Hotan Explained

Hotan
Other Name:Khotan, Hetian, Gosthana
Settlement Type:County-level city
Pushpin Map:Xinjiang#China#Continental Asia
Pushpin Relief:yes
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Xinjiang
Coordinates:37.1167°N 134°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:China
Subdivision Type1:Autonomous region
Subdivision Name1:Xinjiang
Subdivision Type2:Prefecture
Subdivision Name2:Hotan
Subdivision Type3:Township-level divisions
Seat Type:Municipal seat
Seat:Nurbagh Subdistrict
Area Total Km2:465.84
Elevation M:1382
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:501,028
Population As Of:2020
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Demographics
Demographics1 Title1:Ethnic groups
Demographics1 Title2:Spoken languages
Demographics1 Info2:Uyghur, Mandarin Chinese
Timezone1:China Standard
Utc Offset1:+8
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:839000
Area Code:0903
Blank Name:GDP (Nominal)[2]
Blank Info:2018
Blank1 Name:– Total
Blank1 Info:¥8.274 billion
$1.247 billion
Blank2 Name:– Per Capita
Blank2 Info:¥20,399
$3,076
Blank3 Name:– Growth
Blank3 Info: 7.1%
Blank4 Name:License plate prefix
Blank4 Info:新R

Hotan or Khotan (see also § Etymology) is a major oasis town in southwestern Xinjiang, an autonomous region in Northwestern China. The city proper of Hotan broke off from the larger Hotan County to become an administrative area in its own right in August 1984. It is the seat of Hotan Prefecture.

With a population of 408,900 (2018 census),[3] Hotan is situated in the Tarim Basin some southwest of the regional capital, Ürümqi. It lies just north of the Kunlun Mountains, which are crossed by the Sanju, Hindutash and Ilchi passes. The town, located southeast of Yarkant County and populated almost exclusively by Uyghurs, is a minor agricultural center. An important station on the southern branch of the historic Silk Road, Hotan has always depended on two strong rivers, the Karakash River and the White Jade River, to provide the water needed to survive on the southwestern edge of the vast Taklamakan Desert. The White Jade River still provides water and irrigation for the town and oasis.[4] [5]

Etymology

Hotan (or Khotan) and its surrounding area were originally known as Godana in ancient Sanskrit cosmological texts.[6] The Chinese transcribed the name as Chinese: 于窴, pronounced Gudana in Middle Chinese (Yutian in modern Standard Chinese); the pronunciation eventually morphed into Khotan. In the 7th century, the Chinese Buddhist monk and scholar Xuanzang attempted to remedy this lexical change. Xuanzang, who was well-versed in Sanskrit, proposed that the traditional name was in fact Kustana (Sanskrit: गौस्तन) and asserted it meant "breast of the earth". However, this was likely borrowed from the Tibetan name for the region, Gosthana, which means "land of cows". It is therefore most likely that the original name of Hotan was Sanskritic in origin, a consequence of ancient Indian settlement in the region.[7]

An alternative etymology is proposed by Harold Walter Bailey, an expert in the Khotanese language. He believes the oldest indigenous name to be Hvatana.[8]

Hotan was known to 19th-century European explorers as Ilchi.

The official Uyghur-to-Latin transliteration, and therefore English spelling, of the modern city's name is "Hotan" according to the Register of Chinese Geographic Places.[9] The Hanyu pinyin romanization Hetian has also been used on some maps and by some airports. The city's former Chinese name was written with a different character for "tian" .

History

The oasis of Hotan is strategically located at the junction of the southern (and most ancient) branch of the Silk Road joining China and the West with one of the main routes from ancient India and Tibet to Central Asia and distant China. It provided a convenient meeting place where not only goods, but technologies, philosophies, and religions were transmitted from one culture to another.

