Jiangxi Explained

Jiangxi
Native Name:Chinese: 江西
Settlement Type:Province
Translit Lang1:Name
Translit Lang1 Info:Chinese: 江西省
Translit Lang1 Info1:JX / (; Gan Chinese:)
Mapsize:275px
Map Alt:Map showing the location of Jiangxi Province
Coordinates:27.3°N 116°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:China
Named For:Short for Jiangnanxi Circuit
Seat Type:Capital
Seat:Nanchang
Seat1 Type:Largest City
Seat1:Ganzhou
Parts Type:Divisions
Parts Style:para
P1:11 prefectures
P2:99 counties
P3:1549 townships
Government Type:Province
Governing Body:Jiangxi Provincial People's Congress
Leader Title:CCP Secretary
Leader Name:Yin Hong
Leader Title1:Congress chairman
Leader Name1:Yin Hong
Leader Title2:Governor
Leader Name2:Ye Jianchun
Leader Title3:CPPCC chairman
Leader Name3:vacant
Leader Title4:National People's Congress Representation
Leader Name4:80 deputies
Area Total Km2:166919
Area Rank:18th
Elevation Max M:2158
Elevation Max Point:Mt. Huanggang
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:45,188,635
Population As Of:2020
Population Rank:13th
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Rank:16th
Demographics Type1:Demographics
Demographics1 Title1:Ethnic composition
Demographics1 Info1:Han – 99.7%
She – 0.2%
Demographics1 Title2:Languages and dialects
Demographics1 Info2:Gan, Hakka, Huizhou, Wu, Jianghuai Mandarin
Demographics Type2:GDP [2]
Demographics2 Title1:Total
Demographics2 Info1:CN¥ 3,220 billion (15th)
US$ 457 billion
Demographics2 Title2:Per capita
Demographics2 Info2:CN¥ 71,216 (21th)
US$ 10,106
Iso Code:CN-JX
Blank Info Sec2:0.741[3] (high) (19th)
Official Name:Province of Jiangxi
Pic:Jiangxi (Chinese characters).svg
Piccap:"Jiangxi" in Chinese characters
Picupright:0.45
Psp:Kiangsi
L:"Western Jiang[nan]"
P:Jiāngxī
Gr:Jiangshi
Bpmf:ㄐㄧㄤ   ㄒㄧ
W:Chiang1-hsi1
Wuu:Kaonsi
J:Gong1-sai1
Y:Gōng-sāi
Tl:Kang-sai
Gan:Kong si
Order:st
Showflag:gan

Jiangxi is an inland province in the east of the People's Republic of China. Its major cities include Nanchang and Jiujiang. Spanning from the banks of the Yangtze river in the north into hillier areas in the south and east, it shares a border with Anhui to the north, Zhejiang to the northeast, Fujian to the east, Guangdong to the south, Hunan to the west, and Hubei to the northwest.[4]

The name "Jiangxi" is derived from the circuit administrated under the Tang dynasty in 733, Jiangnanxidao. The abbreviation for Jiangxi is "Chinese: {{linktext|赣", for the Gan River which runs across from the south to the north and flows into the Yangtze River. Jiangxi is also alternately called Ganpo Dadi which literally means the "Great Land of Gan and Po".

After the fall of the Qing dynasty, Jiangxi became one of the earliest bases for the Communists and many peasants were recruited to join the growing people's revolution. The Nanchang Uprising took place in Jiangxi on August 1, 1927, during the Chinese Civil War. Later the Communist leadership hid in the mountains of southern and western Jiangxi, hiding from the Kuomintang's attempts to eradicate them. In 1931, the Chinese Soviet Republic's government was established in Ruijin, which is sometimes called the "Former Red Capital", or just the "Red Capital". In 1935, after complete encirclement by the Nationalist forces, the Communists broke through and began the Long March to Yan'an.

