|Filipino-Chinese Friendship Arch at Binondo.jpg|Filipino-Chinese Friendship Arch in ]}}


==Benevolent and business associations==
Other than the original Chinatown in the CBD, several newer Chinese communities are found in the suburbs of Melbourne, such as Box Hill (Carrington Road). Immigrants from Hong Kong have established there. Centro Box Hill is the primary shopping destination in Box Hill as there are many shops focused on Asian products and service.
{{Main|Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association}}
]]]


A major component of many Chinatowns is the family benevolent association, which provides some degree of aid to immigrants. These associations generally provide social support, religious services, death benefits (members' names in Chinese are generally enshrined on tablets and posted on walls), meals, and recreational activities for ethnic Chinese, especially for older Chinese migrants. Membership in these associations can be based on members sharing a common ] or belonging to a common clan, spoken ], specific village, region or country of origin, and so on. Many have their own facilities.
Similar Vietnamese communities can be found in Richmond (Victoria Street), Springvale and Footscray. These areas have businesses owned by some ethnic Chinese from Vietnam, with most run by ethnic Vietnamese, and include associations as well as a range of grocers, shops and eateries offering Chinese and Vietnamese food and merchandise.


Some examples include San Francisco's prominent ] (中華總會館 ''Zhōnghuá Zǒng Huìguǎn''), aka ] and Los Angeles' Southern California Teochew Association. The Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association is among the largest umbrella groups of benevolent associations in the North America, which branches in several Chinatowns. Politically, the CCBA has traditionally been aligned with the ] and the ].
===North America===


The London Chinatown Chinese Association is active in ]. ] has an institution in the ''Association des Résidents en France d'origine indochinoise'' and it servicing overseas Chinese immigrants in Paris who were born in the former ].
{{Main|Chinatowns in Canada and the United States}}
====San Francisco====
{{Main|Chinatown, San Francisco}}
As a port city, San Francisco has one of the largest Chinatowns in North America. It was formed in the 1850s and served as a gateway for incoming immigrants who arrived during the ] and construction of the transcontinental railroads. Chinatown was later reconceptualized as a tourist attraction in the ].{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} Once a community of predominantly Taishanese Chinese-speaking inhabitants, San Francisco's Chinatown remains one of the most important Chinese centers in the United States.


Traditionally, Chinatown-based associations have also been aligned with ethnic Chinese business interests, such as restaurant, grocery, and laundry (antiquated) associations in Chinatowns in North America. In Chicago's Chinatown, the On Leong Merchants Association was active.
====Victoria====
{{Main|Chinatown, Victoria}}
Victoria's Chinatown is the oldest in Canada and second oldest in north America after San Francisco. It is a tourist attraction and contains shops, markets, gallerys and apartments.


====Vancouver==== ==Names==
{{Main|Chinatown, Vancouver}}
]'s Chinatown is the largest in ].<ref></ref> Dating back to the late ], the main centre of the older Chinatown is ] and ]s in downtown Vancouver, which is also, along with ]'s ], one of the oldest surviving Chinatowns in North America, and has been the setting for a variety of modern Chinese Canadian culture and literature. Vancouver's Chinatown contains numerous galleries, shops, restaurants, and markets, in addition to the ] and the ] and park; the garden is the first and one of the largest ] era-style Chinese gardens outside ].


===English===
Although only one neighbourhood is designated as Chinatown in modern ],<!--as New Westminster, Port Moody and Port Hammond all had Chinatowns in the past--> the high proportion of Chinese people living in the region (the highest in North America) has created many commercial and residential areas that while Chinese-dominated are not called "Chinatown", as in Greater Vancouver that refers ''only'' to the historic Chinatown in the city core. There is an abundance of Chinese and Asian malls in the region, with the highest concentration in the ] district of ].
] pointing towards "]"]]
Although the term "Chinatown" was first used in Asia, it is not derived from a Chinese language. Its earliest appearance seems to have been in connection with the ] of ], which by 1844 was already being called "China Town" or "Chinatown" by the British colonial government.<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Simmond's Colonial Magazine and Foreign Miscellany|date=Jan–Apr 1844|page=335|url=http://www.nla.gov.au/ferg/issn/14606011.html|title=Trade and Commerce in Singapore|access-date=2011-12-20|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111222220928/http://www.nla.gov.au/ferg/issn/14606011.html|archive-date=2011-12-22}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Sydney Morning Herald|date=1844-07-23|page= 2}}</ref> This may have been a word-for-word translation into English of the Malay name for that quarter, which in those days was probably "Kampong China" or possibly "Kota China" or "Kampong Tionghua/Chunghwa/Zhonghua".


The first appearance of a Chinatown outside Singapore may have been in 1852, in a book by the Rev. Hatfield, who applied the term to the Chinese part of the main settlement on the remote South Atlantic island of ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Hatfield|first=Edwin F.|title=St. Helena and the Cape of Good Hope|url=https://archive.org/details/sthelenacapeofgo01hatf|year=1852|page=}}</ref> The island was a regular way-station on the voyage to Europe and North America from Indian Ocean ports, including Singapore.
====New York City====
{{Main|Chinatown, Manhattan}}
]'s metropolitan area now contains at least 6 Chinatowns, comprising the original ] Chinatown, two in ] (the ] Chinatown and the ] Chinatown), two in ] (the ] Chinatown and the ] Chinatown), and one in ].<!--but which are CALLED Chinatown??-->


] in ] pointing to "]"]]
Manhattan's Chinatown is one of the largest Chinese communities outside of Asia. Within Manhattan's expanding Chinatown lies a "Little Fuzhou" on East Broadway and surrounding streets, comprised predominantly of immigrants from the Fujian Province of Mainland China. Areas surrounding the "Little Fuzhou" consist mostly of Cantonese immigrants from Guangdong Province, the earlier Chinese settlers and in some areas moderately Cantonese immigrants. In the past few years, however, the Cantonese dialect that has dominated Chinatown for decades is being rapidly swept aside by Mandarin, the national language of China and the lingua franca of most of the latest Chinese immigrants.
One of the earliest American usages dates to 1855, when San Francisco newspaper '']'' described a "pitched battle on the streets of Chinatown".<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Alta California|date=1855-12-12|page= 1}}</ref> Other ''Alta'' articles from the late 1850s make it clear that areas called "Chinatown" existed at that time in several other California cities, including Oroville and San Andres.<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Alta California|date=1857-12-12|page= 1}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Alta California|date=1858-06-04|page= 2}}</ref> By 1869, "Chinatown had acquired its full modern meaning all over the U.S. and Canada. For instance, an Ohio newspaper wrote: "From San Diego to Sitka..., every town and hamlet has its 'Chinatown'."<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Defiance Democrat|date=1869-06-12|page= 5}}</ref>


In British publications before the 1890s, "Chinatown" appeared mainly in connection with California. At first, Australian and New Zealand journalists also regarded Chinatowns as Californian phenomena. However, they began using the term to denote local Chinese communities as early as 1861 in Australia<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Ballarat Star|date=1861-02-16|page= 2}}</ref> and 1873 in New Zealand.<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Tuapeka Times|date=1873-02-06|page= 4}}</ref> In most other countries, the custom of calling local Chinese communities "Chinatowns" is not older than the twentieth century.
The energy and population of Manhattan's Chinatown are fueled by relentless, massive immigration from Mainland China, both legal and illegal in origin, propagated in large part by New York's high density, extensive mass transit system, and huge economic marketplace.


Several alternate English names for Chinatown include '''China Town''' (generally used in ] and ]), '''The Chinese District''', '''Chinese Quarter''' and ''']''' (an antiquated term used primarily in several ] towns in the ] for a Chinese community; some of these are now historical sites). In the case of Lillooet, British Columbia, Canada, China Alley was a parallel commercial street adjacent to the town's Main Street, enjoying a view over the river valley adjacent and also over the main residential part of Chinatown, which was largely of ] construction. All traces of Chinatown and China Alley there have disappeared, despite a once large and prosperous community.
The Flushing Chinatown in ] has become the second largest Chinatown in the region after the Manhattan Chinatown.


===In Chinese===
The Brooklyn Chinatown in ] was originally settled by Cantonese immigrants like Manhattan's Chinatown in the past. However, in the recent decade, an influx of Fuzhou immigrants have been pouring in and supplanting the Cantonese at a high significant rate than Manhattan's Chinatown and is now home to mostly Fuzhou immigrants. In the past during the 1980s and 1990s, the majority of new arriving Fuzhou immigrants were settling within Manhattan's Chinatown and the first ''Little Fuzhou'' community emerged in New York City within Manhattan's Chinatown, but by the 2000s, the growth slowed and is now hardly growing. As the Fuzhou population/community within Manhattan's Chinatown slowed in growth during the 2000s, the increasing Fuzhou influx shifted to Brooklyn's Chinatown and is now home to the fastest growing Fuzhou population than in Manhattan's Chinatown and all other NYC Chinese communities and is replacing Manhattan's Chinatown as having the largest Fuzhou population in New York City. Unlike the ''Little Fuzhou'' within Manhattan's Chinatown remains surrounded by areas that are mostly Cantonese populated and in some parts moderately Cantonese populated, all of Brooklyn's Chinatown is emerging into the new ''Little Fuzhou'' because of the Chinese community's smaller size than Manhattan's Chinatown and experiencing the highest increasing Fuzhou population in NYC and is also now replacing the one within Manhattan's Chinatown as being the largest Fuzhou community in NYC. Unlike Manhattan's Chinatown still successfully continues to carry a large Cantonese population and retain the large Cantonese community established decades ago in the western/main section of Manhattan's Chinatown where the Cantonese residents have a place of gathering to shop and work, Brooklyn's Chinatown is quickly losing the Cantonese community identity.<ref>http://www.indypressny.org/nycma/voices/25/news/news_1/</ref>
], with {{lang|zh|唐人街}} below the street name]]
In ], Chinatown is usually called {{lang|zh|唐人街}}, in ] ''Tong jan gai'', in ] ''Tángrénjiē'', in ] ''Tong ngin gai'', and in ] ''Hong ngin gai'', literally meaning "Tang people's street(s)". The ] was a zenith of the Chinese civilization, after which some Chinese call themselves. Some Chinatowns are indeed just one single street, such as the relatively short ] in ], ], Canada.


A more modern Chinese name is {{lang|zh|華埠}} (Cantonese: Waa Fau, Mandarin: Huábù) meaning "Chinese City", used in the semi-official Chinese translations of some cities' documents and signs. ''Bù'', pronounced sometimes in Mandarin as ''fù'', usually means ''seaport''; but in this sense, it means ''city'' or ''town''. ''Tong jan fau'' ({{lang|zh|唐人埠}} "Tang people's town") is also used in Cantonese nowadays. The literal word-for-word translation of ''Chinatown''—''Zhōngguó Chéng'' ({{lang|zh|中國城}}) is also used, but more frequently by visiting Chinese nationals rather than immigrants of Chinese descent who live in various Chinatowns.
====Toronto====
{{Main|Chinatown, Toronto}}
With one of the largest Chinese communities in North America, is home to 6 Chinatowns in the Greater Metropolitan Area (], ], ], ], ] and ]). The historic Chinatown in Toronto and sits in the West-end of the ]. The first Chinatown took shape during the turn of the ], as Chinese workers arrived from western Canada after the completion of the ]. With changes in immigration patterns since the 1980s, the downtown enclave has come to reflect a more diverse set of East Asian cultures, particularly evident in the variety of restaurants that offer Chinese, Vietnamese and Thai cuisines.


Chinatowns in Southeast Asia have unique Chinese names used by the local Chinese, as there are large populations of people who are ], living within the various major cities of Southeast Asia. As the population of Overseas Chinese, is widely dispersed in various enclaves, across each major Southeast Asian city, specific Chinese names are used instead.
East Chinatown sits in the east-end in an area known as ], which is now considered part of the downtown core. Although smaller, Toronto's East Chinatown{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} is growing and in recent years has grown in prominence in the media and throughout the University and young-professional crowd. Toronto's original Chinatown has become noticeably Vietnamese in character.