Tocharians lived in this region over 2000 years ago. Several of the Tarim mummies were found in the region. At Sampul, east of the city of Hotan, there is an extensive series of cemeteries scattered over an area about wide and 23km (14miles) long. The excavated sites range from about 300 BCE to 100 CE. The excavated graves have produced a number of fabrics of felt, wool, silk and cotton and even a fine bit of tapestry, the Sampul tapestry, showing the face of Caucasoid man which was made of threads of 24 shades of color. The tapestry had been cut up and fashioned into trousers worn by one of the deceased. An Anthropological study of 56 individuals showed a primarily Caucasoid population.[10] [11] A study in 2010 showed that an Eastern Eurasian lineage common in Siberia dominates the mitochondrial DNA of the mummies from the Xiaohe Cemetery. Their Y chromosome is distributed throughout Eastern Europe, South Asia, Central Asia, and Siberia.[12]

There is a relative abundance of information on Hotan readily available for study. The main historical sources are to be found in the Chinese histories (particularly detailed during the Han[13] and early Tang dynasties) when China was interested in control of the Western Regions, the accounts of several Chinese pilgrim monks,[14] a few Buddhist histories of Hotan that have survived in Classical Tibetan and a large number of documents in the Iranian Saka language and other languages discovered, for the most part, early this century at various sites in the Tarim Basin and from the hidden library at the Mogao Caves near Dunhuang.

Indo-Greek Khotan

In the Hellenistic period, there was an Indo-Greek colony in Khotan.[15]

Buddhist Khotan

See main article: Kingdom of Khotan. The ancient Kingdom of Khotan was one of the earliest Buddhist states in the world and a cultural bridge across which Buddhist culture and learning were transmitted from India to China.[16] Its capital was located to the west of the modern city of Hotan. The inhabitants of the Kingdom of Khotan, like those of early Kashgar and Yarkant, spoke Saka, one of the Eastern Iranian languages. Khotan's indigenous dynasty (all of whose royal names are Indian in origin) governed a fervently Buddhist city-state boasting some 400 temples in the late 9th/early 10th century—four times the number recorded by Xuanzang around 630. The kingdom was independent but was intermittently under Chinese control during the Han and Tang dynasties.

After the Tang dynasty, Khotan formed an alliance with the rulers of Dunhuang. Khotan enjoyed close relations with the Buddhist centre at Dunhuang: the Khotanese royal family intermarried with Dunhuang élites, visited and patronized Dunhuang's Buddhist temple complex, and donated money to have their portraits painted on the walls of the Mogao grottos. Through the 10th century, Khotanese royal portraits were painted in association with an increasing number of deities in the caves. Besides this, a particular site, Melikawat functioned as a major Buddhist center in the Kingdom of Khotan.

In the 10th century, Khotan began a struggle with the Kara-Khanid Khanate, a Turkic state.[17] The Kara-Khanid ruler, Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan, had converted to Islam:

Some Khotanese Buddhist works were unearthed.[18] [19] [20]

The rulers of Khotan were aware of the menace they faced since they arranged for the Mogao grottoes to paint a growing number of divine figures along with themselves. Halfway in the 10th century Khotan came under attack by the Qarakhanid ruler Musa, and in what proved to be a pivotal moment in the Turkification and Islamification of the Tarim Basin, the Karakhanid leader Yusuf Qadir Khan conquered Khotan around 1006.[21]

Islamic Khotan

Yūsuf Qadr Khān was a brother or cousin of the Muslim ruler of Kashgar and Balasagun, Khotan lost its independence and between 1006 and 1165, became part of the Kara-Khanid Khanate. Later it fell to the Kara-Khitan Khanate, after which it was ruled by the Mongols.

When Marco Polo visited Khotan in the 13th century, he noted that the people were all Muslim. He wrote that:

Qing period

The Qing dynasty of China conquered the Dzungar Khanate during the final stage of the Dzungar–Qing Wars in the late 1750s. By 1760, Hotan became the territory of the Qing dynasty along with the rest of Xinjiang.[22] The town suffered severely during the Dungan Revolt (1862–1877) against the Qing rule and again a few years later when Yaqub Beg of Kashgar made himself master of Kashgaria,[23] [24] ruling the newly founded Turkic state known at the time as Yettishar.[25] [26] However, Xinjiang was reconquered by the Qing dynasty by 1877 and was converted into a province in 1884.