The southern half of Jiangxi is hilly and mountainous, with ranges and valleys interspersed; notable mountains and mountain ranges include Mount Lu, the Jinggang Mountains and Mount Sanqing. The northern half is comparatively lower in altitude. The Gan River flows through the province.

Although the majority of Jiangxi's population is Han Chinese, Jiangxi is linguistically diverse. It is considered the center of Gan Chinese; Hakka Chinese, is also spoken to some degree. Jiangxi is rich in mineral resources, leading the provinces of China in deposits of copper, tungsten, gold, silver, uranium, thorium, tantalum, niobium and lithium.[5]

History

See main article: History of Jiangxi. Jiangxi is centered on the Gan River valley, which historically provided the main north–south transport route of south China. The corridor along the Gan River is one of the few easily traveled routes through the otherwise mountainous and rugged terrain of the south-eastern mountains. This open corridor was the primary route for trade and communication between the North China Plain and the Yangtze River valley in the north and the territory of modern Guangdong province in the south. As a result, Jiangxi has been strategically important throughout much of China's history.

Jiangxi was outside the sphere of influence of early Chinese civilization during the Shang dynasty (16th to 11th centuries BC). It is likely that peoples collectively known as the Baiyue inhabited the region. During the Spring and Autumn period, the northern part of modern Jiangxi formed the western frontier of the state of Wu. After Wu was conquered by the state of Yue (a power based in modern northern Zhejiang) in 473 BC, the state of Chu (based in modern Hubei) took over northern Jiangxi and there may have been some Yue influence in the south. Chu subjugated Yue in 333 BC. In 223 BC, when Qin conquered Chu, a majority of the Jiangxi area was recorded to be put under Jiujiang Commandery situated in Shouchun (Chinese: 壽春).[6] However the commandery was ineffective and ended shortly when Qin falls.

Yuzhang Commandery (Chinese: 豫章, Gan: Ì-zong) was established in Jiangxi at the beginning of the Han dynasty, possibly before the death of Xiang Yu in 202 BC, and it's also the very first commandery set up by Chinese dynasty in Jiangxi. It was named after the Yuzhang River (Chinese: 豫章江, Gan: Ì-zong Kong), the original name of Gan River. "Gan" has become the abbreviation of the province. In 201, eight counties were added to the original seven of Qin, and three more were established in later years. Throughout most of the Han dynasty the commandery's eighteen counties covered most of the modern province of Jiangxi. The county seats of Nanchang, Gan, Yudu, Luling among others were located at the sites of modern major cities. Other counties, however, have been moved or abolished in later centuries.

Under the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty, Yuzhang Commandery was assigned to Yangzhou Province, as part of a trend to establish provinces (zhou) all across China. In 291 AD, during the Western Jin dynasty, Jiangxi became its own Zhou called Jiangzhou (Chinese: 江州, Gan: Kong-chiu). During the Southern and Northern Dynasties, Jiangxi was under the control of the southern dynasties, and the number of zhou slowly grew.

During the Sui dynasty, there were seven commanderies and twenty-four counties in Jiangxi. During the Tang dynasty, another commandery and fourteen counties were added. Commanderies were then abolished, becoming zhou (henceforth translated as "prefectures" rather than "provinces").

Circuits were established during the Tang dynasty as a new top-level administrative division. At first Jiangxi was part of the Jiangnan Circuit (lit. "Circuit south of the Yangtze"). In 733, this circuit was divided into western and eastern halves. Jiangxi was found in the western half, which was called Jiangnanxi Circuit (lit. "Western circuits south of the Yangtze"). This is the source of the modern name "Jiangxi".

The Tang dynasty collapsed in 907, heralding the division of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. Jiangxi first belonged to Wu (Chinese: , Gan: Ng), then to Southern Tang (Chinese: 南唐, Gan: Nām-thóng). Both states were based in modern-day Nanjing, further down the Yangtze River.

During the Song dynasty, Jiangnanxi Circuit was reestablished with nine prefectures and four army districts (with sixty-eight districts).