For example, in ], where 2.8 million ethnic Chinese constitute a majority 74% of the resident population,<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.singstat.gov.sg/-/media/files/publications/cop2010/census_2010_release1/cop2010sr1.pdf|title=Singapore Census of Population 2010, Statistical Release 1: Demographic Characteristics, Education, Language and Religion|last=Singapore|first=Department of Statistics|publisher=Ministry of Trade & Industry, Republic of Singapore|year=2011|isbn=9789810878085|location=Singapore|pages=19|access-date=2019-12-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200213154440/https://www.singstat.gov.sg/-/media/files/publications/cop2010/census_2010_release1/cop2010sr1.pdf|archive-date=2020-02-13|url-status=dead}}</ref> the Chinese name for ] is ''Niúchēshǔi'' ({{lang|zh|牛車水}}, ] ]: ''Gû-chia-chúi''), which literally means "ox-cart water" from the Malay 'Kreta Ayer' in reference to the water carts that used to ply the area. The Chinatown in ], ], (where 2 million ethnic Chinese comprise 30% of the population of ]<ref>Department of Statistics, Malaysia. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200206052225/https://www.mycensus.gov.my/banci/www/index.php |date=2020-02-06 }}, '']'', Malaysia, August 2014. Retrieved on 27 December 2019.</ref>) while officially known as ] (Malay: ''Jalan Petaling''), is referred to by Malaysian Chinese by its Cantonese name ''ci<sup>4</sup> cong<sup>2</sup> gaai<sup>1</sup>'' ({{lang|zh-hant|茨廠街}}, pinyin: ''Cíchǎng Jiē''), literally "tapioca factory street", after a ] starch factory that once stood in the area. In ], ], the area is called Mínlúnluò Qū {{lang|zh-hant|岷倫洛區}}, literally meaning the "Mín and Luò Rivers confluence district" but is actually a ] of the local term ''Binondo'' and an allusion to its proximity to the ].
====Boston====
{{Main|Chinatown, Boston}}
]
Boston's Chinatown is smaller and focused on food, as almost every business in the roughly 4 blocks is in the food industry. There is a second Chinatown in ] in neighboring ].


====Honolulu==== ===Other languages===
In ], the term used for Chinatown districts is ''''']''''', the etymology of which is uncertain.<ref name="pacs.ph"/> In the rest of the ], the Spanish-language term is usually '''''barrio chino''''' (''Chinese neighborhood''; plural: ''barrios chinos''), used in Spain and ]. (However, ''barrio chino'' or its ] cognate ''barri xinès'' do not always refer to a Chinese neighborhood: these are also common terms for a disreputable district with drugs and prostitution, and often no connection to the Chinese.).
{{Main|Chinatown, Honolulu}}
Honolulu's Chinatown, the oldest Chinatown outside of Asia,{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}} is known for its mixture of Asian and Pacific Island Culture and its recent transformation into a popular arts and nightlife district blending modern galleries and traditional Chinese bazaars.


In Portuguese, Chinatown is often referred to as '''Bairro chinês''' (''the Chinese Neighbourhood''; plural: ''bairros chineses'').
====Los Angeles====
{{Main|Chinatown, Los Angeles}}
Los Angeles's Chinatown came into being around 1880, at the site of the future ]. It existed there for about 50 years, eventually becoming a popular destination for ] and ] use. The degeneration of the area led to the planning of a "New Chinatown", bounded today by ] and ], to replace the old one, and the entire community was moved there (with the exception of a small alley, which stayed as a remnant until the ]) just before construction began on the station.


In ] regions (such as France and ]), Chinatown is often referred to as '''''le quartier chinois''''' (''the Chinese Neighbourhood''; plural: ''les quartiers chinois''). The most prominent Francophone Chinatowns are located in ] and ].
In popular culture, the L.A. Chinatown is probably best known for being the namesake of and the setting of an important scene in the ] film '']''.


The Vietnamese term for Chinatown is ''Khu người Hoa'' (Chinese district) or ''phố Tàu'' (Chinese street). Vietnamese language is prevalent in Chinatowns of Paris, Los Angeles, Boston, Philadelphia, Toronto, and Montreal as ethnic Chinese from Vietnam have set up shop in them.
====Victoria====
{{Main|Chinatown, Victoria}}
Though today very small, Victoria's Chinatown was once one of the largest in North America and was the second major Chinatown founded in North America, after San Francisco's. Begun in 1858 when thousands of Chinese headed north from the California gold fields to new discoveries in the ], the population of Chinatown was up to a third of Victoria, which had become a city overnight. Today largely a small tourism district on the north side of downtown, Victoria's Chinatown has a paifang and various cultural institutions included a Chinese-language school, a college of Chinese medicine<!--or just a clinic?/association?-->, and a benevolent association, and during the days of the Chinese Civil War had been the overseas headquarters of the Chinese Community Party.<!--that's citable, I'll find the cite-->


In Japanese, the term "chūkagai" (中華街, literally "Chinese Street") is the translation used for ] and ].
====Edmonton====
{{Main|Chinatown, Edmonton}}
]'s Chinatown is the third largest in ] and was established in the late 19th century when Chinese men immigrated to Canada to help build the ]. The main strip for Edmonton's Chinatown is 97th Street between 105A Ave and 108A Ave, but also includes the blocks surrounding the main strip, most notably 107A Ave and 101 St.


In ], chinatown is known as '''''Pecinan''''', a shortened term of ''pe-cina-an'', means everything related to the Chinese people. Most of these pecinans usually located in ].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oQifRGYy55sC&q=Pecinan+Chinatown&pg=PA109|title=Cleavage, Connection and Conflict in Rural, Urban and Contemporary Asia|last1=Bunnell|first1=Tim|last2=Parthasarathy|first2=D.|last3=Thompson|first3=Eric C.|date=2012-12-11|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|isbn=9789400754829|language=en|access-date=November 9, 2020|archive-date=February 12, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240212165100/https://books.google.com/books?id=oQifRGYy55sC&q=Pecinan+Chinatown&pg=PA109#v=snippet&q=Pecinan%20Chinatown&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref>
====Chicago====
{{Main|Chinatown, Chicago}}
]]]What once used to be one street of Chinese restaurants and gift shops has grown to include housing developments, businesses and an outdoor mall.


Some languages have adopted the English-language term, such as ] and ].
Chinatown Square consists of restaurants, gift shops, doctor's clinics, groceries, banks, and other businesses such as insurance offices, hair saloons and eyeglass shops. Even though the area is constrained by the ] train at the east border, the ] railway on the west side, 26th Street along the south end, and the empty railroad lot to the north, the area has grown outward toward ] (east), the Loop (north), Bridgeport (south/SW), and Pilsen (west/NW).


==Locations==
Chicago has one of the oldest Chinatowns in the United States and permitted the Chinese to maintain their own laws unlike any other Chinatown in the USA.
], ]]]


===Africa===
Chicago's Chinatown is about the same size as London's Chinatown. Chicago Chinatown is the largest Chinatown in the Midwest. Chicago and has more ethnic neighborhoods than London or New York City and Chicago is now experiencing a significant amount of Chinese immigration who now do not feel the need to congregate in one centralized Chinese district.
{{Main|Chinatowns in Africa}}
There are three noteworthy Chinatowns in Africa located in the coastal African nations of ], ] and ]. South Africa has the largest Chinatown and the largest Chinese population of any African country and remains a popular destination for Chinese immigrants coming to Africa. Derrick Avenue in ], ], hosts South Africa's largest Chinatown.


===America===
Current Chinese immigrants are scattering throughout the city however, most new immigrants are moving further South of Chinatown towards the south edge of Chicago. Currently most of the Chinese population lives in Bridgeport, which was once dominated by Italians and Irish. Now the population has moved with growth toward McKinley Park and Brighton Park and is moving to the south side of Chicago in the Morgan Park neighborhood.
{{main|Chinatowns in the Americas}}
] in ], ]]]
In the ], which includes North America, Central America and South America, Chinatowns have been around since the 1800s. The most prominent ones exist in the United States and Canada in ], ], ], ], ] and ]. The ] is home to the largest ], comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|title=SELECTED POPULATION PROFILE IN THE UNITED STATES 2017 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA Chinese alone|publisher=]|access-date=January 27, 2019|archive-url=https://archive.today/20200214002005/https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|archive-date=February 14, 2020|url-status=dead}}</ref> including at least 12 Chinatowns &ndash; six<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/nyregion/asian-new-yorkers-asian-new-yorkers-seek-power-to-match-surging-numbers.html |title=Asian New Yorkers Seek Power to Match Numbers |author=Kirk Semple |newspaper=The New York Times |date=June 23, 2011 |access-date=2014-10-03 |archive-date=December 19, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141219031916/http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/nyregion/asian-new-yorkers-asian-new-yorkers-seek-power-to-match-surging-numbers.html?scp=1&sq=asians&st=cse |url-status=live }}</ref> (or nine, including the emerging Chinatowns in ] and ], ],<ref name="McGlinn">{{cite journal|url=http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf |title=Beyond Chinatown: Dual Immigration and the Chinese Population of Metropolitan New York City, 2000 |page=4 |author=Lawrence A. McGlinn |journal=Middle States Geographer |year=2002 |volume=35 |issue=1153 |access-date=2014-10-03 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121029075400/http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf |archive-date=2012-10-29 }}</ref> and ]) in ] proper, and one each in ], ]; ], ];<ref name="McGlinn" /> and ], not to mention fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area. ], a Pacific port city, has the oldest and longest continuous running Chinatown in the Western Hemisphere.<ref name="Bacon, Daniel page 50"/><ref name="Richards, Rand page 198"/><ref name="Morris p151-152" /> In Canada, The ] is home to the 2nd largest ethnically Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising 694,970 individuals as of the 2021 Census. ] is the country's largest.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://vancouverchinatown.ca/ |title=Chinatown Vancouver Online |website=Vancouver Chinatown |access-date=2011-09-11 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110903032520/http://www.vancouverchinatown.ca/ |archive-date=2011-09-03 }}</ref>


] is in ] and dates back to at least the early 17th century.<ref name="Mann 2012">{{cite book|last=Mann|first=Charles C.|author-link=Charles C. Mann|title=1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-lB3sy0aH4AC&pg=PA416|access-date=12 October 2012|year=2012|publisher=Random House Digital, Inc.|isbn=978-0-307-27824-1|page=416|archive-date=February 12, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240212165202/https://books.google.com/books?id=-lB3sy0aH4AC&pg=PA416#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref> Since the 1970s, new arrivals have typically hailed from ], ], and Taiwan. Latin American Chinatowns may include the descendants of original migrants – often of mixed Chinese and ] parentage – and more recent immigrants from ]. Most ]s are of ] and ] origin. Estimates widely vary on the number of Chinese descendants in Latin America. Notable Chinatowns also exist in ], ].
====Detroit====
When the first "Oriental" came to Detroit in 1872 and opened a "washee" on Beaubien and Gratiot Ave. in Detroit, the Chinese population rapidly increased in southeast Michigan. Gradually shifting to Third and Michigan Avenues in Detroit, the ethnic borough once distinguished as Chinatown reached a population of over 3,000 residents. The Detroit News frequently ran stories that highlighted Chinese celebrations, customs, and cultural practices—many of which drew crowds of non-Asian individuals both in and outside of urban Detroit. "Double Ten Days" (October 10), the Independence Day of the Republic of China, and Chinese New Year were often celebrated during times of economic prosperity in the enclave. However, both the Great Depression and the gentrification caused by a land redevelopment plan, that included construction of the Lodge Freeway and an eventually defunct plan to fund a multi-ethnic commercial district called the "International Village," suppressed the often expensive and public display of fireworks, theatre, or parade. After deliberations regarding the construction of an "International Village" halted, the Chinese population opened a string of new restaurants and stores along the Cass Corridor, stretching north from Peterboro St., south to the Masonic Temple. This sudden revitalization of community was quickly referred to as the New Chinatown, but soon crime and other factors stirred residents to the point of dispersal. Less than 100 Chinese Americans reside in Detroit city proper, although over 300 Chinese visiting students and scholars attend the local public university, Wayne State. The ], an outreach center that serves both Detroit and satellite suburb, ], is the only Chinese organization that remains operational in the geographic region once referred to as Chinatown, a now hollow stretch of vacant land and arsoned buildings.


