Shilin Yi Autonomous County Explained

Shilin Yi Autonomous County
Settlement Type:Autonomous County
Etymology:Stone Forest
Nickname:Hometown of Ashima
Pushpin Map:Yunnan
Pushpin Label:Shilin
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the seat in Yunnan
Coordinates:24.772°N 103.291°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:China
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Yunnan
Subdivision Type2:Prefecture-level city
Subdivision Name2:Kunming
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1956
Seat Type:County seat
Seat:Lufu Subdistrict
Leader Party:CPC
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:1,680.09
Elevation M:1,668
Population As Of:2020 census
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:240827
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone1:CST
Utc Offset1:+8
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:652200
Area Code Type:Phone code
Area Code:(0)692

Shilin Yi Autonomous County (: Sani: [[File:石林彝族自治县彝文.png|70px]]) is an autonomous county, under the jurisdiction of Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, China.

Etymology

Lunan Yi Autonomous County (Chinese: {{linktext|路|南|彝|族|自|治|县) is the former name of Shilin, and usually be called for short as Lunan County (Chinese: 路南县). The name of "Lunan" was first appeared in 1275, Yuan dynasty, when the administrative division of Lunan Zhou (Chinese: 路南州) established.[3] The name Lunan means "South of Middle Lu (Chinese: 中路)".[4] But in 1998, another said of the word's origin meaning was proposed when Lunan County apply for change the name to Shilin. The research shows "Lunan" means "South People (the most inferior people in Yuan dynasty citizen system) in Chengjiang Lu", it is a discriminatory name.[5] Finally Lunan County was changed the name to Shilin, which means "stone forest", also is a famous tourist site in the county.

History

Archaeological research show that as early as 800,000 years ago, humans began to settle in this region.[5] Shilin area was dominated by Liangzhou (Chinese: 梁州) in Shang dynasty, and was governed by Chu Kingdom and Dian Kingdom in Warring States period.[6] In 111 BC, the Han dynasty established counties in Yunnan area, and Shilin belonged to Tangao county (Chinese: 谈稿县), Zangke Jun (Chinese: 牂牁郡)[7] (another said Lügao County (Chinese: 律高县), Yizhou Jun (Chinese: 益州郡)[8]). After Zhuge Liang marched to the south, Shilin was conquered and still by governed by Tangao County, Jianning Jun (Chinese: 建宁郡).[9] In the Southern Dynasties it was dominated by Cuanman clans, and in early Tang dynasty it was under the jurisdiction of Quanma County (Chinese: 泉麻县) and Longdi County (Chinese: 陇堤县) in Nanning Prefecture (Chinese: 南宁州).[7] [8] In Nanzhao and Dali period it was under the rule of Tuodong Jiedu (Chinese: 拓东节度) and Shanchan Fu (Chinese: 鄯阐府),[10] later under Shicheng County (Chinese: 石城郡).[11] In 742, Salü City (Chinese: 撒吕城) was built on Mount Xuedi (Chinese: 学地山) in today's Shilin urban,[12] which can be seen as the establishment of the county seat today.[13] In 1255 Möngke Khan established Luomeng Wanhufu (Chinese: 落蒙万户府),[7] and implemented tusi system here. In 1270, Luomeng and other two Wanhufu compounded to Middle Lu Zongguanfu (Chinese: 中路总管府).[12] The Zongguanfu was separated to two Lu, Shilin was Lunan Zhou under Chengjiang Lu.[3] Sani Qin clan is the tusi of Lunan Zhou. Lunan surrendered to Ming dynasty in 1382 and still by governed by Chengjiang Fu.[12]

Administrative divisions

Shilin County is divided to 3 subdistricts, 3 towns and 1 township:

Lufu Subdistrict (鹿阜街道), Shilin Subdistrict (石林街道), Banqiao Subdistrict (板桥街道), Xijiekou Town (西街口镇), Changhu Town (长湖镇), Guishan Town (圭山镇) and Dake Township (大可乡).

Natural sites

The Shilin (Stone Forest), a set of remarkable karst formations, is part of the South China Karst, inscribed in 2007 on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Dadieshui Waterfall is the largest waterfall in Yunnan province, located at the southwest of county urban.

Solarpower station

See also, Solar power in China

A large-scale solar power station in Shilin County had started construction on December 6, 2008. With a total installed capacity of 166 megawatts, the power station will be the largest experiment demonstration grid-connected solar photovoltaic power station in China.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Li Cheng (李赪) . 2012 . zh:《云南统计年鉴2017》 . Statistical Yearbook of Yunnan 2017 . zh-hans . . China Statistics Press . 978-7-5037-8267-1.
  2. Web site: 昆明市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报 . Government of Kunming . zh . 2021-06-07 .
  3. Book: Zhou Zhenhe . Zhou Zhenhe . Li Zhi'an (李治安) . Xue Lei (薛磊) . 2009 . zh:《中国行政区划通史·元代卷》 . History of Administrative Divisions of China · Yuan Dynasty Volume . zh-hans . . Fudan University Press . 978-7-3090-5601-3.
  4. Book: Niu Ruchen (牛汝辰) . 2016 . zh:《中国地名掌故词典》 . History of Administrative Divisions of China · Yuan Dynasty Volume . zh-hans . . China Social Press . 978-7-5087-5238-9.
  5. Book: 石林彝族自治县志编纂委员会 . 2006 . zh:《石林彝族自治县志1989—2000》 . Annals of Shilin Yi Autonomous County (1989-2000). zh-hans . . Yunnan Nationalities Publishing House . 7-5367-3448-4.
  6. Book: 石林彝族自治县史志办公室 . 2009 . zh:《云南石林旧志集成》 . Compilation of Historical Annals of Shilin, Yunnan. zh-hans . . Yunnan Nationalities Publishing House . 978-7-5367-3984-0.
  7. Book: Li Yan (李埏) . 2001 . zh:《不自小斋文存》. zh-hans . . . 7-222-03309-2.
  8. Book: Ma Biao (马标) . 1917 . zh:《云南省路南县志》 . Annals of Lunan County, Yunnan Province. zh-hans .
  9. Book: 石林彝族自治县史志办公室 . 2017 . zh:《石林年鉴 2017》 . Yearbook of Shilin 2017 . zh-hans . . Yunnan Nationalities Publishing House . 978-7-5367-7599-2.
  10. Book: Shao Xianshu (邵献书) . 1990 . zh:《南诏和大理国》 . Nanzhao and Dali Kingdom. zh-hans . . Jinlin Education Publishing House . 7-5383-1128-9.
  11. Book: Duan Yuming (段玉明) . 2003 . zh:《大理国史》 . History of Dali Kingdom. zh-hans . . Yunnan Nationalities Publishing House . 978-7-5367-2480-8.
  12. Book: 昆明市路南彝族自治县志编纂委员会 . 1996 . zh:《路南彝族自治县志》 . Annals of Lunan Yi Autonomous County. zh-hans . . Yunnan Nationalities Publishing House . 7-5367-1294-4.
  13. Book: 《石林彝族自治县概况》编写组 . 2007 . zh:《石林彝族自治县概况》 . Overview of Shilin Yi Autonomous County. zh-hans . . . 978-7-1050-8540-8.
  14. Web site: The World Renewable Energy Association (WoREA).