During the Yuan dynasty, the circuit was divided into thirteen different circuits, and Jiangxi Province was established for the first time. This province also included the majority of modern Guangdong. Jiangxi acquired (more or less) its modern borders during the Ming dynasty after Guangdong was separated out. There has been little change to the borders of Jiangxi since.

After the fall of the Qing dynasty, Jiangxi became one of the earliest bases for the Communists and many peasants were recruited to join the growing people's revolution. The Nanchang Uprising took place in Jiangxi on August 1, 1927, during the Chinese Civil War. Later the Communist leadership hid in the mountains of southern and western Jiangxi, hiding from the Kuomintang's attempts to eradicate them. In 1931, the Chinese Soviet Republic's government was established in Ruijin, which is sometimes called the "Former Red Capital" (Chinese: 红色故都, Gan: Fūng-set Kū-tu), or just the "Red Capital". In 1935, after complete encirclement by the Nationalist forces, the Communists broke through and began the Long March to Yan'an.

From 1930 to 1934, the National Government carried out five military campaigns against the Jiangxi Soviet area. Its brutal two-party battles and cleansing (including the internal cleansing of the Red Army and the cleaning of the post-war government) caused a large number of deaths or escapes, causing the population of Jiangxi to drop by 40%, until only 13.8 million people were left in 1936.

In 1936, after the opening of the Yuehan Railway in Hunan, Jiangxi lost its important position regarding north–south traffic. In 1937, the east-west Zhegan Railway was opened to traffic, which changed the original traffic patterns in Jiangxi to a large extent. The Jiujiang Port (Chinese: 九江港) began to decline in importance.

Following the Doolittle Raid during World War II, most of the B-25 American crews that came down in China eventually made it to safety with the help of Chinese civilians and soldiers. The Chinese people who helped them, however, paid dearly for sheltering the Americans. The Imperial Japanese Army began the Zhejiang-Jiangxi Campaign to intimidate the Chinese from helping downed American airmen. The Japanese killed an estimated 250,000 civilians of China while searching for Doolittle's men.[7]

Jiangxi came under the full control of the CCP upon the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949. The Republican provincial government was evacuated to Taichung in Taiwan Province before dissolving itself that same year.[8]

Geography

Mountains surround Jiangxi on three sides, with the Mufu Mountains, Jiuling Mountains, and Luoxiao Mountains on the west; Huaiyu Mountains and Wuyi Mountains on the east; and the Jiulian Mountains (Chinese: 九连山) and Dayu Mountains in the south. The southern half of the province is hilly with ranges and valleys interspersed; while the northern half is flatter and lower in altitude. The highest point in Jiangxi is Mount Huanggang (Chinese: 黄岗山) in the Wuyi Mountains, on the border with Fujian. It has an altitude of .

The Gan River dominates the province, flowing through the entire length of the province from south to north. It enters Lake Poyang in the north, the largest freshwater lake of China; that lake in turn empties into the Yangtze River, which forms part of the northern border of Jiangxi. Important reservoirs include the Xiushui Tuolin Reservoir in the northwest of the province on the Xiushui River, and the Wan'an Reservoir(zh) in the upper section of the Gan.

Jiangxi has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa under the Köppen climate classification), with short, cool, damp winters, and very hot, humid summers. Average temperatures are about 3°C9°C in January and 27°C30°C in July. Annual precipitation is 1200mm1900mm, much of it falling in the heavy rains occurring in late spring and summer.

Nanchang, the provincial capital and the most densely populated city, is one of the largest Chinese metropolises. Nanchang is the hub of Jiangxi civilization throughout its history, which plays a leading role in the commercial, intellectual and industrial and political fields.[9] Ganzhou is the largest subdivision of Jiangxi.

