Victoria, Hong Kong


The City of Victoria, often called Victoria City or simply Victoria, is an area in Hong Kong de jure and was the de facto capital of Hong Kong during its time as a British dependent territory. It was initially named Queenstown but was soon known as Victoria. It was one of the first urban settlements in Hong Kong and its boundaries are recorded in the laws of Hong Kong. All government bureaux and many key departments still have their head offices located within its limit.
Present-day Central is at the heart of Victoria City. Although the city expanded over much of what is now Kennedy Town, Shek Tong Tsui, Lung Fu Shan, Sai Ying Pun, Sheung Wan, Wan Chai, Happy Valley, the Mid-Levels, East Point and parts of Causeway Bay, the name Victoria has been eclipsed by Central in popular usage. However, the name is still used in places such as Victoria Park, Victoria Peak, Victoria Harbour, Victoria Prison, and a number of roads and streets. It is also retained in the names of various organisations such as the Victoria City District of the Hong Kong Scout, and the Victoria Junior Chamber. The name Victoria District Court had been used into the 1980s, when it was moved to the Wanchai Tower and later on combined with other district courts in the territory.

History

"City of Victoria" had appeared on the statute books early in the 1845, although names such as "Town of Victoria" can be found as well. Letters patent that formally confers the city status and creates the City of Victoria was made on 11 May 1849.
In 1857, the British government expanded the scope of Victoria City and divided it into four wans :Sai Wan Sheung Wan Choong Wan or Chung Wan Ha Wan.
"Sai Wan", "Sheung Wan" and "Choong Wan" retain the same Chinese name today. The four wans are further divided into nine yeuks. The coverage also included parts of East Point and Happy Valley. In 1903, boundary stones were established to mark the city's boundary and six of them are still preserved today. The stones spread from Causeway Bay to Kennedy Town.
In the 1890s, Victoria extended west to east along the coastal strip. Buildings were made of granite and brick. Buses and the new tramway would become the main form of transport in the area.
The city is centred in present-day Central, and named after Queen Victoria in 1843. It occupies the areas known in modern times as Central, Admiralty, Sheung Wan, Wan Chai, East Point, Shek Tong Tsui, the Mid-levels, the Peak, Happy Valley, Tin Hau, and Kennedy Town, on Hong Kong Island.

Boundaries

The city boundaries are defined in the laws of Hong Kong as follows:
  • On the north – The Harbour;
  • On the west – A line running due north and south drawn through the north-west angle of Inland Lot No. 1299 and extending southwards a distance of from the aforesaid angle;
  • On the south – A line running due east from the southern extremity of the western boundary until it meets a contour in the vicinity of the Hill above Belchers above principal datum, that is to say, a level below the bench-mark known as "Rifleman's Bolt", the highest point of a copper bolt set horizontally in the east wall of the Royal Navy Office and Mess Block Naval Dockyard, and thence following the said contour until it meets the eastern boundary;
  • On the east – A line following the west side of the Government Pier, Bay View and thence along the west side of, then along the north side of Causeway Road to. Thence along the west side of Moreton Terrace to the south-east corner of Inland Lot No. 1580 and produced in a straight line for, and thence along the north side of Cotton Path and produced until it meets the west side of Wong Nei Chong Road on the east side of Wong Nei Chong Valley and thence to the south-east angle of Inland Lot No. 1364, produced until it meets the southern boundary.

First streets

According to the 1845 map of Victoria City, 16 streets were initially named for the city. These streets exist mainly in the areas of Central and the Mid-Levels, with two being in Sheung Wan. These street names were finalised by the second governor of Hong Kong, Sir John Francis Davis. All 16 streets were named after persons of great prominence in Great Britain or in Hong Kong, with the location and layout determined according to the position and prominence of the eponymous person:
Street NameLocationPerson named afterEponym's position
Queen's RoadCentralQueen VictoriaMonarch of Great Britain
Arbuthnot RoadCentralGeorge ArbuthnotAuditor of the Civil List
Caine RoadMid-LevelsWilliam CaineColonial Secretary of Hong Kong
Cochrane StreetMid-LevelsSir Thomas John CochraneCommander-in-Chief, East Indies and China Station
D'Aguilar StreetCentralSir George Charles d'AguilarLieutenant Governor of Hong Kong
Elgin StreetCentralJames Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin and 12th Earl of KincardineHigh Commissioner and Plenipotentiary in China and the Far East
Gough StreetSheung WanHugh Gough, 1st Viscount GoughCommander-in-Chief, British Forces in China
Graham StreetCentralSir James GrahamHome Secretary and First Lord of the Admiralty
Lyndhurst TerraceCentralJohn Copley, 1st Baron LyndhurstLord High Chancellor of Great Britain
Peel StreetMid-LevelsSir Robert PeelPrime Minister of Great Britain
Pottinger StreetCentralSir Henry PottingerGovernor of Hong Kong
Stanley StreetCentralEdward Smith-Stanley, Baron of Stanley
Later 14th Earl of Derby
Colonial Secretary of Great Britain, later Prime Minister of Great Britain
Wellington StreetCentral and Sheung WanArthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of WellingtonField Marshal and Prime Minister of Great Britain
Wyndham StreetCentralWilliam PedderRoyal Navy Lieutenant, Harbour Master and Marine Magistrate of Hong Kong

Boundary stones

In 1903, the Hong Kong Government erected several boundary stones to mark the limits of Victoria, measuring 98 cm in height, tapered at the top and with the inscription "City Boundary 1903". As the city’s boundaries were clearly defined by ordinance, these stones were more just physical markers.
Three additional boundary stones were found in 2021, adding the total of discovered stones to 10, including the one disappeared in June 2007.
No.LocationRegionNotes
1Sai Ning StreetKennedy TownRe-erected in Kennedy Town Temporary Playground a few metres away from original location in 1970s
2Slope of Mount Davis, south of Victoria RoadMount DavisDiscovered on 12 December 2021
3Pokfulam Road, near SmithfieldSandy Bay Gap
4Slope of Lung Fu Shan, near Hatton RoadLung Fu ShanDiscovered on 5 December 2021
5Hatton Road, near Kotewall RoadLung Fu Shan
6Old Peak Road, near Tregunter PathMid-Levels
7Magazine Gap RoadMid-LevelsRemoved in June 2007, whereabouts unknown
8Bowen Road, near Stubbs RoadMid-Levels
9Slope near Rosaryhill School, Stubbs RoadMid-LevelsDiscovered on 12 December 2021
10Wong Nai Chung RoadHappy Valley

Districts

In 1866 the nine districts, also called yeuks, are:
Other places that might be considered as yeuks include:

Territorial designation

On 21 May 1982, Sir Crawford Murray MacLehose was made a life peer, weeks after the end of his governorship in Hong Kong. His peerage was announced on 31 December 1981 in the 1982 New Years Honours. He was therefore styled as Baron MacLehose of Beoch, of Maybole in the District of Kyle and Carrick, and of Victoria in Hong Kong. Victoria was listed as the barony's territorial designation, alongside MacLehose's hometown Maybole. The barony went extinct on 27 May 2000 when MacLehose died.