Post-Qing

Qing imperial authority collapsed in 1912. During the Republican era in China, warlords and local ethnic self-determination movements wrestled over control of Xinjiang. Abdullah Bughra, Nur Ahmad Jan Bughra, and Muhammad Amin Bughra declared themselves Emirs of Khotan during the Kumul Rebellion. Tunganistan was an independent administered region in the southern part of Xinjiang from 1934 to 1937. The territory included the oases of the southern Tarim Basin; the centre of the region was Khotan. Beginning with the Islamic rebellion in 1937, Hotan and the rest of the province came under the control of warlord Sheng Shicai. Sheng was later ousted by the Kuomintang.

People's Republic of China

Shortly after the Communists won the civil war in 1949, Hotan was incorporated into the People's Republic of China.

In 1983/4, the urban area of Hotan was administratively split from the larger Hotan County, and from then on governed as a county-level city.[27]

On July 11, 2006, the townships of Jiya and Yurungqash (Yulongkashi) in Lop County and Tusalla (Tushala) in Hotan County were transferred to Hotan City.

Following the July 2009 Ürümqi riots, ethnic tensions rose in Xinjiang and in Hotan in particular. As a result, the city has seen occasional bouts of violence. In June 2011, Hotan opened its first passenger-train service to Kashgar, which was established as a special economic zone following the riots. In July of the same year, a bomb and knife attack occurred on the city's central thoroughfare. In June 2011, authorities in Hotan Prefecture sentenced Uyghur Muslim Hebibullah Ibrahim to ten years imprisonment for selling "illegal religious materials".[28] [29] In June 2012, Tianjin Airlines Flight 7554 was hijacked en route from Hotan to Ürümqi.

In a report from the Uyghur American Association, in June 2012, notice was said to be given that police planned to undertake a search of every residence in Gujanbagh (Gujiangbage), Hotan. Hotan is the last municipality in Xinjiang with a majority Ugyhur presence in the core of the city. The UAA viewed this as an attempt to systematically intimidate the Uyghur population in Hotan.[30]

The Sultanim Cemetery (37.1172°N 79.9344°W) in central Hotan was a historical Uyghur graveyard that also included a religious shrine. According to a 2019 interview by the Uyghur Human Rights Project, the cemetery entombed four commanders of Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan, who conquered the city around 960 CE and spread Islam. Due to space limitations after over a thousand years of burials, multiple bodies had to reuse the same grave, and additionals layers were dug underneath old ones.[31] Between 2018 and 2019, the cemetery was demolished and the western part of the land turned into a parking lot.[32] [33] [34] [35]

Geography and climate

Hotan has a temperate zone, cold desert climate (Köppen BWk), with a mean annual total of only 36.5mm of precipitation falling on 17.3 days of the year. Due to its southerly location in Xinjiang just north of the Kunlun Mountains, during winter it is one of the warmest locations in the region, with average high temperatures remaining above freezing throughout the year. The monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from NaN°C in January to 25.8°C in July, and the annual mean is 13.03°C. The diurnal temperature variation is not large for a desert, averaging annually. Although no month averages less than half of possible sunshine, the city only receives 2,587 hours of bright sunshine annually, which is on the low end for Xinjiang; monthly percent possible sunshine ranges from 50% in March to 75% in October.