Major cities in Jiangxi include:

Administrative divisions

See main article: List of administrative divisions of Jiangxi and List of township-level divisions of Jiangxi. Jiangxi is divided into eleven prefecture-level divisions: all prefecture-level cities:

Administrative divisions of Jiangxi
Division code[10] DivisionArea in km2[11] Population 2020[12] SeatDivisions[13]
DistrictsCountiesCL cities
360000 Jiangxi Province166,900.00 45,188,635 Nanchang city 27 61 12
360100 Nanchang city7,432.18 6,255,007 6 3
360200 Jingdezhen city5,256.23 1,618,979 2 1 1
360300 Pingxiang city3,823.99 1,804,805 2 3
360400 Jiujiang city18,796.79 4,600,276 3 7 3
360500 Xinyu city3,177.68 1,202,499 1 1
360600 Yingtan city3,556.74 1,154,223 2 1
360700 Ganzhou city39,317.14 8,970,014 3 13 2
360800 Ji'an city25,283.80 4,469,176 2 10 1
360900 Yichun city18,637.67 5,007,702 1 6 3
361000 Fuzhou city18,811.12 3,614,866 2 9
361100 Shangrao city22,826.04 6,491,088 3 8 1

These prefecture-level cities are in turn subdivided into 100 county-level divisions (27 districts, 12 county-level cities, and 61 counties). Those in turn are divided into 1566 township-level divisions (830 towns, 560 townships, 8 ethnic townships, and 168 subdistricts).

See List of administrative divisions of Jiangxi for a complete list of county-level divisions.

Urban areas

Population by urban areas of prefecture & county cities
CityUrban areaDistrict areaCity proper[14] Census date
1Nanchang2,223,6612,357,8395,042,5662010-11-01
(1)Nanchang 390,719795,4122010-11-01
2Pingxiang716,229893,5501,854,5152010-11-01
3Jiujiang611,321704,9864,728,7782010-11-01
(3)Jiujiang 93,035159,9092010-11-01
4Ganzhou605,231642,6538,368,4472010-11-01
(4)Ganzhou 430,6801,334,6002010-11-01
5Xinyu567,820839,4881,138,8742010-11-01
6Fuzhou482,9401,089,8883,912,3072010-11-01
(6)Fuzhou 169,404438,3192010-11-01
7Yichun461,8171,045,9525,419,5912010-11-01
8Jingdezhen430,084473,5611,587,4772010-11-01
9Fengcheng379,9141,336,3922010-11-01
10Ji'an328,318538,6994,810,3392010-11-01
11Shangrao298,975416,2196,579,7472010-11-01
(11)Shangrao 392,302752,9532010-11-01
12Gao'an295,507811,6332010-11-01
13Leping286,351810,3532010-11-01
14Ruijin216,229618,8852010-11-01
15Guixi210,319558,4512010-11-01
16Yingtan191,893214,2291,125,1562010-11-01
(16)Yingtan 131,470352,4762010-11-01
17Zhangshu188,586555,1202010-11-01
18Ruichang150,531419,0472010-11-01
19Dexing148,565293,2012010-11-01
(20)Gongqingcheng118,986118,9862010-11-01
(21)Lushan101,630245,5262010-11-01
22Jinggangshan86,673152,3102010-11-01

Politics

See main article: Politics of Jiangxi and List of provincial leaders of the People's Republic of China. The Politics of Jiangxi is structured in a dual party-government system like all other governing institutions in mainland China.

The Governor of Jiangxi is the highest-ranking official in the People's Government of Jiangxi. However, in the province's dual party-government governing system, the Governor has less power than the Jiangxi Chinese Communist Party Provincial Committee Secretary, colloquially termed the "Jiangxi CCP Party Chief".

Economy

Rice is the dominant crop in Jiangxi. Cash crops commonly grown include cotton and rapeseed. Jiangxi is the leading producer of kumquats in China, particularly Suichuan County.[15]

Jiangxi is rich in mineral resources, leading the provinces of China in deposits of copper, tungsten, gold, silver, uranium, thorium, tantalum, niobium, among others. Noted centers of mining include Dexing (copper) and Dayu County (tungsten).

