Mount Tai
Mount Tai is a mountain of historical and cultural significance located north of the city of Tai'an. It is the highest point in Shandong province, China.| Tap on a place to explore it |
Photo: Wikimedia, Public domain.
- Type: Peak with an elevation of 1,532 metres
- Description: mountain in Shandong, China
- Also known as: “Tai Mountain”, “Tai Shan”, “Tài Shān”, “Taishan”, and “玉皇顶”
Mount Tai
- Categories: mountain, Chinese AAAAA-rated tourist attraction, and landform
- Location: Tai’an, Shandong, North China, China, East Asia, Asia
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
36.257° or 36° 15′ 25″ northLongitude
117.1026° or 117° 6′ 9″ eastElevation
1,532 metres (5,026 feet)Open location code
8P8V7443+R2OpenStreetMap ID
node 6707653370OpenStreetMap feature
natural=peak
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Mount Tai from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Arabic to Yue Chinese—“Mount Tai” goes by many names.
- Arabic: “جبل تاي”
- Armenian: “Թայշան”
- Asturian: “Monte Tai”
- Balinese: “Gunung Tai”
- Basque: “Tai mendia”
- Bengali: “তাই পর্বত”
- Bengali: “তাইশান”
- Bengali: “মাউন্ট তাইশান”
- Bulgarian: “Тайшан”
- Catalan: “Mont Tai”
- Cebuano: “Taishan”
- Chinese: “Thài-san”
- Chinese: “东岳”
- Chinese: “中华泰山”
- Chinese: “太山”
- Chinese: “岱”
- Chinese: “泰山”
- Chinese: “泰山世界地质公园”
- Chinese: “泰山国家地质公园”
- Chinese: “泰山国家森林公园”
- Chinese: “泰山景区”
- Chinese: “泰山风景名胜区”
- Croatian: “Tai Shan”
- Croatian: “Taishan”
- Czech: “Hora Tai”
- Czech: “Hora Tchaj-šan”
- Czech: “Hora Tchaj”
- Czech: “Hora Tchajšan”
- Czech: “Mount Tai”
- Czech: “Tai Shan”
- Czech: “Tchaj-šan”
- Czech: “Tchajšan”
- Danish: “Tai Shan”
- Danish: “Taishan”
- Dutch: “Heilige berg Taishan”
- Dutch: “Taishan”
- Egyptian Arabic: “جبل تاى”
- Esperanto: “Monto Taj”
- Finnish: “Taishan”
- French: “mont Tai”
- French: “Mont Tai”
- French: “Mont Taishan”
- French: “Parc national de Taishan”
- French: “Taishan”
- Georgian: “ტაიშანი”
- German: “Tai Shan”
- German: “Taischan”
- Greek: “Όρος Τάι”
- Greek: “Ταϊσάν”
- Hakka Chinese: “Thai-sân”
- Hebrew: “הר טאי”
- Hindi: “ताई पर्वत”
- Hungarian: “Taj-hegy”
- Indonesian: “Gunung Tai”
- Italian: “Monte Tai”
- Italian: “Monte Taishan”
- Japanese: “泰山”
- Korean: “동악태산”
- Korean: “옥황봉”
- Korean: “타이 산”
- Korean: “타이산 산”
- Korean: “타이산”
- Korean: “태산”
- Ladin: “Mont Tai”
- Latvian: “Taišaņs”
- Literary Chinese: “泰山”
- Lithuanian: “Tai kalnas”
- Lithuanian: “Tai Šanas”
- Macedonian: “Таи”
- Macedonian: “Таишан”
- Malay: “Gunung Tai”
- Malayalam: “തായ് പർവ്വതം”
- Maltese: “Muntanja Tai”
- Maltese: “Taishan”
- Manchu: “ᡨᠠᡳ ᡧᠠᠨ ᠠᠯᡳᠨ”
- Manchu: “ᡩᡝᡵᡤᡳ ᠴᠣᠯᡥᠣᠨ”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Thài-san”
- Nepali: “ताई पर्वत”
- Nepali: “माउन्ट ताई”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Tai Shan”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Taifjellet”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Taishanfjellet”
- Norwegian: “Tai Shan”
- Persian: “تای شان”
- Persian: “تایشان”
- Persian: “کوه تای”
- Persian: “کوهٔ تای”
- Polish: “Góra Tai”
- Polish: “Tai Shan”
- Polish: “Taj-szan”
- Portuguese: “Monte Tai”
- Portuguese: “Monte Taishan”
- Romanian: “Tai Shan”
- Russian: “Тайшань”
- Serbian: “Тајшан”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Tai Shan”
- Slovak: “Tchaj-šan”
- Slovenian: “Tai Šan”
- Slovenian: “Taj Šan”
- Spanish: “montaña Tai”
- Spanish: “Monte Tai”
- Swedish: “Taishan”
- Tagalog: “Bundok Tai”
- Tamil: “டாய் மலை”
- Tatar: “Тай тавы”
- Tatar: “Тайшань”
- Thai: “เขาไท่”
- Thai: “ไท่ซาน”
- Tibetan: “ཐའེ་ཧྲན་རི་བོ།”
- Turkish: “Tai Dağı”
- Ukrainian: “Тайшань”
- Venetian: “Monte Tai”
- Vietnamese: “Núi Thái Sơn”
- Vietnamese: “Núi Thái”
- Vietnamese: “Thái Sơn”
- Wu Chinese: “泰山”
- Yue Chinese: “天孫”
- Yue Chinese: “岱宗”
- Yue Chinese: “岱山”
- Yue Chinese: “岱嶽”
- Yue Chinese: “泰山”
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as 后石坞 and 中天门.
Shandong: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Qingdao, Jinan, Zibo, and Yantai.
Explore These Curated Destinations
Discover places selected for their distinct character and enduring appeal.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Mount Tai”. Photo: Wikimedia, CC0.