Haiyang | |
Settlement Type: | County-level city |
Pushpin Map: | China Shandong |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Shandong |
Coordinates: | 36.7792°N 121.1681°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | People's Republic of China |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Shandong |
Subdivision Type2: | Prefecture-level city |
Subdivision Name2: | Yantai |
Seat Type: | Municipal seat |
Area Footnotes: | [1] |
Area Total Km2: | 1886 |
Population As Of: | 2017 |
Population Total: | 658,000 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Timezone: | China Standard |
Utc Offset: | +8 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 265100 |
Haiyang, is a coastal city in the Shandong province in eastern China, located on the Yellow Sea (southern) coast of the Shandong Peninsula. It is a county-level city under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Yantai.
Haiyang is a popular tourist destination known for its national parks, wetland reserves, yachting and beaches. On December 2, 2006, the Olympic Council of Asia in Doha announced the selection of Haiyang as the host city for the 2012 Asian Beach Games. Haiyang is the site of the new Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant.[2] Haiyang is the hometown of writer Sun Junqing (Chinese: 孙俊卿),[3] whose 1962 work about the hope for a better year of farming in 1963 after the Great Chinese Famine is part of the Putonghua Proficiency Test.[4]
As of 2012, Haiyang administers four subdistricts and 9 towns:[5]
Name | Chinese (S) | Hanyu Pinyin | |
---|---|---|---|
Subdistricts | |||
Chinese: 东村街道 | Dōngcūn Jiēdào | ||
Chinese: 方圆街道 | Fāngyuán Jiēdào | ||
Chinese: 凤城街道 | Fèngchéng Jiēdào | ||
Chinese: 龙山街道 | Lóngshān Jiēdào | ||
Towns | |||
Chinese: 里店镇 | Lǐdiàn Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 小纪镇 | Xiǎojǐ Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 行村镇 | Xíngcūn zhèn | ||
Chinese: 辛安镇 | Xīn'ān Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 留格庄镇 | Liúgézhuāng Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 盘石镇 | Pánshí Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 朱吴镇 | Zhūwú Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 发城镇 | Fāchéng Zhèn | ||
Chinese: 郭城镇 | Guōchéng Zhèn |
Haiyang was first settled with Laiyi people, one of the peripheral Chinese ethnic minorities, some 2,300 years ago, and was annexed into China proper over centuries of dynasty rule and wars. Haiyang was, consecutively, under administration of Qi Kingdom in Warring period, Jiaodong Province in Qin dynasty, Laizhou Prefecture in Tang, Song, and Yuan dynasties, and Dengzhou Prefecture in Ming dynasty.
In 1389, Dasongwei Fortress, one of the nine coastal fortresses of the time to guard against Japanese invasion and pirate attacks, was set up to govern (both administratively and militarily) the area known today as Haiyang. In 1734, Dasongwei Fortress was officially renamed as Haiyang, which name is still used today for the land covering the south coast of Shandong Peninsula, with an area of more than 3,000 kilometers. In 1947, the newly founded communist government cut off the eastern land of Haiyang to create another county of Rushan, and since then, Haiyang's 1,886 kilometer area forms a shape that resembles a flying phoenix towards the Pacific Ocean.
From the late 19th century until World War I, Haiyang was a strategic town on the route between the two European settlements of Qingdao and Weihaiwei, respectively taken by Germany in 1898 and Britain in 1898 on a lease basis, and commercial and trade activities were active until 1947 when the communist troops took over.
Haiyang Port is one of the pivotal ports along the south coastline of Shandong Peninsula with sea routes connecting to Korea, Japan and southern Chinese ports. In May 1860, the French Navy tried to land so they could take the fortress, but their invasion attempt failed. In August 1947, the government troops retreated from the port towards Qingdao after a defeat by the communists. In April 1963, the Taiwan-based Chinese nationalist troops tried to land to take back the city and all the troops were defeated and captured by the Chinese paramilitaries. Haiyang Port is one of the trade ports for the peninsula with active export-oriented manufacturies, and is administratively under Qingdao Customs and Port Authorities.
Due to natural gas shortages, the Chinese government implemented a 5-year plan in 2017 to convert half of northern China to clean energy for winter heating.[6] By the end of 2019 the Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant provided heating to 700,000 square meters of housing via non-radioactive steam, with the entire city expected to follow by 2021. This is anticipated to save 23,200 tons of coal each year,[7] and more than 60,000 tons of fossil fuel emissions.[8]
Haiyang is nicknamed the West Pacific Paradise, partially due to its literal meaning of the city name, which means Ocean and Sun. With the Laoshan mountain range in the northwest, and the Kunyu mountain range in the northeast, Haiyang has some of the most popular facilities of beach sporting and leisure resorts in the area, including, but not limited to, Tiger Beach Golf Courses, Yachting Clubs, sailing events, Sand Carving Parks, Beach Volleyball Club, Beach Basketball Club, Music Festival, Japanese Village, seaview gardens and terrains, Phoenix Wetland Reserve, National Forest Park, and Coast Film Park. Rocky Islands, some 80 kilometers off the shore is another vacation resort of the city.
The city is a prime destination for beach sports with its 230 kilometer coastline, and topographically is quite similar to Scotland. In the past decade, this city has quickly become one of the top summer resorts and vacation getaways in China, and in northeast Asia in general.
Haiyang hosted the 2012 Asian Beach Games, the first ever to be held in China, which was announced by the Olympic Council of Asia in Doha on 2 December 2006.
As of September 2019, Haiyang is twinned with Cranberry Township in Butler County, Pennsylvania.[9]