Fengyang County Explained

Fengyang
Native Name:凤阳县
Native Name Lang:zh-Hans
Settlement Type:County
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:People's Republic of China
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Anhui
Subdivision Type2:Prefecture-level city
Subdivision Name2:Chuzhou
Area Total Km2:1949.5
Population As Of:2018
Population Total:683200
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Coor Pinpoint:Fengyang County government
Coordinates:32.8757°N 117.5318°W
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:233100

Fengyang County is a county in north-central Anhui Province, China. It is under the administration of Chuzhou, a prefecture-level city. The county was home to 765,600 people as of 2013.[1]

Administrative divisions

Fengyang County is divided into 14 towns and 1 township. The county seat is in Fucheng Town.

14 Towns

The county is home to the following 14 towns:

  • Banqiao (Chinese: 板桥镇)
  • Damiao (Chinese: 大庙镇)
  • Fucheng (Chinese: 府城镇)
  • Guantang (Chinese: 官塘镇)
  • Hongxin (Chinese: 红心镇)
  • Liufu (Chinese: 刘府镇)
  • Wudian (Chinese: 武店镇)
  • Xiquan (Chinese: 西泉镇)
  • Linhuaiguan (Chinese: 临淮关镇)
  • Zaoxiang (Chinese: 枣巷镇)
  • Yinjian (Chinese: 殷涧镇)
  • Zongpu (Chinese: 总铺镇)
  • Xiaoxihe (Chinese: 小溪河镇)
  • Daxihe (Chinese: 大溪河镇)

1 Township

The county's sole township is:

Geography

The county's northern border is formed by the Huai River and neighboring Wuhe County. The county is also home to the Huayuan Lake, which totals about 30 square kilometers in size.

Climate

The average annual temperature for Fengyang County is 14.9 °C, and the average annual precipitation is 904.4 mm.

History

Pre-Ming Dynasty

During the Xia, Shang and early Zhou dynasties, the Dongyi peoples inhabited this area and were collectively known as the Huaiyi after the Huai River. During the late Western Zhou Period and the early Spring and Autumn period, the Dongyi became increasingly sinicized and formed their own states. During the late Spring and Autumn period, the once-powerful Dongyi state of Xu was pressured from all directions and destroyed through a series of wars with its neighbors, such as the Chu State and the Wu State. Another Dongyi State was the small Zhongli State, which was a part of the Huaiyi Confederation led by the State of Xu. Tombs belonging to the royalty of the Zhongli State were discovered in excavations between 2005 and 2008 near Fengyang. Eventually, the Huaiyi peoples were either pushed south or assimilated.

Ming Dynasty

Fengyang's best known historical site is linked with the name of the county's most famous native, Zhu Yuanzhang (1328-1398). Although coming from a poor family, he became an important rebel leader and, later, the founder of China's Ming Dynasty. Once entrenched as the Hongwu Emperor in the nearby Nanjing, he honored the memory of his father, Zhu Wusi (d. 1344), and his mother, Lady Chen, by posthumously raising them to imperial dignity, and building for them an imperial-style mausoleum, known as Ming Huangling (Chinese: [[:zh:明皇陵|明皇陵]], literally, "Ming Imperial Mausoleum").[2] The emperor even started building the new imperial capital, named Zhongdu near his childhood hometown, but the project was eventually abandoned. The stone figures of the Huangling Mausoleum have survived, and have been re-erected at the original location, some 7km (04miles)south of the county seat ((32.8139°N 117.5194°W)).[3] The mausoleum statuary and the remains of the capital-building project are protected as a national historic site known as "Zhongdu Imperial City of the Ming and the Imperial Mausoleum's Statuary" (Chinese: 明中都皇故城及皇陵石刻).[4] In 1370, existing counties in the area were merged into a new county, named Linhuai County.[5]

Qing Dynasty

In 1754, Linhuai County was restructured into a new county called Fengyang County, which serves as the descendant of the modern Fengyang County.

Recent History

The county's borders are jurisdiction has changed numerous times since its Qing-era formation. From 1959 to 1960, during the Great Leap Forward, 60,245 people of the county died, occupying 17.7 percent to its total population of 335,698. 8,404 complete households were wiped out. [6]

In 1974, future Chinese Premier Li Keqiang was sent to Damiao, Fengyang County as part of Mao Zedong's Down to the Countryside Program.[7] [8] [9] Here, he did manual labour throughout the day and studied for university, Li recounts his days in the county as "hard times". He rose up to the rank of Damiao's Communist Party branch secretary in 1976, before leaving for Peking University in 1978.

Economy

Fengyang County's natural resources include limestone, quartz, marble, vermiculite, and asbestos.

Transportation

Key highways in the county include the G36 Expressway, Anhui Provincial Highway 101, Anhui Provincial Highway 207, Anhui Provincial Highway 307, and Anhui Provincial Highway 310. The Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Rail also passes through the county.

Notable People

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: http://xzqh.org/html/show/ah/7635.html. zh-cn . zh:凤阳县概况地图_行政区划网(区划地名网) www.xzqh.org. XZQH.org. 2020-04-28.
  2. Eric N. Danielson, "The Ming Ancestor Tomb ". China Heritage Quarterly, No. 16, December 2008.
  3. http://history.cultural-china.com/en/46H202H6853.html Huangling Mausoleum of the Ming Dynasty
  4. http://www1.chinaculture.org/library/2003-09/24/content_32574.htm Zhongdu Imperial City of Ming and Stone Tablets in Imperial Mausoleum
  5. Web site: http://xzqh.org/html/show/ah/7634.html. zh-cn . zh:凤阳县历史沿革_行政区划网(区划地名网) www.xzqh.org. XZQH.org. 2020-04-28.
  6. Book: MacFarquhar . Roderick . The Origins of the Cultural Revolution- 3. The Coming of the Cataclysm 1961-1966 . 1997 . 1 . Oxford University Press and Columbia University Press.
  7. Web site: President Xi Jinping and other sent-down youths who are now big names in China. hweepeng@st. 2016-05-15. The Straits Times. en. 2020-04-28.
  8. Web site: Li Keqiang 李克强. March 18, 2018. Brookings Institution. April 28, 2020.
  9. Web site: Li Keqiang -- Premier of China's State Council - Xinhua English.news.cn. https://web.archive.org/web/20180318180625/http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-03/18/c_137048347.htm. dead. March 18, 2018. www.xinhuanet.com. 2020-04-28.