In ], the ] neighborhood in ] has, along with a large Japanese community, an important Chinese community.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://portal.sescsp.org.br/online/artigo/9036_A+CHINATOWN+BRASILEIRA | title=A Chinatown brasileira | date=12 May 2015 | access-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231226163516/https://portal.sescsp.org.br/online/artigo/9036_A+CHINATOWN+BRASILEIRA | url-status=live }}</ref> There is a project for a Chinatown in the ] neighborhood, close to the ] and the commercial ].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.apecc.com.br/revitalizacao-do-centro-de-sp-conheca-o-projeto-chinatown/ | title=Revitalização do Centro de SP: Conheça o projeto Chinatown | date=4 January 2023 | access-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231226163516/https://www.apecc.com.br/revitalizacao-do-centro-de-sp-conheca-o-projeto-chinatown/ | url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.ibrachina.com.br/o-globo-destaca-projeto-da-chinatown-sao-paulo/ | title=O Globo destaca projeto da Chinatown São Paulo | date=5 June 2023 | access-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231226163516/https://www.ibrachina.com.br/o-globo-destaca-projeto-da-chinatown-sao-paulo/ | url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/opiniao/2021/11/a-chinatown-paulistana.shtml | title=Opinião - José Ruy Gandra: A Chinatown paulistana | date=11 November 2021 | access-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-date=December 26, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231226163516/https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/opiniao/2021/11/a-chinatown-paulistana.shtml | url-status=live }}</ref>
====Houston====
{{Main|Chinatown, Houston}}
There are two Chinatowns: the old Chinatown located downtown near the ] and the new one located west of ] in the ] neighborhood along ] between ] and ]. Houston Chinatown is a place of food, Chinese groceries, films, souvenirs, and the offices of the ].
====Seattle====
{{Main|International District, Seattle}}
Seattle's Chinatown is part of an area known as the International District, adjacent to ].


<gallery class="center">
===South America===
File:chinatown manhattan 2009.JPG|]
====Buenos Aires====
File:San Francisco China Town MC.jpg|]
] Chiantown is centered around Arribeños, Mendoza and Montañeses Streets, in the neighbourhood of ]. Large numbers of recent ]ese and ] immigrants have settled in the area. Also included are ethnic Chinese from other parts of America and East Asia, and Asians of non-Chinese ancestry, mainly Japanese and Korean, whose first immigrants date from WWII and the Korean war.
File:Boston Chinatown Paifang.jpg|]
File:Friendship Gate Chinatown Philadelphia from east.jpg|]
File: Chinatown in Portland, Oregon.jpg|]'s Chinatown
File:Seattle_-_Chinatown_gate_01.jpg|], ]
File:Vancouver's Chinatown.jpg|]
File:Chinatown, Ottawa.jpg|Chinatown in Canada's Capital, ]
Image:ChineseArchMexicoCity.JPG|Arch honors Chinese-Mexican community of Mexico City, built in 2008, Articulo 123 Street
File:BarrioChino3.jpg|], ]
File:Chinatown,_Lima20060002.JPG|], ]
</gallery>


====Lima==== ===Asia===
{{Main|Chinatown, Lima}} {{Main|Chinatowns in Asia}}
Chinatowns in Asia are widespread with a large concentration of ] in ] and ] and ethnic Chinese whose ancestors came from ] – particularly the provinces of ], ], and ] – and settled in countries such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], the ], ], and ] centuries ago—starting as early as the ], but mostly notably in the 17th through the 19th centuries (during the reign of the ]), and well into the 20th century. Today the Chinese diaspora in Asia is largely concentrated in Southeast Asia however the legacy of the once widespread overseas Chinese communities in Asia is evident in the many Chinatowns that are found across East Asia, South Asia, and Southeast Asia.
The Chinatown in Lima, is locally known as Barrio chino. There are over 6000 Chinese-Peruvian restaurants in Lima called "]s". ] is by far the country with the most Chinese restaurants in ]. The first 75 Chinese to arrive in Peru - to the province of ] and the department of ] - arrived, to be more precise, in 1849. They came to work in the 'haciendas' along the Coast, at the time lacking labor force as a result of the liberation of black ]. ]
But it is only since 1950 that reference may be made of a Chinatown in ]. It was in those days that the 'calle' Capón was born; famous for its 'chifas' and their typical dishes from the Chinese provinces of Guangdong (Canton), Sichuan and Beijing; from where the majority of immigrants came, bringing with them their delicious and exotic dishes prepared with spices such as pepper from Sichuan and 'chempi', among others. While in Lima, visiting Chinatown will be worth for all interested in fusion and oriental food.
Lima is the third city in the ] out of ] in number of Chinese immigrants and/or their descendants.


Vietnam houses the largest ] by size in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon).
===Europe===
====Republic of Ireland====


<gallery class="center">
=====Dublin=====
File:HCMC Binh Tay.jpg|] Chinatown, ], Vietnam
Ireland's only Chinatown is in Dublin. Dublin's Chinatown is located on ]. The city of ] holds an annual to mark the ].
File:Chinatown, incheon 20230430 002.jpg|The Gate of the ] Chinatown, ]. This is the only official Chinatowns in the country
File:tyuukagaimon.jpg|]'s Goodwill Gate in Japan
File:Yaowarat Road Bangkok.jpg|Chinatown in ], Thailand
File:Kuan Yin Si, Bago, Myanmar.jpg|Kan Yin Temple (''Kwan Yin Si''), a place of worship for Burmese Chinese in Bago, also serves as a Mandarin school.
File:Liong.jpg|Chinatown gate performing an attraction ] in ], ], Indonesia
File:Surabaya Chinatown.jpg|''Kya-Kya'' or ''Kembang Jepun'', ]'s Chinatown, one of the oldest Chinatowns in Indonesia
File:Chinese New Year in Chinatown, Tangra, Kolkata, India.png|Chinese New Year celebrated in ], India
Santa Cruz Binondo Metro Manila Districts 05.jpg|] in ]
</gallery>


===United Kingdom=== ===Australia and Oceania===
{{main|Chinatowns in Australia|Chinatowns in Oceania}}
The ] of ] lies within the ] and centers on the eastern end of ]. It extends between the corners of ] and ]s. Melbourne's Chinatown originated during the ] in 1851, and is notable as the oldest Chinatown in Australia. It has also been claimed to be the longest continuously running Chinese community outside of Asia, but only because the ] all but destroyed the Chinatown in San Francisco in California.<ref name="Bacon, Daniel page 50">Bacon, Daniel: Walking the Barbary Coast Trail 2nd ed., page 50, Quicksilver Press, 1997</ref><ref name="Richards, Rand page 198">Richards, Rand: ''Historic San Francisco'', 2nd Ed., page 198, Heritage House Publishers, 2007</ref><ref name="Morris p151-152">
Morris, Charles: San Francisco Calamity by Earthquake and Fire, pgs. 151-152, University of Illinois Press, 2002</ref>


] centers on Sussex Street in the Sydney downtown. It stretches from Central Station in the east to ] in the west, and is Australia's largest Chinatown.
====Liverpool====
]
{{Main|Chinatown, Liverpool}}
Home to the oldest Chinese community in Europe, Liverpool's Chinatown dates back to the early 20th century. At the beginning of World War Two there were 20,000 Chinese seamen based in the city and London's Chinatown was reduced to insignificance. Chinese sailors settled down with local women and in the war years the city's Eurasian population grew rapidly. By the end of the conflict it numbered around 1,000. With the end of the War the men were forcibly repatriated leaving behind them their wives and their children. Few were ever to see their families again.<ref>http://www.halfandhalf.org.uk</ref>


The ] of ] was originally built in the 1960s and was renovated in the 1980s. It is located near Adelaide Central Market and the ].
With the Communist victory in China ], men were no longer recruited from the Mainland. Rather they came from Hong Kong and Singapore. Some did settle and marry local women but Liverpool's Chinese or rather Eurasian population had reached its peak and was in decline as they married into the local community. In the late 1950s a new group of Chinese began to arrive in significant numbers from Hong Kong's ]. For the first time Liverpool and London had Chinese Chinatowns and their mixed race past became forgotten.


] is a precinct in the Central Business District of ], that runs through Davenport Street and Young Street. The precinct extends between Nerang Street in the north and Garden Street/Scarborough Street east-west. Redevelopment of the precinct was established in 2013 and completed in 2015 in time for Chinese New Year celebrations.
The ] located at the gateway of Liverpool's Chinatown is the largest of its kind outside of China and was constructed in ], one of the cities Liverpool is twinned with.


There are additional Chinatowns in ], ], and ] in Australia.
====London====
{{Main|Chinatown, London}}


<gallery class="center"|title=Chinatowns in Australia and Oceania>
Similar in many respects to Liverpool's original Chinatown in its origins and the inter-marriage between local women and Chinese men, Liverpool's Chinatown never had the glamour of that of London. London's Chinatown was established in the ] district in the late 19th century. Its reputation has come to define Chinatowns as exotic and dangerous with various vices, such as ]s and gambling dens (called ''fan tans''). Chinatown served as the setting for classic British anti-Chinese literature such as villainous ] as well as a setting for the ] story "]". Its end came as Limehouse was destroyed during ] by the ] during the ]. With an influx of new immigrants from then British possession of ], a new Chinatown (mainly commercial) became established in the ] district of central London in the 1950s and ].
File:Chinatownsyd.jpg|Paifang at ]
====Manchester====
File:BendigoEntranceChineseGardens.JPG|Paifang at ]
{{Main|Chinatown, Manchester}}
File:Adelaide - SA (26089559218).jpg|]
File:Lane of Chinatown (6760133489).jpg|]
File:Chinese New Year celebration at Box Hill, Melbourne.jpg|Chinese New Year celebration at ]
File:Chinatown Mall entrance Wickham St Fortitude Valley L1030218.jpg|]
</gallery>
<!-- Following removed because it may no longer be available: |File:Dr Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Statue in Melbourne's Chinatown.jpg| ] memorial statue in ] -->


===Europe===
Manchester's Chinatown is the second largest Chinatown in the United Kingdom and the third largest Chinatown in Europe. It is located in east central Manchester and situated next to the Gay Village. The Chinatown, which is spread out over streets in the city centre has an archway, now dwarfed by the arch in Liverpool, was for a time one of the largest in Europe when it was completed in 1987.
{{Main|Chinatowns in Europe}}
Several urban Chinatowns exist in major European capital cities. There is ], England as well as major Chinatowns in ], ], ], and ]. <span class="plainlinks">], Germany has one established Chinatown in the area around Kantstrasse of ] in the West.</span> ], Belgium has also seen an upstart Chinese community, that has been recognized by the local authorities since 2011.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.chinatown-antwerpen.be |title=China Town Antwerpen |website=Chinatown-antwerpen.be |access-date=2011-09-11 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110920075100/http://www.chinatown-antwerpen.be/ |archive-date=2011-09-20 }}</ref> The city council of ] has plans to recognize the Chinese Diaspora in the city.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.britishchineseonline.com/forum/showthread.php?t=28439 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120328180855/http://www.britishchineseonline.com/forum/showthread.php?t=28439 |url-status=dead |archive-date=2012-03-28 |title=What happened to Cardiff Chinatown? - Discussion Board |website=Britishchineseonline.com |date=2005-10-05 |access-date=2011-09-11 }}</ref>


The ], located in the ], is the largest in Europe, where many Vietnamese – specifically ethnic Chinese refugees from Vietnam – have settled and in ] in the northeast of Paris as well as in ]. In Italy, there is a Chinatown in ] between Via Luigi Canonica and ] and others in ] and ]. In the Netherlands, Chinatowns exist in ], ] and ].
===France===


In the United Kingdom, several exist in Birmingham, Liverpool, London, Manchester and Newcastle Upon Tyne. The ] is the oldest Chinese community in Europe.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.halfandhalf.org.uk |title=Liverpool and it's Chinese Children |website=Halfandhalf.org.uk |access-date=2011-09-11 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184856/http://www.halfandhalf.org.uk/ |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref> The ] was established in the ] district in the late 19th century. The ] is located in central Manchester.
====Paris====
During ], 140,000 Chinese arrived in France as temporary labour, replacing French male workers who went to the war. Most left after 1918, but a community of 2,000 stayed and created the first Chinatown (]) near the ]. Nothing is left of it today.


