Minqin County | |
Postal Code: | 733300 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Settlement Type: | County |
Pushpin Map: | China Gansu |
Pushpin Label: | Minqin |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of the seat in Gansu |
Coordinates: | 38.624°N 103.094°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | China |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Gansu |
Subdivision Type2: | Prefecture-level city |
Subdivision Name2: | Wuwei |
Seat Type: | County seat |
Seat: | Sanlei |
Area Total Km2: | 15900 |
Population As Of: | 2020 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Total: | 241400 |
Timezone: | China Standard |
Utc Offset: | +8 |
Minqin County is a county of Gansu province, China. It is under the jurisdiction of Wuwei City. Its postal code is 733300, and its population in 1999 was 281,826 people.
In older literature, today's Minqin is referred to as Zhenfan . According to Pyotr Kozlov, the Mongol name for the city was Sogo Khoto.[1]
Geographically, Minqin county occupies one of Gansu's panhandles, bordering in the north, east, and southeast on the Alashan League of Inner Mongolia.
Historically, Chinese agricultural settlement in the area was made possible by the Shiyang River, flowing from the Qilian Mountains.[2] However, the livelihood of Chinese farmers here was often precarious; in the 1920s it was considered as somewhat of a regular famine district.[3] Large number of Zhenfan people, nicknamed "Sand-hollow Mice", worked as "camel-pullers" with caravans owned by Mongols from the adjacent Alashan, or moved—temporarily or permanently—to Xinjiang. For example, as of 1926, the main population of the small oasis of Santanghu (now, officially, Santanghu (Chinese: 三塘湖乡) in what's today Barkol Kazakh Autonomous County of Xinjiang were migrants from Minqin (Zhenfan) and their descendants.[4]
By the late 20th century, the environmental situation in the Minqin area deteriorated, as smaller amounts of the Shiyang River water reached the area, due to the increased irrigation of use of it upstream. Ground water levels fell, and desertification became a serious threat.[2] Minqin is now identified as one of the major sources of sandstorms in China.[2] [5]
Minqin County is divided to 18 towns.[6]
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