Administrative divisions

The city includes four subdistricts, three towns, five townships and two other areas:[36] [37] [38]

NameSimplified ChineseHanyu PinyinUyghur (UEY)Uyghur Latin (ULY)Administrative division codeNotes
Subdistricts
Nurbagh Subdistrict
(Nurbag)
Chinese: 努尔巴格街道
(Chinese: 奴尔巴格街道[39])
Uighur; Uyghur: نۇرباغ كوچا باشقارمىسى653201001
Gujanbagh SubdistrictChinese: 古江巴格街道Uighur; Uyghur: گۇجانباغ كوچا باشقارمىسى653201002
Gulbagh SubdistrictChinese: 古勒巴格街道Uighur; Uyghur: گۈلباغ كوچا باشقارمىسى653201003
Narbagh SubdistrictChinese: 纳尔巴格街道Uighur; Uyghur: نارباغ كوچا باشقارمىسى653201004
Towns
Laskuy TownChinese: 拉斯奎镇Uighur; Uyghur: لاسكۇي بازىرى653201100
Yurungqash Town[40] Chinese: 玉龙喀什镇Uighur; Uyghur: يۇرۇڭقاش بازىرى653201101
Tusalla TownChinese: 吐沙拉镇Uighur; Uyghur: تۇساللا بازىرى653201102formerly Tusalla Township (Uighur; Uyghur: تۇساللا يېزىسى, Chinese: 吐沙拉乡)
Townships
Shorbagh TownshipChinese: 肖尔巴格乡Uighur; Uyghur: شورباغ يېزىسى653201200
Ilchi TownshipChinese: 伊里其乡Uighur; Uyghur: ئىلچى يېزىسى653201201
Gujanbagh TownshipChinese: 古江巴格乡Uighur; Uyghur: گۇجانباغ يېزىسى653201202
Jiya TownshipChinese: 吉亚乡Uighur; Uyghur: جىيا يېزىسى653201204
Aqchal TownshipChinese: 阿克恰勒乡Uighur; Uyghur: ئاقچال يېزىسى653201205

Others:

Demographics

Hotan is largely dominated by the Uyghurs, and as of 2015, 311,050 of the 348,289 residents of the county were Uyghur, 35,897 were Han Chinese and 1,342 were from other ethnic groups.[41]

In 1940, Owen Lattimore quoted the population of Khotan to be estimated as 26,000.[42]

In 1998 the urban population was recorded at 154,352, 83% of which were Uyghurs, and 17% were Han Chinese.[43]

In 1999, 83.01% of the population was Uyghur and 16.57% of the population was Han Chinese.[44]

In the 2000 census, the population was recorded as 186,123. In the 2010 census figure, the figure had risen to 322,300. The increase in population is partly due to boundary changes.[45]

Transportation

Air

Hetian Kungang Airport (IATA: HTN) serves the city. It serves regional flights to Ürümqi. Originally a military use airport, it was expanded significantly in 2002 to accommodate higher passenger volumes. It is located 12km (07miles) south of the city proper.

Road

Hotan is served by China National Highway 315, which runs along the southern Tarim Basin from Ruoqiang to Kashgar, and the Trans-Taklamakan Desert Highway, which run north to Luntai. An expressway is being built between Hotan and Karakax County (Moyu) as of 2014.

Rail

Hotan is connected to the rest of China's rail network via the Kashgar–Hotan Railway, which opened to freight traffic in December 2010, and passenger service in June 2011. The railway station was constructed by a company under the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, and is located in the town of Lasqi (Chinese: 拉斯奎) northwest of the city proper. Passenger train service on this line is limited, with only one train per day, local service 5828/5825, linking the city with Kashgar (8~ hours) and Ürümqi (~34 hours).

Buses

Regular bus services link Hotan with Kashgar. There is also an express bus to Aksu via the 430km (270miles) 'Hotan-Aksu Cross-Desert Highway' which was opened in 2007, travels alongside the intermittent Hotan River, and which takes about 5 or 6 hours. This same bus then goes on to Urumchi taking a total of about 21 hours from Hotan.[46]

Economy

, there was about 100,000 acres (662,334 mu) of cultivated land in Khotan.[47]

Nephrite jade

Chinese historical sources indicate that Hotan was the main source of the nephrite jade used in ancient China. For several hundred years, until they were defeated by the Xiongnu in 176 BCE, the trade of Khotanese jade into China was controlled by the nomadic Yuezhi. The Chinese still refer to the Yurungkash as the White Jade River, alluding to the white jade recovered from its alluvial deposits. The light-colored jade is called "Mutton fat" jade. Most of the jade is now gone, with only a few kilos of good quality jade found yearly. Some is still mined in the Kunlun Mountains to the south in the summer,[48] but it is generally of poorer quality than that found in the rivers.[49] [50]