<gallery class="center"|title=European Chinatowns>
In the ] and ], ] Chinese settled in Paris and worked as leather workers near the ]ish neighborhood in the ]. Taking over the wholesale trade lost by Jews during the ] during ], this Chinese community still exists today, but remains extremely discreet. No obvious signs of Chinese culture are to be seen in the ], though most shops in this wholesale neighborhood are held by overseas Chinese.
File:MappaChinatownMilano.jpg|Map of Chinatown Milan
File:Liverpool China Town Chinese Arch.jpg|Gate of ] England, is the largest multiple-span arch outside of China, in the oldest Chinese community in Europe.
File:Day 30 unsplashdaily (Unsplash).jpg|Wardour Street, ]
File:China Court Restaurant. - geograph.org.uk - 707948.jpg|Chinese Quarter in ], England
File:Nouvel an chinois à la Guillotière.JPG|Chinese new year celebration in ], France
</gallery>


==In popular culture==
Today's Chinatown was created in the 1970s in the ]. Fleeing persecution and civil wars in Vietnam, ] and ], those overseas Chinese, mostly ] and Cantonese, settled in this newly renovated area. Unlike the Wenzhou settlement in the 3rd arrondissement, signs of Chinese culture are more likely to be seen and a strong business community has developed. An estimated 68,000 residents of Chinese origin now live in this area of Paris.
Chinatowns have been portrayed in various films including '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']''. Within the context of the last film "Chinatown" is used primarily as an ] for any situation in which an outside entity seeks to intervene without having the local knowledge required to understand the consequences of that intervention. The neighborhood or district is often associated with being outside the normal ] or isolated from the ]s of the larger society.


Chinatowns have also been mentioned in the song "]" by ] whose song lyrics says "...{{nbsp}}There was funky China men from funky Chinatown{{nbsp}}..."<ref>{{cite book|title=Kung Fu Fighting|author=Carl Douglas}}</ref>
With China opening up, more Chinese settlements are developing in Paris and its suburban areas. In ] (]), another wave of Wenzhou have settled and has taken over this originally ]n settlement. Large communities are to be found in small towns outside Paris like ]/], or ], where earlier migrants settled, but again without bringing out the usual signs of Chinatown.


The ] actor ] is well known as a person who was born in the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.laweekly.com/arts/bruce-lees-huge-bronze-statue-turns-into-a-mecca-in-las-chinatown-video-5380451|title=Bruce Lee's Huge Bronze Statue Turns Into a Mecca in L.A.'s Chinatown (VIDEO)|first=Liz|last=Ohanesian|date=12 February 2015|website=laweekly.com|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180104233447/https://www.laweekly.com/arts/bruce-lees-huge-bronze-statue-turns-into-a-mecca-in-las-chinatown-video-5380451|archive-date=4 January 2018}}</ref> Other notable ] such as politician ] and NBA player ] grew up in suburbs with lesser connections to traditional Chinatowns. Neighborhood activists and politicians have increased in prominence in some cities, and some are starting to attract support from non-Chinese voters.
] from China is booming; authorities also fear that France's "Authorized Destination Status" with easier visa procedures for China nationals will only increase uncontrolled migration. Illegal workshops have been existing for several years, without always being located within "official" chinatowns and still exist and flourish in different areas in the ] and outside the city of Paris.HISTORY YOUR HEAD LA IM HENG YONG SIANG


==Some notable temples in Chinatowns worldwide==
==Features==
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|天后古廟}}), ] ({{lang|zh|美國舊金山媽祖廟朝聖宮}})
The features described below are characteristic of most Chinatowns. In some cases, however, they may only apply to Chinatowns in Western countries, such as those in North America, Australia, and Western Europe.
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|天后宮}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|横濱媽祖廟}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|龍尾古廟}}), ] ({{lang|zh|永福寺}}) & ] {{lang|zh|(龍蓮寺}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|慶福宮}}) & ] ({{lang|zh|觀音古廟}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|金德院}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|仙四師爺廟}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|青云亭}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|护安宫}}) & ] ({{lang|zh|天后宮}})
* ] – ] ({{lang|zh|龙华寺}})
* ]
* ]
* ]


==See also==
(''See also: ]'')
{{Portal|China|Society}}
{{commons and category|Chinatown|Chinatowns}}
{{div col|colwidth=35em}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
{{div col end}}


== References ==
]]]


===Arches, or ''Paifang''=== === Citations ===
{{reflist}}


=== Sources ===
], ].]]
{{refbegin}}

* Chew, James R. "Boyhood Days in Winnemucca, 1901–1910." ''Nevada Historical Society Quarterly'' 1998 41(3): 206–209. ISSN 0047-9462 Oral history (1981) describes the Chinatown of Winnemucca, Nevada, during 1901–10. Though many Chinese left Winnemucca after the Central Pacific Railroad was completed in 1869, around four hundred Chinese had formed a community in the town by the 1890s. Among the prominent buildings was the Joss House, a place of worship and celebration that was visited by Chinese revolutionist Sun Yat-Sen in 1911. Beyond describing the physical layout of the Chinatown, the author recalls some of the commercial and gambling activities in the community.
Many tourist-destination metropolitan Chinatowns can be distinguished by large red arch entrance structures known in Mandarin Chinese as '']'' (sometimes accompanied by ] on either side of the ''paifang'' that greet visitors). They usually have special inscriptions in Chinese. Historically, these gateways were donated to a particular city as a gift from the ] and ] governments (such as Chinatown, San Francisco) and business organizations. The long-neglected Chinatown in ], Cuba, received materials for its paifang from the ] as part of Chinatown's gradual renaissance. Construction of these red arches was also financed by local financial contributions from the Chinatown community. Some span an entire intersection and some are smaller in height and width. Some ''paifang'' can be made of ], ], or ] and may incorporate an elaborate or simple design.
* ], ''China Blues'', ] 2012, {{ISBN|0975925571}}, San Francisco's Chinatown during the 1906 earthquake and in the early 1920s. ()
] looking towards the '']'']]
* "Chinatown: Conflicting Images, Contested Terrain", K. Scott Wong, ''Melus'' (Vol. 20, Issue 1), 1995. Scholarly work discussing the negative perceptions and imagery of old Chinatowns.

* Pan, Lynn. Sons of the Yellow Emperor: A History of the Chinese Diaspora (1994). Book with detailed histories of Chinese diaspora communities (Chinatowns) from San Francisco, Honolulu, Bangkok, Manila, Johannesburg, Sydney, London, Lima, etc.
However, some Chinatowns that still do not have the arch feature are considering installing one, such as the Chinatowns in Houston and Toronto, as these arches are believed to increase tourist traffic. Additionally, work is being done by the ] of London to develop a new and more authentic Chinese arch on Wardour Street to act as a counterpoint to the Western influenced one on Gerrard Street (pictured above).
* Williams, Daniel. , '']'' Foreign Service, March 1, 2004; Page A11.

{{refend}}
===Bilingual signs===
] Chinatown are given in English and Chinese.]]

Many major metropolitan areas with Chinatowns have bilingual street signs in Chinese and the language of the adopted country. Other public services are sometimes bilingual also (for example, banking machines; the ] began adding Chinese characters to patrol vehicles assigned to Chinatown in the 1980s to increase ties to the community).

===Antiquated features===
Many early Chinatowns were characterized by the large number of Chinese-owned ] restaurants (''chop suey'' itself is ] and is not considered authentic Chinese cuisine), laundry businesses, and ]s, until around the mid-20th century when most of these businesses began to disappear; though some remain, they are generally seen as anachronisms. In early years of Chinatowns, the opium dens were patronized as a relaxation and to escape the harsh and brutal realities of a non-Chinese society, although in North American Chinatowns they were also frequented by non-Chinese. Additionally, due to the inability on the part of Chinese immigrant men to bring a wife and lack of available local Chinese women for men to marry, ]s became common in some Chinatowns in the 19th century. Chinese laundries, which required very little capital and English ability, were fairly prosperous. These businesses no longer exist in many Chinatowns and have been replaced by Chinese grocery stores, Chinese restaurants that serve more authentic Chinese cuisine, and other establishments. While opium dens no longer exist, illegal basement ] parlors are still places of recreation in many Chinatowns, where men gather to play ] and other games. These shady gambling venues are featured, when portraying Chinatown, in the media such as an episode of ] and the comedy film ].

===Restaurants===
] restaurant on a break]]
Most Chinatowns are centered on food and hence Chinatowns worldwide are usually popular destinations for various ethnic Chinese and increasingly, other Asian cuisines such as Vietnamese, Thai, and ]n. Some Chinatowns such as Singapore have their localized style of ]. Restaurants serve many Chinatowns both as a major economic component and social gathering places. In the Chinatowns in the western countries, restaurant work may be the only type of employment available for poorer immigrants, especially those who cannot converse fluently in the language of the adopted country. Most Chinatowns generally have a range of authentic and touristy restaurants.

San Francisco's Chinatown retains many historic restaurants, including those established from the 1910s to the 1950s, although some that lasted for generations have shut in recent years and others have modernized their menus. Many Chinatown eateries from that era specialized in ] (or, depending on where they were located, ], Chinese Cuban cuisine, etc.), especially ] and ]. They often used gaudy neon lighting to attract non-Chinese customers, large red doors, Chinese paper lanterns, and ] ]s. Often these restaurants had English-language signs written in a typeface intended to appear stereotypically "Chinese" by being composed of strokes similar to those in ] writing.

Generally, restaurants serving authentic Chinese food primarily to immigrant customers have never conformed to these Chinatown stereotypes. Because of ethnic Chinese immigration and the expanded palate of many contemporary cultures, the remaining ] and ] restaurants are seen as anachronisms but remain popular and profitable. In many Chinatowns, there are now many large, authentic Cantonese seafood restaurants, restaurants specializing in other varieties of Chinese cuisine such as ], ], ], etc., and small restaurants with delis.

====Chop suey and chow mein eateries====
{{Expand section|date=June 2008}}
Lit by neon signage, restaurants offering ] or ] mainly for the benefit for non-Chinese customers were fairly frequent in Chinatowns of old. These dishes are offered in standard barbecue restaurants and takeouts (take-away restaurants).

====Cantonese seafood restaurants====
]]]
] (海鮮酒家, pronounced in Cantonese as ''hoy seen jau ga'') typically use a large dining room layout, have ornate designs, and specialize in seafood such as expensive Chinese-style ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s, and ]s, all kept live in tanks until preparation. Some seafood restaurants may also offer ] in the morning through the early afternoon hours as waiters announce the names of dishes whilst pushing steamy carts of food and other pastries across the restaurant. These restaurants are also used for weddings, banquets, and other special events.

These types of restaurants flourished and became in vogue in Hong Kong during the 1960s and subsequently began opening in various Chinatowns overseas. Owing to their higher menu prices and greater amount of investment capital required to open and manage one (due to higher levels of staffing needed), they tend to be more common in Chinatowns and satellite communities in developed countries and in fairly affluent Chinese immigrant communities, notably in Australia, Canada, and the United States, where they have received significant population of Hong Kong Chinese émigrés. Poorer immigrants usually cannot start these kinds of restaurants, although they too are employed in them. There are generally fewer of them in the older Chinatowns; for example, they are practically non-existent in ]'s Chinatown, but more are found in its suburbs such as ], ], ]. Competition between these restaurants is often fierce; hence owners of seafood restaurants hire and even "steal" well-rounded chefs, many of whom are from ].

====BBQ delicatessens/restaurants====
]]]
Also, Chinese ] ] restaurants , called '']'' (燒臘) and sometimes called a "noodle house" (麵家, ''mein ga'' in Cantonese; alternatively, 面馆), are generally low-key and serve less expensive fare such as ] noodles (or ''wonton mein''), ] (炒粉, stir-fry rice noodles), ] (揚州炒飯), and ] or ], known as ''juk'' in Cantonese Chinese. They also tend to have displays of whole pre-cooked roasted ducks and ]s hanging in their windows, a common feature in most Chinatowns worldwide. These delis also serve barbecue ] (叉燒, '']''), ] and other Chinese-style items less welcome to the typical Western palate. Food is usually intended for ]. Some of these Chinatown restaurants sometimes have the reputation of being "]s" and reputation for poor service. Nonetheless, with their low prices, they are still patronized by both Chinese and any other customers on a budget.

To adapt to local tastes, the best ]-style Cantonese cuisine is said to be found in ]'s Chinatown (or ] in its local Spanish) or the ] cuisine in the ] of ].

