Siming, Xiamen Explained

Siming
Settlement Type:District
Image Map1:ChinaFujianXiamen.png
Map Caption1:Xiamen in Fujian
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:People's Republic of China
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Fujian
Subdivision Type2:Sub-provincial city
Subdivision Name2:Xiamen
Area Total Km2:76
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Total:860000
Coordinates:24.4456°N 118.0827°W
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Postal Code:361001
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Area Code:0592
Website:http://www.siming.gov.cn
Siming
Poj:Si-bêng / Su-bêng
W:Ssu-ming
P:Sīmíng
Former names
Also Known As:Central District
P2:Zhōngxīn Qū
W2:Chung-hsin Ch‘ü
Poj2:Tiong-sin Khu
Altname3:Xiangyang
P3:Xiàngyáng
W3:Hsiang-yang
Poj3:Hiong-iong

Siming District is an urban district of the city of Xiamen, Fujian province, China. It includes the territory of the old town of Xiamen and the government offices of the modern sub-provincial city.

Geography

Siming occupies the southern half of Xiamen Island. It also includes Gulangyu Island to its southwest. The sheltered Yundang Bay responsible for old Xiamen's prized harbor was converted into a lake in the 20th century by the addition of landfill from construction.

History

The modern Siming District includes the territory of the old town of Xiamen, which had its harbor in the sheltered Yundang Bay. The town took the name "Siming" for a brief period in the early Qing when it was occupied by the Southern Ming loyalist Koxinga, who used it from 1650 as a base to launch attacks on the Manchu drive southwards. He abandoned the island in favor of Taiwan when he defeated the Dutch there. The Qing held the city from the early 1660s, restoring its former name. Gulangyu Island, now part of the district, developed as a foreign enclave after Xiamen became a treaty port at the end of the First Opium War in 1842. After the fall of the Qing in 1912, the Republic of China organized the area around Xiamen as Siming County.[1] It was renamed the Central District in October 1945 after its reconquest from the Japanese. Following its capture by the Communists at the end of the Chinese Civil War, it was renamed Siming District in 1950. In April 1953, its "district bureau" (Chinese: 区公所) administration was upgraded to a "people's government" (Chinese: 人民政府). As part of the Cultural Revolution, it was renamed Xiangyang District from August 1966 to October 1979. Along with Huli District to its north, Siming District formed one of the first four special economic zones for foreign investment and trade established by Deng Xiaoping's Opening Up Policy in the early 1980s. Gulangyu Island and Kaiyuan District were merged into Siming in May 2003.

Administration

Before the merge, Siming originally had five local government street offices (Chinese: 街道办事处):

The above five were divided into 58 residential committees (Chinese: 居委会) and two villages, Zengcuo'an (曾厝垵, Tsan-tshu-uann) and Huangcuo (黄厝, Ng-tshu). Xiagang Street was originally a district in 1950.

Today, Siming has ten street offices (Chinese: 街道办事处):

These street offices are divided into 95 residential committees (Chinese: 社区居委会).

Economy

Xiamen Bluebird Cartoon Company (Chinese: 厦门青鸟动画有限公司动画有限公司), which makes the XingXing Fox cartoon, is headquartered in the Amoy Software Park 2 (Chinese: 厦门软件园二期) in Siming District.[2]

External links

Notes and References

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  2. http://www.qndh.com/ Home page