Fabrics and carpets

Khotanese textiles were mentioned by Xuanzang, who visited the oasis in 644 CE. In his Biography it is stated: "It produced carpets and fine felt, and the felt-makers also spun coarse and fine silk."[51]

Ancient Chinese-Khotanese relations were so close that the oasis emerged as one of the earliest centres of silk manufacture outside China. There are good reasons to believe that the silk-producing industry flourished in Hotan as early as the 5th century.[52] According to one story, a Chinese princess given in marriage to a Khotan prince brought to the oasis the secret of silk-manufacture, "hiding silkworms in her hair as part of her dowry", probably in the first half of the 1st century CE.[53] [54] It was from Khotan that the eggs of silkworms were smuggled to Iran, reaching Justinian I's Constantinople in 551.[55] Silk production is still a major industry employing more than a thousand workers and producing some 150 million metres of silk annually. Silk weaving by Uyghur women is a thriving cottage industry, some of it produced using traditional methods.

Atlas is the fabric used for traditional Uyghur clothing worn by Uyghur women. It is soft, light and graceful tie-dyed silk fabric. It comes various colors, the brighter and rich colors are for small children to young ladies. The gray and dark colors are for elderly women.

The oldest piece of kilim which we have any knowledge was obtained by the archaeological explorer Aurel Stein; a fragment from an ancient settlement near Hotan, which was buried by sand drifts about the fourth century CE. The weave is almost identical with that of modern kilims.

Hotanese pile carpets are still highly prized and form an important export.[56] [57]