Vietnamese immigrants, both ethnic Chinese and non-Chinese, have opened restaurants in many Chinatowns, serving Vietnamese ] ]s and ] ]es. Some immigrants have also started restaurants serving Teochew Chinese cuisine. Some Chinatowns old and new may also contain several pan-Asian restaurants offering a variety of Asian noodles under one roof.

====''Chifas''====
A special feature of Chinatown in Lima, Peru (''Barrio Chino de Lima'') is the chifa, a ] type of restaurant which mixes Cantonese Chinese cuisine with local Peruvian flavours. Chifa is the ] deriative of the Cantonese phrase ''jee fon'' (饎飯), which renders as "cook rice" or as "cook meal'". This type of restaurant is popular with native Peruvians.
]]]

====Street vendors====
Besides restaurants, the Chinatowns of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Singapore are noted for their street vendors selling local-style Chinese food from carts and stalls. They are also known as hawker stands and many have developed into hawker centers.

===Shops===
{{Expand section|date=June 2008}}
Most Chinatown businesses are engaged in the import-export and wholesale businesses; hence a large number of trading companies are found in Chinatowns.

====Ginseng, herbs and animal parts====
Small ] and herb shops are common in most Chinatowns, selling products used in ]. The Canadian government has stepped up policing of Chinese traditional medicinal stores and on a few occasions several Chinese stores in ] and ] have been raided for products taken from the harvesting of rare and endangered species, such as tiger bone, bear paw and bear gall bladder. {{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} This has been alleged by some Chinese to be racial persecution, despite environmental and moral concerns. {{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} Other products sold in this trade include sea cucumbers, sea horses, lizards, deer musk glands, shark fins, swallows' nests, antlers, bear bile pills, crocodile bile pills, deer musk pills, rhino skin pills, and pangolin pills, as well as a wide range of mushrooms, herbs, bark, seaweed, roots and more.

====Markets====
] at the gate to the ] Chinatown]]
As with the restaurant trade, grocery stores and seafood markets serve a key function in Chinatown economies, and these stores sell Chinese ingredients to such restaurants. Such markets are ]s. Chinatown grocers and markets are often characterized by sidewalk vegetable and fruit stalls &ndash; a quintessential image of Chinatowns &ndash; and also sell a variety of grocery items imported from East Asia (chiefly Mainland China, ], Japan, and South Korea) and Southeast Asia (principally Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia). For example, most Chinatown markets stock items such as sacks of Thai ], Chinese ] and ] ]s, bottles of ], rice ], Hong Kong ] beverages, Malaysian snack items, Taiwanese ]s, and Japanese ] and Chinese specialties such as black ]s (often used in rice porridge), '']'' and ]s. These markets may also sell fish (especially ]) and other seafood items, which are kept alive in aquariums, for Chinese and other Asian cuisine dishes. Until recently, these items generally could not be found outside the Chinatown enclaves, although since the 1970s ]s have proliferated in the suburbs of North America and Australia, competing strongly with the old Chinatown markets.

====Religious and funerary supplies====
In keeping with ] and ] funeral traditions, Chinese specialty shops also sell incense and funeral items which provide material comfort in the afterlife of the deceased. Shops sell specially-crafted replicas of small paper houses, paper radios, paper televisions, paper telephones, paper jewelry, and other material items. They also sell "]" currency notes. These items are intended to be burned in a furnace.

These businesses also sell red, wooden Buddhist ]s and small ]s for worship. Per Chinese custom, an offering of oranges are usually placed in front of the statue in the altar. Some altars are stacked atop each other. These altars may be found in many Chinatown businesses.

====Video CD stores====
Chinatowns may contain small businesses that sell ]ed ]s and ]s of ] films and ]. The VCDs are mainly titles of Hong Kong and PRC films, while there are also VCDs of Japanese ] and occasionally ]. Often, imported ] DVDs and VCDs are sold owing to lax enforcement of ]s.

====Street merchants====
Street merchants selling low-priced vegetables, fruits, clothes, newspapers, and knickknacks are common in most Chinatowns. Most of the peddlers tend to be elderly (Cantonese: ''lo wah cue'').

===Benevolent and business associations===
]. The ] is still flown by most benevolent associations in San Francisco Chinatown, including these on Waverly Street.]]

A major component of many Chinatowns is the family benevolent association, which provides some degree of aid to immigrants. These associations generally provide social support, religious services, death benefits (members' names in Chinese are generally enshrined on tablets and posted on walls), meals, and recreational activities for ethnic Chinese, especially for older Chinese migrants. Membership in these associations can be based on members sharing a common ] or belonging to a common clan, spoken ], specific village, region or country of origin, and so on. Many have their own facilities.

Some examples include San Francisco's prominent ] (中華總會館), aka ], and Los Angeles' Southern California Teochew Association. The Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association is among the largest umbrella groups of benevolent associations in the North America, which branches in several Chinatowns. Politically, the CCBA has traditionally been aligned with the Kuomintang and the ].

The London Chinatown Chinese Association is active in Chinatown, London. ] has an institution in the ''Association des Résidents en France d'origine indochinoise'' and it servicing overseas Chinese immigrants in Paris who were born in the former ].

Traditionally, Chinatown-based associations have also been aligned on ethnic Chinese business interests, such as restaurant, grocery, and laundry (antiquated) associations in Chinatowns in North America. In Chicago's Chinatown, the On Leong Merchants Association was active.

===Annual events in Chinatown===
], 1954]]
Most Chinatowns present '']'' (also known as ]) festivities with ] and ]s accompanied by the rhythm of clashing of ]s, clanging on a ], clapping of hardwood clappers, by pounding of ]s, and by loud Chinese ]s, set off especially in front of ethnic Chinese storefronts, where the "lion" character attempts to reach for a ] or catch an ]. The lion typically contains two performers and performances may involves several stunts. In return, storekeepers usually donate some money to the performers, some of whom belong to local ]s affiliations.

In addition, some streets of Chinatowns are closed off for ]s, Chinese ]s and ]s demonstrations, ]s, and ]s—this is dependent on the promoters or organizers of the events. Other festivals may also be held in a ]/], local ], or ] grounds within Chinatown.

Some Chinatowns hold an annual "]" ], such as "Miss Chinatown San Francisco," "Miss Chinatown Hawaii," "Miss Chinatown Houston" or "Miss Chinatown Atlanta."

===Dragon and lion dances===
], ]'s Chinatown perform ]s for good luck.]]

] and ]s are performed in Chinatown every Chinese New Year, particularly to scare off evil spirits and bring good fortune to the community. They are also performed to celebrate a grand opening of a new Chinatown business, such as a restaurant or bank.

Ironically, many lion and dragon dances are considered more preserved in true form in Chinatowns than in China itself. This discrepancy is attributed to the fact that traditional Chinese customs, including lion and dragon dances, were unable to flourish during the political and social instabilities of ] under rule of the ] and were almost eliminated completely under the communist order of the People's Republic of China under Chairman ]. However, due to the migration of Chinese all over the world (particularly Southeast Asia), the dances were continually practiced by overseas Chinese and performed in Chinatowns.

Ceremonial ]s and leafy green plants with red-coloured ribbons strewn across are also usually placed in front of new Chinatown businesses by well-wishers (particularly family members, wholesalers, community organizations, and so on), to assure future success.

==Names for Chinatowns==
In ], Chinatown is usually called "唐人街", in ] ''Tong yan gai'', in ] ''Tángrénjiē'', in ] ''Tong ngin gai'', and in ] ''Hong ngin gai'', literally meaning "Tang people's street(s)". The ] was a zenith of the Chinese civilization, after which some Chinese—especially in ]--call themselves.
Some Chinatowns are indeed just one single street, such as the relatively short ] in ], ], Canada or the sprawling 4-mile (6.4-km) ] in ], ]. However, most Chinatown are in fact multiple intersecting streets.

], ]]]
A more modern Chinese name is ''華埠'' (Cantonese: Waa Fau, Mandarin: Huábù) meaning "Chinese City", used in the semi-official Chinese translations of some cities' documents and signs. ''Bù'', pronounced sometimes in Mandarin as ''fù'', usually means ''seaport''; but in this sense, it means ''city'' or ''town''. Likewise, ''Tong yan fau'' (唐人埠 "Tang people's town") is also used in Cantonese nowadays. The literal word-for-word translation of ''Chinatown''--''Zhōngguó Chéng'' (中國城) is also used, but more frequently by visiting Chinese nationals rather than immigrants of Chinese descent who live in the Chinatowns.

In ] regions (such as ] and ]), Chinatown is often referred to as '''''le quartier chinois''''' (''the Chinese Quarter''; plural: ''les quartiers chinois'') and the Spanish-language term is usually '''''el barrio chino''''' (''the Chinese neighborhood''; plural: ''los barrios chinos''), used in ] and ]. (However, ''barrio chino'' or its ] cognate ''barri xines'' do not always refer to a Chinese neighborhood: these are also common terms for a disreputable district with drugs and prostitution, and often no connection to the Chinese.). The Vietnamese term for Chinatown is ''Khu người Hoa'', due to the prevalence of the Vietnamese language in Chinatowns of Paris, Los Angeles, Toronto, and Montréal as ethic Chinese from Vietnam have set up shop in them. Other countries also have idiosyncratic names for Chinatown in local languages and in Chinese; however, some local terms may not necessarily translate as ''Chinatown''. For example, Singapore's tourist-centric Chinatown is called in local ] ''Niúchēshǔi'' (牛车水), which literally means "Ox-cart water" from the Malay 'Kreta Ayer' in reference to the water carts that used to ply the area. Some languages have adopted the English-language term, such as ], ], and ]. In Malaysia, the term ''Chinatown'' is named under administrative reason. Instead, the name ''Chee Chong Kai'' (茨厂街)is preferred and agreed upon by the locals. ''Chee'' in Hakka means tapioca, ''chong'' means factory and ''kai'' means street. This is originated from a factory that was set up by Yap Ah Loy, a rich ] (a Chinese immigrant who had administrative and political power under the British rule) that made tapioca. Chee Chong Kai is also called ''jalan Petaling'' or "Petaling Street".

Several alternate English names for Chinatown include '''China Town''' (generally used in ] and ]), '''The Chinese District''', '''Chinese Quarter''' and '''China Alley''' (an antiquated term used primarily in several ] towns in the ] for a Chinese community; some of these are now historical sites). In the case of Lillooet, British Columbia, Canada, China Alley was a parallel commercial street adjacent to the town's Main Street, enjoying a view over the river valley adjacent and also over the main residential part of Chinatown, which was largely of adobe construction. All traces of Chinatown and China Alley there have disappeared, despite a once large and prosperous community.

==Chinatowns worldwide==
{{chinatown}}
{{See also|List of Chinatowns}}

Chinatowns can be found across the globe, but are most common in ], ], ] and ].

===United Kingdom===

''Main articles: ], ], ] and ]''

Chinatowns in the UK are not heavily residential, the Chinese in the UK are relatively dispersed, and do not form ethnic enclaves as in many other countries, although the highest number are to be found in large cities and in the South-East. The ] has several Chinatowns, including the largest one in central ], located in the ] area, established in the 1950s and 1960s. Other UK Chinatowns are found in the English cities of ], ] and ], the Scottish cities of ] and ], the ] capital ] and a growing population of Chinese immigrants are present in ], ].

=====England=====
;London
] has Chinese restaurants and businesses. A new Chinese gate over ] marking the entrance to Leicester Square is planned. London's Chinatown is undergoing a £50 million planned regeneration.

There are plans to revive London's original Chinese district in ] as part of the wider regeneration of ]. This area was bombed out during the Blitz in the Second World War causing a relocation of the few ethnic Chinese who had lived there to other areas.

Other Chinese-run businesses can be found in other parts of London, e.g. in suburban ]. At present, they consist mainly of a shopping centre with a major Chinese British supermarket chain as the anchor. One such centre in Croydon is called China Town Mall and has been built complete with Chinese-style architecture and gateway. Oriental City in Colindale, boasts a supermarket, a large food court of E/SE Asian cuisines, several other restaurants, a games arcade, herbal shops, masseurs, and a cultural performance space this has been closed for redevolopment as of 1 June 2008. Queensway, though a cosmopolitan blend of many cultures, also has a sizable Chinese presence and a substantial cluster of Chinese restaurants, supermarkets, and other businesses.

