Provinces of China explained

Provinces
Map:China provinces highlighted.svg
Mapsize:350px
Category:Unitary state
Current Number:22 (1 claimed)
Government:Unitary one-party socialist republic
Subdivision:Sub-provincial city, Prefecture-level divisions
Order:st
Collapse:yes
Provinces
T:
S:
P:Shěng
Tib:ཞིང་ཆེན།
Wylie:zhing chen
Zwpy:Xingqên
Zha:Swngj
Monr:muǰi
Mon:муж
Hangul:
Rr:seong
Mr:sŏng
Uig:ئۆلكە
Uly:ölke
Uyy:ɵlkə
Sgs:ölkä
Usy:өлкә
Lang1:Kazakh
Lang1 Content:Kazakh: ولكە
Kazakh: өлке
Lang2:Kyrgyz
Lang2 Content:Kirghiz; Kyrgyz: ۅلكۅ
Kirghiz; Kyrgyz: өлкө
Mnc:ᡤᠣᠯᠣ
Mnc V:golo

Provinces (Chinese: c=省|p=Shěng) are the most numerous type of province-level divisions in the People's Republic of China (PRC). There are currently 22 provinces administered by the PRC and one province that is claimed, but not administered, which is Taiwan, currently administered by the Republic of China (ROC).

The local governments of Chinese provinces consists of a Provincial People's Government headed by a governor that acts as the executive, a Provincial People's Congress with legislative powers, and a parallel provincial branch of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that elects a Party Secretary and a Provincial Standing Committee.

Government

Provinces are the most common form of province-level governments. The legislative bodies of the provinces are the Provincial People's Congresses. The executive branch is the Provincial People's Government, led by a governor. The People's Government is answerable to both the State Council and the Provincial People's Congress. The provincial branch of the CCP has a Provincial Party Congress every five years, and elects a Standing Committee to exercise its authority when not in session. The Provincial Party Secretary is the de facto most important position in the province.

History

See main article: History of the administrative divisions of China.

The first provinces were created in the Yuan dynasty, and have remained one of the most stable forms of Chinese government since then. They were created to help the Imperial court manage local county governments, which were too numerous and far-flung to be managed directly. The number of provinces grew steadily during subsequent dynasties, reaching 28 by the time of the Republic of China. During the Warlord Era, provinces became largely or completely autonomous and exercised significant national influence. Province-level units proliferated and under the early People's Republic there were over 50.Political boundaries are, in part, established to counterbalance the influence of economic factors. For instance, the Yangtze Delta is divided among the provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangsu, and Anhui. This division ensures that economic strength is distributed, preventing any single region from potentially overpowering the state.[1]

List of provinces

GB/T 2260-2007[2] ISO[3] ProvinceChinese
Hanyu Pinyin
CapitalPopulation
(2020)
Density
(per km2)
Area
(km2)
Abbreviation
HECN-HEHebeiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=河北省
Héběi Shěng
Shijiazhuang74,610,235393.08189,809Chinese:
SXCN-SXShanxiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=山西省
Shānxī Shěng
Taiyuan34,915,616222.80156,713Chinese:
Jìn
LNCN-LNLiaoningChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=辽宁省
Liáoníng Shěng
Shenyang42,591,407289.59147,076Chinese:
Liáo
JLCN-JLJilinChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=吉林省
Jílín Shěng
Changchun24,073,453126.51190,282Chinese:
HLCN-HLHeilongjiangChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=黑龙江省
Hēilóngjiāng Shěng
Harbin31,850,08867.37472,766Chinese:
Hēi
JSCN-JSJiangsuChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=江苏省
Jiāngsū Shěng
Nanjing84,748,016847.9199,949Chinese:
ZJCN-ZJZhejiangChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=浙江省
Zhèjiāng Shěng
Hangzhou64,567,588615.67104,873Chinese:
Zhè
AHCN-AHAnhuiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=安徽省
Ānhuī Shěng
Hefei61,027,171436.29139,879Chinese:
Wǎn
FJCN-FJFujianChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=福建省
Fújiàn Shěng
Fuzhou41,540,086335.66123,756Chinese:
Mǐn
JXCN-JXJiangxiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=江西省
Jiāngxī Shěng
Nanchang45,188,635270.69166,939Chinese:
Gàn
SDCN-SDShandongChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=山东省
Shāndōng Shěng
Jinan101,527,453643.78157,704Chinese:
HACN-HAHenanChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=河南省
Hénán Shěng
Zhengzhou99,365,519600.52165,467Chinese:
HBCN-HBHubeiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=湖北省
Húběi Shěng
Wuhan57,752,557310.87185,776Chinese:
È
HNCN-HNHunanChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=湖南省
Húnán Shěng
Changsha66,444,864313.65211,842Chinese:
Xiāng
GDCN-GDGuangdongChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=广东省
Guǎngdōng Shěng
Guangzhou126,012,510700.02180,013Chinese:
Yuè
HICN-HIHainanChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=海南省
Hǎinán Shěng
Haikou10,081,232294.2734,259Chinese:
Qióng
SCCN-SCSichuanChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=四川省
Sìchuān Shěng
Chengdu83,674,866174.93484,056Chinese: 川(蜀)
Chuān (Shǔ)
GZCN-GZGuizhouChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=贵州省
Guìzhōu Shěng
Guiyang38,562,148218.93176,140Chinese: 贵(黔)
Guì (Qián)
YNCN-YNYunnanChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=云南省
Yúnnán Shěng
Kunming47,209,277123.20383,195Chinese: 云(滇)
Yún (Diān)
SNCN-SNShaanxiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=陕西省
Shǎnxī Shěng
Xi'an39,528,999192.24205,624Chinese: 陕(秦)
Shǎn (Qín)
GSCN-GSGansuChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=甘肃省
Gānsù Shěng
Lanzhou25,019,83154.70457,382Chinese: 甘(陇)
Gān (Lǒng)
QHCN-QHQinghaiChinese: {{zh|labels=no|s=青海省
Qīnghǎi Shěng
Xining5,923,9578.58690,355Chinese:
Qīng
-TWCN-TWTaiwanChinese: {{lang|zh-hans|台湾省
Táiwān Shěng
Taipei23,162,123650.9736,161Chinese: 台(臺)
Tái

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fairbank . John . China: A New History . Goldman . Merle . Harvard University Press . 2006 . 0674116739 . 11.
  2. Web site: GB/T 2260 codes for the provinces of China . 2011-10-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040305025950/http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~chgis/work/design/chinastdb_1210.doc . 2004-03-05 . live .
  3. [ISO 3166-2:CN]