It is located in extreme proximity to some of the richest provinces of China (Guangdong, Zhejiang, Fujian), which are sometimes blamed for taking away talent and capital from Jiangxi.[16]

Jiangxi has the lowest wages and third lowest property prices in all of China.,[16] As of 2016 Jiangxi's nominal GDP was CNY 1.84 trillion or US$276.48 billion, and a per capita of CNY 40,400 or US$6,082.

align=center colspan=10 Historical GDP of Jiangxi Province for 1978 –present (SNA2008)[17]
(purchasing power parity of Chinese Yuan, as Int'l. dollar based on IMF WEO October 2017[18])
align=center rowspan=3yearalign=center colspan=4GDPalign=center colspan=3GDP per capita (GDPpc)
based on mid-year population
align=center colspan=2Reference index
align=center colspan=3GDP in millionsalign=center rowspan=2real
growth
(%)
align=center colspan=3GDPpcalign=center colspan=2exchange rate
1 foreign currency
to CNY
CNYUSDPPP
(Int'l$.)
CNYUSDPPP
(Int'l$.)
USD 1Int'l$. 1
(PPP)
20161,836,440276,477524,5629.040,400608211,5406.64233.5009
20151,672,378268,508471,1599.136,968593510,4156.22843.5495
20141,571,463255,822442,6169.734,89056809,8276.14283.5504
20131,441,019232,678402,86810.132,12251878,9806.19323.5769
20121,294,888205,131364,67511.028,96745898,1586.31253.5508
20111,170,282181,192333,84212.426,29240717,5006.45883.5055
2010945,126139,615285,48514.021,36831566,4546.76953.3106
2009765,518112,065242,44413.217,43725535,5226.83103.1575
2008697,105100,374219,43613.315,98623025,0326.94513.1768
2007580,02576,279192,38613.213,38917614,4417.60403.0149
2006482,05360,470167,51312.311,19714053,8917.97182.8777
2005405,67649,523141,89412.99,47811573,3158.19172.8590
2000200,30724,19673,6618.048515861,7848.27842.7193
1995116,97314,00742,8576.828963471,0618.35102.7294
199042,8628,96125,1744.511342376664.78321.7026
198520,7897,07914,83114.85972034262.93661.4017
198011,1157,4187,4324.23422282291.49841.4955
19788,7005,59513.32761771.5550

Economic and technological development zones

Nanchang National Export Expressing Zone is located in Nanchang Hi-Tech Industrial Development Zone, it was approved by the State Council on May 8, 2006, and passed the national acceptance inspection on Sep 7th, 2007. It has a planning area of 1km2 and now has built 0.31km2. It enjoys simple and convenient customs clearances, and special preferential policies both for Nanchang National Export Expressing Zone and NCHDZ.[19]

Nanchang National High-tech Industrial Development Zone (NCHDZ for short hereafter) is the only national grade high-tech zoned in Jiangxi, it was established in Mar. 1991. The zone covers an area of 231km2, in which 32km2 have been completed. NCHDZ possesses unique nature condition and sound industry foundation of accepting electronics industry. NCHDZ has brought 25% industrial added value and 50% industrial benefit and tax to Nanchang city by using only 0.4% land area.[20]

Demographics

The population of Jiangxi is approximately 39.66 million.[25] 99.73% of that is Han Chinese, predominantly Gan and Hakka. Ganzhou, Jiangxi's largest city, has an especially large number of Hakka. Ethnic minorities include She.

Jiangxi and Henan both have the most unbalanced gender ratios of all Chinese provinces. Based on a 2009 British Medical Journal study, the ratio is over 140 boys for every 100 girls in the 1–4 age group.[26]

In 2019 the most-common surname in Jiangxi was Liú (刘), the only province where this was the case. Overall Liu is the fourth-most common surname in the country.[27]

Religion

See also: Christianity in Jiangxi.

The predominant religions in Jiangxi are Chinese folk religions, Taoist traditions and Chinese Buddhism. According to surveys conducted in 2007 and 2009, 24.05% of the population believes and is involved in ancestor veneration, while 2.31% of the population identifies as Christian.