], ]]]
;Manchester
Manchester's Chinatown on Faulkner Street is the second largest in Britain after London's Soho Chinatown. The Chinese British population, many of whom are immigrants from former British-ruled Hong Kong, has especially settled in the ] area. However, Hong Kong immigration to the United Kingdom has leveled off over the years and there has been a rise in Mainland Chinese immigration to the country.

;Birmingham
The ] is an area of Birmingham, United Kingdom.

It first emerged as a cluster of Chinese community organizations, social clubs, and businesses in the 1960s centred around ], as a result of post-World War II migration from Hong Kong. The Chinese quarter was officially recognized in the 1980s. It is known for its Chinese restaurants; for the parade which is held there each year to celebrate the Chinese New Year; for the Birmingham Hippodrome; and for being the location of the headquarters of ].

To the rear of the area is the ] which is located next to a large supermarket selling Chinese produce.

;Newcastle
The Chinatown in Newcastle was primarily based on Stowell Street, but has expanded in recent years with many Chinese businesses in the surrounding area. The Chinatown incorporates the area from Stowell Street to Westgate Road. According to the BBC, Newcastle's Chinatown is also undergoing regeneration. A gateway costing £160,000 (€240,000) has recently been constructed by Mainland Chinese engineers as part of the plans.

;Liverpool
], ]]]
The Chinatown in Liverpool in the Merseyside area is on Duke Street and is home to the oldest Chinese community in Europe. The arch is the largest of its kind outside of China. It has been under regeneration.

;Leeds
The Chinatown in ] is small in comparison to other Chinatowns. It is situated at the northern end of Vicar Lane near Eastgate to the east of the city centre. Controversy arose when plans were drawn up for a shopping centre called ] to be built over parts of the Chinatown. There are also plans to build a Chinatown arch.
] Chinatown]]

;Sheffield
Sheffield has no official Chinatown although ], ] is the centre of the Sheffield Chinese community. There are Chinese restaurants, supermarkets and community stores and home of the Sheffield Chinese Community Centre. The Sheffield Chinese community is pressing for the street to be formally labelled Sheffield's Chinatown.

=====Northern Ireland=====
'''Belfast'''

] in Northern Ireland has a large Chinese immigrant population. Although there is no formal Chinatown, the area on the street of Donegall Pass and Dublin Road exhibits the properties of many Chinatowns.

=====Scotland=====
] in Glasgow has a large ethnic Chinese population, catered for by many local speciality shops, restaurants and social facilities.

In 2003, the city council of ] approved plans for a new Chinatown in the northern part of the city.

===Artificial Chinatowns===
{{Refimprove|section|date=February 2007}}
The latest trend of Chinatowns has been to build-up artificial Chinatowns, constructed as Chinese-themed shopping malls in lieu of actual traditional communities. Examples are in ], ] (United Arab Emirates), ] (South Korea), ] (Romania), ] (Russia), ] (Australia) and most notably the Canadian ] in ], ].

There is one such mall going up in 2006 in ] in the Philippines, in which the project is called "Neo Chinatown" and is to be developed in conjunction with Filipino Chinese and Mainland Chinese businessmen.

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] San Francisco's Chinatown squad
* ]
* ], a street in China dedicated to European culture

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
* {{cite book |last1=Kwan |first1=Cheuk |title=Have you eaten yet? : stories from Chinese restaurants around the world |date=2023 |publisher=Pegasus Books |location=New York |isbn=9781639363346 |edition=First Pegasus Books cloth}}
* Sons of the Yellow Emperor: A History of the Chinese Diaspora (1994) by Lynn Pan. Book with detailed histories of Chinese diaspora communities (Chinatowns) from San Francisco, Honolulu, Bangkok, Manila, Johannesburg, Sydney, London, Lima, etc.
* Chew, James R. "Boyhood Days in Winnemucca, 1901–1910." ''Nevada Historical Society Quarterly'' 1998 41(3): 206-209. ISSN 0047-9462 Oral history (1981) describes the Chinatown of Winnemucca, Nevada, during 1901–10. Though many Chinese left Winnemucca after the Central Pacific Railroad was completed in 1869, around four hundred Chinese had formed a community in the town by the 1890s. Among the prominent buildings was the Joss House, a place of worship and celebration that was visited by Chinese president Sun Yat-Sen in 1911. Beyond describing the physical layout of the Chinatown, the author recalls some of the commercial and gambling activities in the community.
*"Chinatown: Conflicting Images, Contested Terrain", K. Scott Wong, ''Melus'' (Vol. 20, Issue 1), 1995. Scholarly work discussing the negative perceptions and imagery of old Chinatowns.
*Daniel Williams, , '']'' Foreign Service, March 1, 2004; Page A11.


==External links==
{{Commons|Chinatown|Chinatown}}
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* New York City's 3 Chinatowns.
*
*—Pictures of Chinatowns
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{{Chinatowns}} {{Chinatowns}}
{{Ethnic enclaves}}
{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 18:44, 16 December 2024

Ethnic enclave of expatriate Chinese persons "Little China" redirects here. For the ideology, see Little China (ideology). For other uses, see Chinatown (disambiguation).

Chinatown
New York's Manhattan Chinatown has the highest concentration of Chinese people outside of Asia.
Chinese唐人街
Literal meaning"Tang people street"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTángrénjiē
Bopomofoㄊㄤˊ ㄖㄣˊ ㄐㄧㄝ
Wade–GilesTʻang jen chieh
IPA
Wu
Romanization Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 10) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationTòhngyàhngāai
JyutpingTong4 jan4 gaai1
IPA
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTông-jîn-ke
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCTòng-ìng-kĕ
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese中國城
Simplified Chinese中国城
Literal meaning"China-town"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguóchéng
Bopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄔㄥˊ
Wade–GilesChung-kuo chʻeng
IPA
Wu
Romanization Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 10) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationJūnggwoksìhng
JyutpingZung1 gwok3 sing4
IPA
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTiong-kok-siânn
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCDŭng-guók-siàng
Second alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese華埠
Simplified Chinese华埠
Literal meaning"Chinese district"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuábù
Bopomofoㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄅㄨˋ
Wade–GilesHua pu
IPA
Wu
Romanization Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 9) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationWàhfauh
JyutpingWaa4 fau6
IPA
Southern Min
Hokkien POJHôa-bú
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCHuà-pú
Chinatowns

Chinatown (Chinese: 唐人街) is the catch-all name for an ethnic enclave of Chinese people located outside Greater China, most often in an urban setting. Areas known as "Chinatown" exist throughout the world, including Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and the Americas.

The development of most Chinatowns typically resulted from human migration to an area without any or with few Chinese residents. Binondo in Manila, established in 1594, is recognized as the world's oldest Chinatown. Notable early examples outside Asia include San Francisco's Chinatown in the United States and Melbourne's Chinatown in Australia, which were founded in the early 1850s during the California and Victoria gold rushes, respectively. A more modern example, in Montville, Connecticut, was caused by the displacement of Chinese workers in New York's Manhattan Chinatown following the September 11th attacks in 2001.

Definition

Oxford Dictionaries defines "Chinatown" as "... a district of any non-Asian town, especially a city or seaport, in which the population is predominantly of Chinese origin". However, some Chinatowns may have little to do with China. Some "Vietnamese" enclaves are in fact a city's "second Chinatown", and some Chinatowns are in fact pan-Asian, meaning they could also be counted as a Koreatown or Little India. One example includes Asiatown in Cleveland, Ohio. It was initially referred to as a Chinatown but was subsequently renamed due to the influx of non-Chinese Asian Americans who opened businesses there. Today the district acts as a unifying factor for the Chinese, Taiwanese, Korean, Japanese, Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Laotian, Nepalese and Thai communities of Cleveland.

Further ambiguities with the term can include Chinese ethnoburbs which by definition are "... suburban ethnic clusters of residential areas and business districts in large metropolitan areas An article in The New York Times blurs the line further by categorizing very different Chinatowns such as Chinatown, Manhattan, which exists in an urban setting as "traditional"; Monterey Park's Chinatown, which exists in a "suburban" setting (and labeled as such); and Austin, Texas's Chinatown, which is in essence a "fabricated" Chinese-themed mall. This contrasts with narrower definitions, where the term only described Chinatown in a city setting.

History

See also: Chinese emigration

Trading centers populated predominantly by Chinese men and their native spouses have long existed throughout Southeast Asia. Emigration to other parts of the world from China accelerated in the 1860s with the signing of the Treaty of Peking (1860), which opened China's borders to free movement. Early emigrants came primarily from the coastal provinces of Guangdong (Canton, Kwangtung) and Fujian (Fukien, Hokkien) in southeastern China – where the people generally speak Toishanese, Cantonese, Hakka, Teochew (Chiuchow) and Hokkien. In the late 19th century and early 20th century, a significant amount of Chinese emigration to North America originated from four counties called Sze Yup, located west of the Pearl River Delta in Guangdong province, making Toishanese a dominant variety of the Chinese language spoken in Chinatowns in Canada and the United States.

As conditions in China have improved in recent decades, many Chinatowns have lost their initial mission, which was to provide a transitional place into a new culture. As net migration has slowed into them, the smaller Chinatowns have slowly decayed, often to the point of becoming purely historical and no longer serving as ethnic enclaves.

In Asia

Binondo, Manila, home to the world's oldest Chinatown

In the Spanish Philippines, where the oldest surviving Chinatowns are located, the district where Chinese migrants (sangleyes) were required to live is called a parián, which were also often a marketplace for trade goods. Most of them were established in the late 16th century to house Chinese migrants as part of the early Spanish colonial policy of ethnic segregation. There were numerous pariáns throughout the Philippines in various locations, the names of which still survive into modern district names. This include the Parián de Arroceros of Intramuros, Manila (which was eventually moved several times, ending up in Binondo). The term was also carried into Latin America by Filipino migrants. The central market place of Mexico City (now part of Zócalo) selling imported goods from the Manila galleons in the 18th and early 19th centuries was called "Parián de Manila" (or just "Parián").

Along the coastal areas of Southeast Asia, several Chinese settlements existed as early as the 16th century according to Zheng He and Tomé Pires' travel accounts. Melaka during the Portuguese colonial period, for instance, had a large Chinese population in Campo China. They settled down at port towns under the authority's approval for trading. After the European colonial powers seized and ruled the port towns in the 16th century, Chinese supported European traders and colonists, and created autonomous settlements.

Several Asian Chinatowns, although not yet called by that name, have a long history. Those in Nagasaki, Kobe, and Yokohama, Japan, Binondo in Manila, Hoi An and Bao Vinh in central Vietnam all existed in 1600. Glodok, the Chinese quarter of Jakarta, Indonesia, dates to 1740.

Chinese presence in India dates back to the 5th century CE, with the first recorded Chinese settler in Calcutta named Young Atchew around 1780. Chinatowns first appeared in the Indian cities of Kolkata, Mumbai, and Chennai.

The Chinatown centered on Yaowarat Road in Bangkok, Thailand, was founded at the same time as the city itself, in 1782.

Outside of Asia

Chinatown, Melbourne is the longest continuous Chinese settlement in the Western World and the oldest Chinatown in the Southern Hemisphere.

Many Chinese immigrants arrived in Liverpool in the late 1850s in the employ of the Blue Funnel Shipping Line, a cargo transport company established by Alfred Holt. The commercial shipping line created strong trade links between the cities of Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Liverpool, mainly in the importation of silk, cotton, and tea. They settled near the docks in south Liverpool, this area was heavily bombed during World War II, causing the Chinese community moving to the current location Liverpool Chinatown on Nelson Street.

The Chinatown in San Francisco is one of the largest in North America and the oldest north of Mexico. It served as a port of entry for early Chinese immigrants from the 1850s to the 1900s. The area was the one geographical region deeded by the city government and private property owners which allowed Chinese persons to inherit and inhabit dwellings within the city. Many Chinese found jobs working for large companies seeking a source of labor, most famously as part of the Central Pacific on the Transcontinental Railroad. Since it started in Omaha, that city had a notable Chinatown for almost a century. Other cities in North America where Chinatowns were founded in the mid-nineteenth century include almost every major settlement along the West Coast from San Diego to Victoria. Other early immigrants worked as mine workers or independent prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the 1849 Gold Rush.