Notable persons

See also

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: China: Xīnjiāng (Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map. www.citypopulation.de.
  2. Web site: 12 November 2019. (新疆)2018年和田市国民经济和社会发展统计公报. 12 March 2021. zh.
  3. China Population: Xinjiang: Hotan: Hetian City https://www.ceicdata.com/en/china/population-county-level-region/population-xinjiang-hotan-hetian-city
  4. [Marc Aurel Stein]
  5. Bonavia, Judy. The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar. Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), pp. 306-319. Odyssey Publications. .
  6. The Philippines. Public Policy and National Economic Development. By Frank Golay. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1961. Xviii, 455. Map, Tables, Index, Bibliographic Essay. 10.2307/2049929. 2049929. The Journal of Asian Studies. 22. 1. 114–116. Higgins. Benjamin. November 1962.
  7. Book: Wang . Bangwei . Sen . Tansen. India and China: Interactions through Buddhism and Diplomacy: A Collection of Essays by Professor Prabodh Chandra Bagchi . Anthem Press . 2011 . 186 . 9780857288219 .
  8. Book: Bailey, Harold W.. The Culture of the Sakas in Ancient Iranian Khotan. Caravan Books. 1982. 0-88206-053-8. 2–3.
  9. (中国地名录, published in Beijing, SinoMaps Press Chinese: 中国地图出版社 1997; ; p. 312.)
  10. Mallory, J. P. and Mair, Victor H. 2000. The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West, pp. 132, 155-156. Thames & Hudson. London. .
  11. Bonavia, Judy. The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar. Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), p. 317. Odyssey Publications. .
  12. Chunxiang Li . Hongjie Li . Yinqiu Cui . Chengzhi Xie . Dawei Cai . Wenying Li . Victor H Mair . Zhi Xu . Quanchao Zhang . Idelis Abuduresule . Li Jin . Hong Zhu . Hui Zhou . Evidence that a West-East admixed population lived in the Tarim Basin as early as the early Bronze Age . BMC Biology . 8 . 15 . 15. 2010. 20163704 . 2838831 . 10.1186/1741-7007-8-15 . free .
  13. Hill (2015), Vol. I, "The Kingdom of Yutian 于窴 (Khotan)", pp. 17-19 and nn.
  14. Web site: 《大唐大慈恩寺三藏法師傳》. https://web.archive.org/web/20130527054103/http://cbeta.org/result/T50/T50n2053.htm. dead. May 27, 2013.
  15. Christopoulos . Lucas . August 2021 . Hellenes and Romans in Ancient China . Sino-Platonic Papers . 230.
  16. Web site: Khotan - Britannica Online Encyclopedia . Britannica.com . 2012-04-06.
  17. Web site: Error. www.ihp.sinica.edu.tw. 5 April 2018.
  18. Mark J. Dresden, The Jatakastava or 'Praise of the Buddha's Former Births' Philadelphia, 1955
  19. Web site: TITUS Texts: Corpus of Khotanese Saka Texts: Frame. Jost. Gippert. titus.uni-frankfurt.de. 5 April 2018.
  20. Web site: 賢愚經. https://web.archive.org/web/20141122183929/http://www.cbeta.org/result/T04/T04n0202.htm. dead. November 22, 2014.
  21. Book: James A. Millward. Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang. 2007. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-13924-3. 55–.
  22. Book: Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland. 57. S. Frederick Starr. 2015. Taylor & Francis . 9781317451372.
  23. Web site: Stein . Aurel M. . 1907 . Ancient Khotan: Detailed report of archaeological explorations in Chinese Turkestan, 2 vols., p. 180. Clarendon Press. Oxford .
  24. Bonavia, Judy. The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar. Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), p. 309. Odyssey Publications. .
  25. Web site: China's Uighur Strategy and South Asian Risk. 29 January 2019. 30 April 2020. Samah Ibrahim. Future Directions International. The creation of the Islamic State of Yettishar (1865 – 1878), with its capital at Kashgar, which is in present-day Xinjiang, came about as the result of a series of uprisings in Xinjiang.. 30 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210930114054/https://www.futuredirections.org.au/publication/chinas-uighur-strategy-and-south-asian-risk/. dead.
  26. Book: Soviet Russia and Tibet: The Debarcle of Secret Diplomacy, 1918-1930s. Google Books. Alexandre Andreyev. 2003. 16. BRILL . 9004129529.
  27. Book: 夏征农. 陈至立. zh:辞海:第六版彩图本 . Cihai (Sixth Edition in Color) . September 2009. 上海. Shanghai. 上海辞书出版社. Shanghai Lexicographical Publishing House.. 9787532628599. zh. 866. Chinese: 和田地区行署驻此。{....
  28. Web site: CHINA (INCLUDES TIBET, HONG KONG, AND MACAU) 2012 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT. International Religious Freedom Report. 10, 11. Internet Archive.