The reports didn't give figures for other types of religion; 73.64% of the population may be either irreligious or involved in worship of nature deities, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, folk religious sects.

Altar of Shangdi and Doumu at the Chengxu Temple (Taoist) in Zhouzhuang.File:Nanchang Youmin Si 20120712-03.jpgYoumin Buddhist Temple in Nanchong.

Culture

See main article: Culture of Jiangxi. Jiangxi is the main area of concentration of the Gan varieties of Chinese, spoken over most of the northern two-thirds of the province. Examples include the Nanchang dialect, Yichun dialect and Ji'an dialect. The southern one-third of the province speaks Hakka. There are also Mandarin, Huizhou, and Wu dialects spoken along the northern border.

Ganju (Jiangxi opera) is the type of Chinese opera performed in Jiangxi.

Although little known outside of the province, Jiangxi cuisine is rich and distinctive. Flavors are some of the strongest in China, with heavy use of chili peppers and especially pickled and fermented products.

Jingdezhen is widely regarded as the producer of the best porcelain in China.[28]

Jiangxi also was a historical center of Chan Buddhism.

Prominent examples of Hakka architecture can be found in Jiangxi.

Transportation

As of January 2015, Jiangxi had two Yangtze River crossings, both in Jiujiang.

Rail

The Beijing–Kowloon Railway and Shanghai–Kunming Railway crisscross the province and intersect at Nanchang, which also has a high-speed rail link to Jiujiang. In addition, Jiangxi is connected by rail to Anhui Province via the Anhui–Jiangxi and Tongling–Jiujiang Railways; to Hubei via the Wuhan–Jiujiang Railway; and to Fujian via the Yingtan–Xiamen, Hengfeng–Nanping, Ganzhou–Longyan and Xiangtang–Putian Railways.

Tourism

There are several famous mountains in Jiangxi Province, including Mount Lu in Jiujiang, Mount jinggang at the border of Jiangxi province and Hunan province, Mount Sanqing in Yushan county.

Near the northern port city of Jiujiang lies the well-known resort area of Mount Lu. Also near the city is the Donglin Temple, an important Buddhist temple in china.

Near the small city of Yingtan is the resort area of Longhushan, which purports to be the birthplace of Taoism and hence has great symbolic value to Taoists. The region has many temples, cave complexes, mountains and villages.

The Mount Lu National Park has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996.

Kuling located on the top of Mount Lu is a summer resort developed by European in the 19th century. There were 3000 European living in Kuling, Mount Lu, Jiujiang in summer time in 1920 s.

In 2007, Jiangxi (specifically the Mount Lu West Sea, located in Jiujiang) was the filming location for the fifteenth series of the American TV show Survivor.

Flora and fauna

The mountainous terrain and large forest coverage of Jiangxi has made it historically one of the more wild places of central China. South China tigers have been seen as recently as fifteen or twenty years ago and projects are underway to document evidence of existing tigers, if there are any. Several mountain areas along the northern border with Hunan and Hubei are potential sites for "wilderness" preserves specifically for protecting or even reintroducing tigers.

Other wildlife, though not plentiful, are more numerous in Jiangxi than in many other developed areas of China. Numerous species of birds are common, especially around the marshes of Lake Poyang in the north. Though protected, mammals such as muntjac, wild boar, civet cats, and pangolins, are still common enough that they'll even occasionally be seen in markets for sale as game meat, or possibly even in a forest.

The late Paleocene mesonychid, Jiangxia chaotoensis was found in the province, and named after it.

Education

Colleges and universities

See main article: List of universities and colleges in Jiangxi.