Economic opportunity drove the building of further Chinatowns in the United States. The initial Chinatowns were built in the Western United States in states such as California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Colorado and Arizona. As the transcontinental railroad was built, more Chinatowns started to appear in railroad towns such as St. Louis, Chicago, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and Butte, Montana. Chinatowns then subsequently emerged in many East Coast cities, including New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Providence and Baltimore. With the passage of the Emancipation Proclamation, many southern states such as Arkansas, Louisiana and Georgia began to hire Chinese for work in place of slave labor.

The history of Chinatowns was not always peaceful, especially when labor disputes arose. Racial tensions flared when lower-paid Chinese workers replaced white miners in many mountain-area Chinatowns, such as in Wyoming with the Rock Springs Massacre. Many of these frontier Chinatowns became extinct as American racism surged and the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed.

In Australia, the Victorian gold rush, which began in 1851, attracted Chinese prospectors from the Guangdong area. A community began to form in the eastern end of Little Bourke Street, Melbourne by the mid-1850s; the area is still the center of the Melbourne Chinatown, making it the oldest continuously occupied Chinatown in a western city (since the San Francisco one was destroyed and rebuilt). Gradually expanding, it reached a peak in the early 20th century, with Chinese business, mainly furniture workshops, occupying a block wide swath of the city, overlapping into the adjacent 'Little Lon' red light district. With restricted immigration it shrunk again, becoming a strip of Chinese restaurants by the late 1970s, when it was celebrated with decorative arches. However, with a recent huge influx of students from mainland China, it is now the center of a much larger area of noodle shops, travel agents, restaurants, and groceries. The Australian gold rushes also saw the development of a Chinatown in Sydney, at first around The Rocks, near the docks, but it has moved twice, first in the 1890s to the east side of the Haymarket area, near the new markets, then in the 1920s concentrating on the west side. Nowadays, Sydney's Chinatown is centered on Dixon Street.

Other Chinatowns in European capitals, including Paris and London, were established at the turn of the 20th century. The first Chinatown in London was located in the Limehouse area of the East End of London at the start of the 20th century. The Chinese population engaged in business which catered to the Chinese sailors who frequented the Docklands. The area acquired a bad reputation from exaggerated reports of opium dens and slum housing.

France received a large settlement of Chinese immigrant laborers, mostly from the city of Wenzhou, in the Zhejiang province of China. Significant Chinatowns sprung up in Belleville and the 13th arrondissement of Paris.

1970s to the present

By the late 1970s, refugees and exiles from the Vietnam War played a significant part in the redevelopment of Chinatowns in developed Western countries. As a result, many existing Chinatowns have become pan-Asian business districts and residential neighborhoods. By contrast, most Chinatowns in the past had been largely inhabited by Chinese from southeastern China.

In 2001, the events of September 11 resulted in a mass migration of about 14,000 Chinese workers from Manhattan's Chinatown to Montville, Connecticut, due to the fall of the garment industry. Chinese workers transitioned to casino jobs fueled by the development of the Mohegan Sun casino.

In 2012, Tijuana's Chinatown formed as a result of availability of direct flights to China. The La Mesa District of Tijuana was formerly a small enclave, but has tripled in size as a result of direct flights to Shanghai. It has an ethnic Chinese population rise from 5,000 in 2009 to roughly 15,000 in 2012, overtaking Mexicali's Chinatown as the largest Chinese enclave in Mexico.

The busy intersection of Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue in the Flushing Chinatown (法拉盛華埠), Downtown Flushing, Queens, New York City. The segment of Main Street between Kissena Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue, punctuated by the Long Island Rail Road trestle overpass, represents the cultural heart of Flushing Chinatown. Housing over 30,000 individuals born in China alone, the largest by this metric outside Asia, Flushing has become home to the largest and one of the fastest-growing Chinatowns in the world. Flushing is undergoing rapid gentrification by Chinese transnational entities, and the growth of the business activity at the core of Downtown Flushing, dominated by the Flushing Chinatown, has continued despite the Covid-19 pandemic. As of 2023, illegal Chinese immigration to New York City, and especially to the city's Flushing Chinatown, has accelerated.

The New York metropolitan area, consisting of New York City, Long Island, and nearby areas within the states of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, is home to the largest Chinese-American population of any metropolitan area within the United States and the largest Chinese population outside of China, enumerating an estimated 893,697 in 2017, and including at least 12 Chinatowns, including nine in New York City proper alone. Steady immigration from mainland China, both legal and illegal, has fueled Chinese-American population growth in the New York metropolitan area. New York's status as an alpha global city, its extensive mass transit system, and the New York metropolitan area's enormous economic marketplace are among the many reasons it remains a major international immigration hub. The Manhattan Chinatown contains the largest concentration of ethnic Chinese in the Western hemisphere, and the Flushing Chinatown in Queens has become the world's largest Chinatown.

The COVID-19 pandemic has adversely affected tourism and business in Chinatown, San Francisco and Chinatown, Chicago, Illinois as well as others worldwide.

Chinese settlements

History

Settlement pattern

  • The settlement was developed along a jetty and protected by Mazu temple, which was dedicated for the Goddess of Sea for safe sailing. Market place was open in front of Mazu temple, and shophouses were built along the street leading from west side of the Mazu temple. At the end of the street, Tudigong (Land God) temple was placed. As the settlement prospered as commercial town, Kuan Ti temple would be added for commercial success, especially by people from Hong Kong and Guangdong province. This core pattern was maintained even the settlement got expanded as a city, and forms historical urban center of the Southeast Asia.
  • Hoian Settlement Pattern, Vietnam, 1991 Hoian Settlement Pattern, Vietnam, 1991
  • Pengchau Settlement Pattern, Hong Kong, 1991 Pengchau Settlement Pattern, Hong Kong, 1991
  • Chinese Settlement in Georgetown, Malaysia, 1991 Chinese Settlement in Georgetown, Malaysia, 1991
  • Chinese Settlement in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991 Chinese Settlement in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991
  • Tin Hau (Goddess of Sea) Temple in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991 Tin Hau (Goddess of Sea) Temple in Kuching, Malaysia, 1991
  • To Di Gong (Land God) Temple at Kuching, 1991 To Di Gong (Land God) Temple at Kuching, 1991

Characteristics

The features described below are characteristic of many modern Chinatowns.

Demographics

The early Chinatowns such as those in San Francisco and Los Angeles in the United States were naturally destinations for people of Chinese descent as migration were the result of opportunities such as the California Gold Rush and the Transcontinental Railroad drawing the population in, creating natural Chinese enclaves that were almost always 100% exclusively Han Chinese, which included both people born in China and in the enclave, in this case American-born Chinese. In some free countries such as the United States and Canada, housing laws that prevent discrimination also allows neighborhoods that may have been characterized as "All Chinese" to also allow non-Chinese to reside in these communities. For example, the Chinatown in Philadelphia has a sizeable non-Chinese population residing within the community.

A recent study also suggests that the demographic change is also driven by gentrification of what were previously Chinatown neighborhoods. The influx of luxury housing is speeding up the gentrification of such neighborhoods. The trend for emergence of these types of natural enclaves is on the decline (with the exceptions being the continued growth and emergence of newer Chinatowns in Queens and Brooklyn in New York City), only to be replaced by newer "Disneyland-like" attractions, such as a new Chinatown that will be built in the Catskills region of New York. This includes the endangerment of existing historical Chinatowns that will eventually stop serving the needs of Chinese immigrants.

Newer developments like those in Norwich, Connecticut, and the San Gabriel Valley, which are not necessarily considered "Chinatowns" in the sense that they do not necessarily contain the Chinese architectures or Chinese language signs as signatures of an officially sanctioned area that was designated either in law or signage stating so, differentiate areas that are called "Chinatowns" versus locations that have "significant" populations of people of Chinese descent. For example, San Jose, California in the United States has 63,434 people (2010 U.S. Census) of Chinese descent, and yet "does not have a Chinatown". Some "official" Chinatowns have Chinese populations much lower than that.

Town-Scape

Main article: Chinese architecture

Many tourist-destination metropolitan Chinatowns can be distinguished by large red arch entrance structures known in Mandarin Chinese as Paifang (sometimes accompanied by imperial guardian lion statues on either side of the structure, to greet visitors). Other Chinese architectural styles such as the Chinese Garden of Friendship in Sydney Chinatown and the Chinese stone lions at the gate to the Victoria, British Columbia Chinatown are present in some Chinatowns. Mahale Chiniha, the Chinatown in Iran, contains many buildings that were constructed in the Chinese architectural style.

Paifangs usually have special inscriptions in Chinese. Historically, these gateways were donated to a particular city as a gift from the Republic of China and People's Republic of China, or local governments (such as Chinatown, San Francisco) and business organizations. The long-neglected Chinatown in Havana, Cuba, received materials for its paifang from the People's Republic of China as part of the Chinatown's gradual renaissance. Construction of these red arches is often financed by local financial contributions from the Chinatown community. Some of these structures span an entire intersection, and some are smaller in height and width. Some paifang can be made of wood, masonry or steel and may incorporate an elaborate or simple design.

Chinatown landmarks

Benevolent and business associations

Main article: Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association
Headquarters of the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association in Chinatown, San Francisco

A major component of many Chinatowns is the family benevolent association, which provides some degree of aid to immigrants. These associations generally provide social support, religious services, death benefits (members' names in Chinese are generally enshrined on tablets and posted on walls), meals, and recreational activities for ethnic Chinese, especially for older Chinese migrants. Membership in these associations can be based on members sharing a common Chinese surname or belonging to a common clan, spoken Chinese dialect, specific village, region or country of origin, and so on. Many have their own facilities.

Some examples include San Francisco's prominent Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association (中華總會館 Zhōnghuá Zǒng Huìguǎn), aka Chinese Six Companies and Los Angeles' Southern California Teochew Association. The Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association is among the largest umbrella groups of benevolent associations in the North America, which branches in several Chinatowns. Politically, the CCBA has traditionally been aligned with the Kuomintang and the Republic of China.

The London Chinatown Chinese Association is active in Chinatown, London. Chinatown, Paris has an institution in the Association des Résidents en France d'origine indochinoise and it servicing overseas Chinese immigrants in Paris who were born in the former French Indochina.

Traditionally, Chinatown-based associations have also been aligned with ethnic Chinese business interests, such as restaurant, grocery, and laundry (antiquated) associations in Chinatowns in North America. In Chicago's Chinatown, the On Leong Merchants Association was active.

Names

English

Official signs in Boston pointing towards "Chinatown"

Although the term "Chinatown" was first used in Asia, it is not derived from a Chinese language. Its earliest appearance seems to have been in connection with the Chinese quarter of Singapore, which by 1844 was already being called "China Town" or "Chinatown" by the British colonial government. This may have been a word-for-word translation into English of the Malay name for that quarter, which in those days was probably "Kampong China" or possibly "Kota China" or "Kampong Tionghua/Chunghwa/Zhonghua".

The first appearance of a Chinatown outside Singapore may have been in 1852, in a book by the Rev. Hatfield, who applied the term to the Chinese part of the main settlement on the remote South Atlantic island of St. Helena. The island was a regular way-station on the voyage to Europe and North America from Indian Ocean ports, including Singapore.

Sign inside Jefferson Station in Philadelphia pointing to "Chinatown"

One of the earliest American usages dates to 1855, when San Francisco newspaper The Daily Alta California described a "pitched battle on the streets of Chinatown". Other Alta articles from the late 1850s make it clear that areas called "Chinatown" existed at that time in several other California cities, including Oroville and San Andres. By 1869, "Chinatown had acquired its full modern meaning all over the U.S. and Canada. For instance, an Ohio newspaper wrote: "From San Diego to Sitka..., every town and hamlet has its 'Chinatown'."

In British publications before the 1890s, "Chinatown" appeared mainly in connection with California. At first, Australian and New Zealand journalists also regarded Chinatowns as Californian phenomena. However, they began using the term to denote local Chinese communities as early as 1861 in Australia and 1873 in New Zealand. In most other countries, the custom of calling local Chinese communities "Chinatowns" is not older than the twentieth century.

Several alternate English names for Chinatown include China Town (generally used in British and Australian English), The Chinese District, Chinese Quarter and China Alley (an antiquated term used primarily in several rural towns in the western United States for a Chinese community; some of these are now historical sites). In the case of Lillooet, British Columbia, Canada, China Alley was a parallel commercial street adjacent to the town's Main Street, enjoying a view over the river valley adjacent and also over the main residential part of Chinatown, which was largely of adobe construction. All traces of Chinatown and China Alley there have disappeared, despite a once large and prosperous community.