  29. Web site: Uyghur Jailed Over Religious Materials. Radio Free Asia. 19 June 2012. 22 January 2020. Luisetta Mudie. Qiao Long . Luisetta Mudie. Authorities in the city of Hotan in the ethnically troubled Xinjiang region have handed a 10-year jail term to a Uyghur man convicted of selling "illegal religious materials" ahead of a sensitive anniversary. The sentence was passed on Sunday by the Hotan Municipal People's Court on Hebibullah Ibrahim, the People's Daily online news site reported..
  30. Web site: Notice informs locals of mandatory residence searches in Hotan community; police reserve the right to "use force" to enter homes. 18 June 2012. 7 May 2020. Uyghur American Association.
  31. Web site: Demolishing Faith: The Destruction and Desecration of Uyghur Mosques and Shrines. Bahram K. Sintash. Uyghur Human Rights Project. 24–25. October 2019. 11 August 2020. The Sultanim Cemetery has a history of over 1,000 years. King Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan of the Kara-Khanid Khanate (999–1211) conquered Hotan (the Buddhist Kingdom Udun at that time), and spread Islam around 960 AD. During the conquest, four Kara-khan commanders, including Prince Sultan Kilich Khan, were killed and Muslims buried them at this location. Since then, the cemetery has been known as Sultanim Maziri (My Sultan Shrine) and became one of the most important cemeteries among Uyghur Muslims who have paid their respects here for over 1,000 years. In the center, the four commanders’ graves were still there until China completely bulldozed the entire cemetery in 2019. Many religious leaders, scholars and other important people in Hotan's far and recent history have been buried in this cemetery..
  32. Web site: More than 100 Uyghur graveyards demolished by Chinese authorities, satellite images show. 3 January 2020. 11 August 2020. CNN. Matt Rivers. The Sultanim Cemetery in the center of Hotan City is one of the most famous ancient cemeteries in Xinjiang. It was destroyed between January to March 2019..
  33. News: In China, every day is Kristallnacht. 3 November 2019. 10 August 2020. Washington Post. Fred Hiatt. Before After
    Cemetery demolished
    The site of Sultanim cemetery in Hotan, Xinjiang, in December, 2018 and March 2019..
  34. Web site: Xinjiang Authorities Construct Parking Lot Atop Historic Uyghur Cemetery. 1 May 2020. 5 May 2020. Radio Free Asia. Kurban Niyaz . Joshua Lipes.
  35. Web site: US: China Targets Uighur Mosques to Eradicate Minority's Faith. 1 December 2019. 11 August 2020. Voice of America. Asim Kashgarian. 37°7′2.13″N 79°56′2.96″E
    Satellite imagery with a comparative analysis of Sultanim Cemetery in Hotan city, in China's northwest Xinjiang province..
  36. Web site: http://www.xzqh.org/html/show/xj/22441.html. zh:和田市历史沿革 . Hotan City Historical Development . XZQH.org . 2 December 2014 . zh-hans . 20 December 2019 . Chinese: 1984年和田县析置和田市。{....
  37. Web site: http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/tjbz/tjyqhdmhcxhfdm/2018/65/32/653201.html . zh:2018年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码:和田市 . 2018 Statistical Area Numbers and Rural-Urban Area Numbers: Hotan City . zh-hans . . 2018 . 20 December 2019 . Chinese: 统计用区划代码 名称 653201001000 努尔巴格街道办事处 653201002000 古江巴格街道办事处 653201003000 古勒巴格街道办事处 653201004000 纳尔巴格街道办事处 653201100000 拉斯奎镇 653201101000 玉龙喀什镇 653201102000 吐沙拉镇 653201200000 肖尔巴格乡 653201201000 伊里其乡 653201202000 古江巴格乡 653201204000 吉亚乡 653201205000 阿克恰勒乡 653201401000 北京工业园区 653201402000 和田市京和物流园区|.
  38. Web site: https://www.hts.gov.cn/jinrihetian/show.php?itemid=8. zh:和田市概况. zh-hans. 12 December 2018. 20 December 2019. Chinese: 辖6乡2镇,4个街道办事处和1个工业园区. Chinese: 和田市人民政府网.
  39. Web site: https://www.hts.gov.cn/bendixinwen/show.php?itemid=1256. zh:奴尔巴格街道. 25 September 2017. 21 December 2019. zh-hans. Chinese: 和田市人民政府网.
  40. Web site: Full Text: Employment and Labor Rights in Xinjiang. 17 September 2020. 20 September 2020. Xinhua News Agency. huaxia. Yusan Hasan from Yurungqash Town, Hotan City.
  41. Web site: 15 March 2017. zh:3-7 各地、州、市、县(市)分民族人口数. http://www.xjtj.gov.cn/sjcx/tjnj_3415/2016xjtjnj/rkjy/201707/t20170714_539450.html. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20171011101904/http://www.xjtj.gov.cn/sjcx/tjnj_3415/2016xjtjnj/rkjy/201707/t20170714_539450.html. 11 October 2017. 3 September 2017. Uighur; Uyghur: شىنجاڭ ئۇيغۇر ئاپتونوم رايونى Chinese: 新疆维吾尔自治区统计局 Statistic Bureau of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. zh-hans.
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