Definition of "Tahsi"
Tahsi
proper noun
Quotations
The committee also decided that the remains of President Chiang will be entombed temporarily by Tzu Lake, at Tahsi township of Taoyuan County in northern Taiwan, and will be buried on the mainland after it is recovered.
1975 April 13, “Late President funeral service set for April 16”, in Free China Weekly, volume XVI, number 14, page 1
Although the ruling party, the Kuomintang, insists that its basic policies have not changed, uncertainty about this island nation's political direction has increased since the death of President Chiang Ching-kuo on Wednesday.The Government announced today that Mr. Chiang's funeral would be held on Jan. 30 and that he would be buried in the town of Tahsi, 20 miles southwest of Taipei.
1988 January 17, Clyde Haberman, “Taiwan Imprisons 2 Backing Independence”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 01 February 2011
To reach Tzuhu from Taipei, first take a train to Taoyuan (táoyuán) or Chungli (zhōnglì). From there you can get a bus directly to Tzuhu or else to the nearby town of Tahsi (dàxī), from where you’ll have to get another bus to Tzuhu. Buses from Tahsi to Tzuhu are not very frequent so you might have to take a taxi. Fortunately, it’s not very far so it’s not too expensive.
1994 July, Robert Storey, “North Taiwan”, in Taiwan - A Travel Survival Kit, 3rd edition, Lonely Planet, page 187, column 1
Former president Lee Teng-hui and his wife Tseng Wen-hui cut Lee's birthday cake in Tahsi in Taoyuan County yesterday to celebrate Lee's upcoming 86th birthday.
2007 January 7, “Lee to visit Japan if health holds up”, in Taipei Times, archived from the original on 18 January 2007, Taiwan News, page 3
6.6 Tak’ok’an (Tōakhokhām in Holo) on the uppermost reaches of the Tamsui River, was a collection point for tea transport in the late Ch’ing period. The town is today called Tahsi.
2015, Wan-yao Chou (周婉窈), translated by Carole Plackitt and Tim Casey, A New Illustrated History of Taiwan, Taipei: SMC Publishing, page 118
Soldiers stand guard in front of the late President Chiang Kai-shek’s mausoleum in Tahsi, Taoyuan county, in northern Taiwan in this file image.
2018 April 4, “10 Taiwanese protesters charged with vandalising Chiang Kai-shek’s tomb”, in South China Morning Post, archived from the original on 02 June 2018
In 1997, he allowed the mayor of Tahsi to put discarded statues of Chiang Kai-shek in what was a vegetable garden next to the site’s entrance.
2022 April 1, Vladimir Stolojan-filipesco, “The second life of a political cult: Official and popular reappropriation of Chiang Kai-shek statues in post-martial law Taiwan”, in East Asian Journal of Popular Culture, volume 8, number 1