In Chinese

Street sign in Chinatown, Newcastle, with 唐人街 below the street name

In Chinese, Chinatown is usually called 唐人街, in Cantonese Tong jan gai, in Mandarin Tángrénjiē, in Hakka Tong ngin gai, and in Toisan Hong ngin gai, literally meaning "Tang people's street(s)". The Tang dynasty was a zenith of the Chinese civilization, after which some Chinese call themselves. Some Chinatowns are indeed just one single street, such as the relatively short Fisgard Street in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

A more modern Chinese name is 華埠 (Cantonese: Waa Fau, Mandarin: Huábù) meaning "Chinese City", used in the semi-official Chinese translations of some cities' documents and signs. , pronounced sometimes in Mandarin as , usually means seaport; but in this sense, it means city or town. Tong jan fau (唐人埠 "Tang people's town") is also used in Cantonese nowadays. The literal word-for-word translation of ChinatownZhōngguó Chéng (中國城) is also used, but more frequently by visiting Chinese nationals rather than immigrants of Chinese descent who live in various Chinatowns.

Chinatowns in Southeast Asia have unique Chinese names used by the local Chinese, as there are large populations of people who are Overseas Chinese, living within the various major cities of Southeast Asia. As the population of Overseas Chinese, is widely dispersed in various enclaves, across each major Southeast Asian city, specific Chinese names are used instead.

For example, in Singapore, where 2.8 million ethnic Chinese constitute a majority 74% of the resident population, the Chinese name for Chinatown is Niúchēshǔi (牛車水, Hokkien POJ: Gû-chia-chúi), which literally means "ox-cart water" from the Malay 'Kreta Ayer' in reference to the water carts that used to ply the area. The Chinatown in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, (where 2 million ethnic Chinese comprise 30% of the population of Greater Kuala Lumpur) while officially known as Petaling Street (Malay: Jalan Petaling), is referred to by Malaysian Chinese by its Cantonese name ci cong gaai (茨廠街, pinyin: Cíchǎng Jiē), literally "tapioca factory street", after a tapioca starch factory that once stood in the area. In Manila, Philippines, the area is called Mínlúnluò Qū 岷倫洛區, literally meaning the "Mín and Luò Rivers confluence district" but is actually a transliteration of the local term Binondo and an allusion to its proximity to the Pasig River.

Other languages

In Philippine Spanish, the term used for Chinatown districts is parián, the etymology of which is uncertain. In the rest of the Spanish Empire, the Spanish-language term is usually barrio chino (Chinese neighborhood; plural: barrios chinos), used in Spain and Latin America. (However, barrio chino or its Catalan cognate barri xinès do not always refer to a Chinese neighborhood: these are also common terms for a disreputable district with drugs and prostitution, and often no connection to the Chinese.).

In Portuguese, Chinatown is often referred to as Bairro chinês (the Chinese Neighbourhood; plural: bairros chineses).

In Francophone regions (such as France and Quebec), Chinatown is often referred to as le quartier chinois (the Chinese Neighbourhood; plural: les quartiers chinois). The most prominent Francophone Chinatowns are located in Paris and Montreal.

The Vietnamese term for Chinatown is Khu người Hoa (Chinese district) or phố Tàu (Chinese street). Vietnamese language is prevalent in Chinatowns of Paris, Los Angeles, Boston, Philadelphia, Toronto, and Montreal as ethnic Chinese from Vietnam have set up shop in them.

In Japanese, the term "chūkagai" (中華街, literally "Chinese Street") is the translation used for Yokohama and Nagasaki Chinatown.

In Indonesia, chinatown is known as Pecinan, a shortened term of pe-cina-an, means everything related to the Chinese people. Most of these pecinans usually located in Java.

Some languages have adopted the English-language term, such as Dutch and German.

Locations

Street scene of the Chinatown in Cyrildene, Johannesburg

Africa

Main article: Chinatowns in Africa

There are three noteworthy Chinatowns in Africa located in the coastal African nations of Madagascar, Mauritius and South Africa. South Africa has the largest Chinatown and the largest Chinese population of any African country and remains a popular destination for Chinese immigrants coming to Africa. Derrick Avenue in Cyrildene, Johannesburg, hosts South Africa's largest Chinatown.

America

Main article: Chinatowns in the Americas
Celebrating Chinese New Year in Fuzhou Town, Brooklyn

In the Americas, which includes North America, Central America and South America, Chinatowns have been around since the 1800s. The most prominent ones exist in the United States and Canada in New York, Boston, San Francisco, Chicago, Toronto and Vancouver. The New York City metropolitan area is home to the largest ethnically Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017, including at least 12 Chinatowns – six (or nine, including the emerging Chinatowns in Corona and Whitestone, Queens, and East Harlem, Manhattan) in New York City proper, and one each in Nassau County, Long Island; Edison, New Jersey; and Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey, not to mention fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area. San Francisco, a Pacific port city, has the oldest and longest continuous running Chinatown in the Western Hemisphere. In Canada, The Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area is home to the 2nd largest ethnically Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising 694,970 individuals as of the 2021 Census. Vancouver's Chinatown is the country's largest.

The oldest Chinatown in the Americas is in Mexico City and dates back to at least the early 17th century. Since the 1970s, new arrivals have typically hailed from Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Latin American Chinatowns may include the descendants of original migrants – often of mixed Chinese and Latin parentage – and more recent immigrants from East Asia. Most Asian Latin Americans are of Cantonese and Hakka origin. Estimates widely vary on the number of Chinese descendants in Latin America. Notable Chinatowns also exist in Chinatown, Lima, Peru.

In Brazil, the Liberdade neighborhood in São Paulo has, along with a large Japanese community, an important Chinese community. There is a project for a Chinatown in the Mercado neighborhood, close to the Municipal Market and the commercial Rua 25 de Março.

Asia

Main article: Chinatowns in Asia

Chinatowns in Asia are widespread with a large concentration of overseas Chinese in East Asia and Southeast Asia and ethnic Chinese whose ancestors came from southern China – particularly the provinces of Guangdong, Fujian, and Hainan – and settled in countries such as Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam centuries ago—starting as early as the Tang dynasty, but mostly notably in the 17th through the 19th centuries (during the reign of the Qing dynasty), and well into the 20th century. Today the Chinese diaspora in Asia is largely concentrated in Southeast Asia however the legacy of the once widespread overseas Chinese communities in Asia is evident in the many Chinatowns that are found across East Asia, South Asia, and Southeast Asia.

Vietnam houses the largest Chinatown by size in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon).

Australia and Oceania

Main articles: Chinatowns in Australia and Chinatowns in Oceania

The Chinatown of Melbourne lies within the Melbourne central business district and centers on the eastern end of Little Bourke Street. It extends between the corners of Swanston and Exhibition Streets. Melbourne's Chinatown originated during the Victorian gold rush in 1851, and is notable as the oldest Chinatown in Australia. It has also been claimed to be the longest continuously running Chinese community outside of Asia, but only because the 1906 San Francisco earthquake all but destroyed the Chinatown in San Francisco in California.

Sydney's main Chinatown centers on Sussex Street in the Sydney downtown. It stretches from Central Station in the east to Darling Harbour in the west, and is Australia's largest Chinatown.

The Chinatown of Adelaide was originally built in the 1960s and was renovated in the 1980s. It is located near Adelaide Central Market and the Adelaide Central bus station.

Chinatown Gold Coast is a precinct in the Central Business District of Southport, Queensland, that runs through Davenport Street and Young Street. The precinct extends between Nerang Street in the north and Garden Street/Scarborough Street east-west. Redevelopment of the precinct was established in 2013 and completed in 2015 in time for Chinese New Year celebrations.

There are additional Chinatowns in Brisbane, Perth, and Broome in Australia.

Europe

Main article: Chinatowns in Europe

Several urban Chinatowns exist in major European capital cities. There is Chinatown, London, England as well as major Chinatowns in Birmingham, Liverpool, Newcastle, and Manchester. Berlin, Germany has one established Chinatown in the area around Kantstrasse of Charlottenburg in the West. Antwerp, Belgium has also seen an upstart Chinese community, that has been recognized by the local authorities since 2011. The city council of Cardiff has plans to recognize the Chinese Diaspora in the city.

The Chinatown in Paris, located in the 13th arrondissement, is the largest in Europe, where many Vietnamese – specifically ethnic Chinese refugees from Vietnam – have settled and in Belleville in the northeast of Paris as well as in Lyon. In Italy, there is a Chinatown in Milan between Via Luigi Canonica and Via Paolo Sarpi and others in Rome and Prato. In the Netherlands, Chinatowns exist in Amsterdam, Rotterdam and the Hague.

In the United Kingdom, several exist in Birmingham, Liverpool, London, Manchester and Newcastle Upon Tyne. The Chinatown in Liverpool is the oldest Chinese community in Europe. The Chinatown in London was established in the Limehouse district in the late 19th century. The Chinatown in Manchester is located in central Manchester.

  • Map of Chinatown Milan Map of Chinatown Milan
  • Gate of Chinatown, Liverpool England, is the largest multiple-span arch outside of China, in the oldest Chinese community in Europe. Gate of Chinatown, Liverpool England, is the largest multiple-span arch outside of China, in the oldest Chinese community in Europe.
  • Wardour Street, Chinatown, London Wardour Street, Chinatown, London
  • Chinese Quarter in Birmingham, England Chinese Quarter in Birmingham, England
  • Chinese new year celebration in Lyon, France Chinese new year celebration in Lyon, France

In popular culture

Chinatowns have been portrayed in various films including The Joy Luck Club, Big Trouble in Little China, Year of the Dragon, Flower Drum Song, The Lady from Shanghai and Chinatown. Within the context of the last film "Chinatown" is used primarily as an extended metaphor for any situation in which an outside entity seeks to intervene without having the local knowledge required to understand the consequences of that intervention. The neighborhood or district is often associated with being outside the normal rule of law or isolated from the social norms of the larger society.

Chinatowns have also been mentioned in the song "Kung Fu Fighting" by Carl Douglas whose song lyrics says "... There was funky China men from funky Chinatown ..."

The martial arts actor Bruce Lee is well known as a person who was born in the Chinatown of San Francisco. Other notable Chinese Americans such as politician Gary Locke and NBA player Jeremy Lin grew up in suburbs with lesser connections to traditional Chinatowns. Neighborhood activists and politicians have increased in prominence in some cities, and some are starting to attract support from non-Chinese voters.

Some notable temples in Chinatowns worldwide

See also

References

Citations

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Sources

  • Chew, James R. "Boyhood Days in Winnemucca, 1901–1910." Nevada Historical Society Quarterly 1998 41(3): 206–209. ISSN 0047-9462 Oral history (1981) describes the Chinatown of Winnemucca, Nevada, during 1901–10. Though many Chinese left Winnemucca after the Central Pacific Railroad was completed in 1869, around four hundred Chinese had formed a community in the town by the 1890s. Among the prominent buildings was the Joss House, a place of worship and celebration that was visited by Chinese revolutionist Sun Yat-Sen in 1911. Beyond describing the physical layout of the Chinatown, the author recalls some of the commercial and gambling activities in the community.
  • Ki Longfellow, China Blues, Eio Books 2012, ISBN 0975925571, San Francisco's Chinatown during the 1906 earthquake and in the early 1920s. (Eio Books)
  • "Chinatown: Conflicting Images, Contested Terrain", K. Scott Wong, Melus (Vol. 20, Issue 1), 1995. Scholarly work discussing the negative perceptions and imagery of old Chinatowns.
  • Pan, Lynn. Sons of the Yellow Emperor: A History of the Chinese Diaspora (1994). Book with detailed histories of Chinese diaspora communities (Chinatowns) from San Francisco, Honolulu, Bangkok, Manila, Johannesburg, Sydney, London, Lima, etc.
  • Williams, Daniel. "Chinatown Is a Hard Sell in Italy", The Washington Post Foreign Service, March 1, 2004; Page A11.

Further reading

  • Kwan, Cheuk (2023). Have you eaten yet? : stories from Chinese restaurants around the world (First Pegasus Books cloth ed.). New York: Pegasus Books. ISBN 9781639363346.
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