List of colleges and universities in Jiangxi:

Sister provinces

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 11 May 2021. Communiqué of the Seventh National Population Census (No. 3). 11 May 2021. National Bureau of Statistics of China.
  2. Web site: National Data. China NBS. March 2024. June 22, 2024.
    see also Web site: zh: 2023年江西省国民经济和社会发展统计公报. jiangxi.gov.cn. March 20, 2024. June 22, 2024.
  3. Web site: Sub-national HDI - Subnational HDI - Global Data Lab. globaldatalab.org. 2020-04-17.
  4. Web site: www.ctoptravel.com . www.ctoptravel.com . 2012-12-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120816112347/http://www.ctoptravel.com/jiangxi/jiangxi-details/jiangxi-location.html . 2012-08-16 . dead .
  5. News: 2023-03-01 . China's lithium mining likely to face more scrutiny . en . Reuters . 2023-11-06.
  6. http://218.65.88.149:8080/was40/detail?record=1&primarykeyvalue=%E9%A2%98%E5%90%8D%3D%E8%B1%AB%E7%AB%A0%E6%95%85%E9%83%A1&channelid=7274{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  7. Web site: The Perilous Fight: America's World War II in Color | PBS. www.pbs.org.
  8. https://www.culture.taichung.gov.tw/media/827206/文化萬象p53-57.pdf
  9. Web site: www.china.com.cn . China.com.cn . 2008-11-26 . 2012-12-24.
  10. Web site: zh-hans . http://files2.mca.gov.cn/cws/201502/20150225163817214.html . zh:中华人民共和国县以上行政区划代码 . Ministry of Civil Affairs.
  11. Book: zh-hans. Shenzhen Bureau of Statistics. . zh:《深圳统计年鉴2014》. http://www.sztj.gov.cn/nj2014/indexce.htm. 2015-05-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20150512184740/http://www.sztj.gov.cn/nj2014/indexce.htm. 2015-05-12. dead.
  12. Book: Census Office of the State Council of the People's Republic of China. Population and Employment Statistics Division of the National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China . zh:中国2010人口普查分乡、镇、街道资料. 2012. . Beijing. 978-7-5037-6660-2. 1.
  13. Book: zh-hans . Ministry of Civil Affairs . zh:《中国民政统计年鉴2014》 . August 2014 . . 978-7-5037-7130-9. Ministry of Civil Affairs .
  14. Book: Compiled by Chinese: 国务院人口普查办公室 [Department of Population Census of the State Council], Chinese: 国家统计局人口和社会科技统计司编 [Department of Population and Social Science and Statistics, National Bureau of Statistics] . 2012 . zh:中国2010年人口普查分县资料 . Beijing . . 978-7-5037-6659-6 .
  15. Book: Zhonghua quan guo min zhu fu nü lian he hui. Chung-kuo fu nü. 16 June 2011. 1988. Foreign Language Press.
  16. Web site: Jiangxi Province: Economic News and Statistics for Jiangxi's Economy . Thechinaperspective.com . 2012-12-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120815200822/http://www.thechinaperspective.com/topics/province/jiangxi-province/ . 2012-08-15 . dead .
  17. Historical GDP of Jiangxi Province published on Jiangxi Statistical Yearbook 2017, ALSO see Jiangxi GDP Revision (Chinese)
  18. Purchasing power parity (PPP) for Chinese yuan is estimate according to IMF WEO (October 2017) data; Exchange rate of CN¥ to US$ is according to State Administration of Foreign Exchange, published on China Statistical Yearbook.
  19. Web site: Nanchang Export Processing Zone . RightSite.asia . 2012-12-24.
  20. Web site: Nanchang High-Tech Industrial Development Zone . RightSite.asia . 2012-12-24.
  21. Web site: Nanchang Economic & Technological Development Zone . RightSite.asia . 2012-12-24.
  22. Web site: 九江综合保税区 . Jiujiang Free Trade Zone Website . 20 July 2021 . 20 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210720063114/http://bsq.jiujiang.gov.cn/ . dead .
  23. Web site: 九江国家级经济技术开发区 . Jiujiang National Economical and Technological Development Zone Website . 20 July 2021 . 22 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210722230112/http://jkq.jiujiang.gov.cn/ . dead .
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