Provinces of China
Province-level administrative divisions | |
---|---|
Category | Unitary one-party socialist republic (PRC) Unitary semi-presidential republic (ROC) |
Location | People's Republic of China Republic of China (Taiwan)[1] |
Created |
|
Number | PRC: 31 (Direct Jurisdiction) + 2 (Special Administrative Regions) + 1 (Disputed) ROC: 22 (Direct jurisdiction + 2 (Streamlined) + 48 (Claimed areas) |
Populations | 552,300 (Macau) – 104,303,132 (Guangdong) |
Areas | 30.4 km2 (11.7 sq mi) (Macau)[2] – 1,664,897 km2 (642,820 sq mi) (Xinjiang)[3] |
Government |
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Subdivisions |
province-level administrative divisions | |||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 省级行政区 | ||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 省級行政區 | ||||||||
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province | |||||||||
Chinese | 省 | ||||||||
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Tibetan name | |||||||||
Tibetan | ཞིང་ཆེན། | ||||||||
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Zhuang name | |||||||||
Zhuang | Swngj | ||||||||
Mongolian name | |||||||||
Mongolian script | ᠮᠤᠵᠢ | ||||||||
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Uyghur name | |||||||||
Uyghur | ئۆلكە | ||||||||
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Manchu name | |||||||||
Manchu script | ᡤᠣᠯᠣ | ||||||||
Romanization | golo |
Administrative divisions of China |
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History: before 1912, 1912–49, 1949–present Administrative division codes |
Provincial-level administrative divisions (simplified Chinese: 省级行政区; traditional Chinese: 省級行政區; pinyin: Shěng-jí xíngzhèng qū) or first-level administrative divisions (simplified Chinese: 一级行政区; traditional Chinese: 一級行政區; pinyin: yī-jí xíngzhèng qū), are the highest-level Chinese administrative divisions. There are 34 such divisions claimed by the People's Republic of China, classified as 23 provinces (Chinese: 省; pinyin: shěng), four municipalities, five autonomous regions, and two Special Administrative Regions. The political status of Taiwan Province along with a small fraction of Fujian Province remain in dispute, those are under separate rule by the Republic of China.
Every province on mainland China (including the island province of Hainan) has a Communist Party of China provincial committee (Chinese: 省委; pinyin: shěngwěi), headed by a secretary (Chinese: 书记; pinyin: shūjì). The Committee Secretary is effectively in charge of the province, rather than the governor (Chinese: 省长/直辖市长/自治区长; pinyin: shěng zhǎng/ zhí xiá shì zhǎng/ zì zhì qū zhǎng) of the provincial government.[4]
Types of provincial-level divisions
Province
The government of each standard province (Chinese: 省; pinyin: shěng) is nominally led by a provincial committee, headed by a secretary. The committee secretary is first-in-charge of the province; second-in-command is the governor of the provincial government. In practice, day-to-day affairs are managed by a provincial party standing committee, which makes decisions for a province analogous to the Politburo for the central government.
The People's Republic of China (PRC) claims the island of Taiwan and its surrounding islets, including Penghu, as "Taiwan Province", though Taiwan has not been under control of a government that ruled from mainland China since 1949, when the Republic of China (ROC) lost the mainland to the Communist Party of China, which established the PRC. (Kinmen and the Matsu Islands are claimed by the PRC as part of its Fujian Province. Pratas Island and the Vereker Banks and Itu Aba (Taiping Island) are claimed by the PRC as part of Guangdong and Hainan provinces respectively.) The territory is controlled by the Republic of China (ROC, commonly called "Taiwan") though the provinces were streamlined in 1998 and the provincial governments were de facto dissolved in 2019.
Municipality
A municipality (simplified Chinese: 直辖市; traditional Chinese: 直轄市; pinyin: zhíxiáshì; lit. 'direct-administrated city') or municipality directly under the administration of the central government is a higher level of city which is directly under the Chinese government, with status equal to that of the provinces. In practice, their political status is higher than that of common provinces.
Autonomous region
An autonomous region (simplified Chinese: 自治区; traditional Chinese: 自治區; pinyin: zìzhìqū) is a minority subject which has a higher population of a particular minority ethnic group along with its own local government, but an autonomous region theoretically has more legislative rights than in actual practice. The governor of each autonomous region is usually appointed from the respective minority ethnic group.
Special administrative region (SAR)
A special administrative region (SAR) (simplified Chinese: 特别行政区; traditional Chinese: 特別行政區; pinyin: tèbié xíngzhèngqū) is a highly autonomous and self-governing sub national subject of the People's Republic of China that is directly under the Central People's Government. Each SAR has a chief executive as head of the region and head of government. The region's government is not fully independent, as foreign policy and military defence are the responsibility of the central government, according to the basic laws.
List of province-level divisions
GB/T 2260-2007[5] | ISO[6] | Province | Chinese Hanyu Pinyin |
Capital | Population[a] | Density[b] | Area[c] | Abbreviation[d] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wǎn | CN-AH | Anhui Province | 安徽省 Ānhuī Shěng |
Hefei | 59,500,510 | 425.91 | 139,700 | AH | 皖 |
Jīng | CN-BJ | Beijing Municipality | 北京市 Běijīng Shì |
19,612,368 | 1,167.40 | 16,800 | BJ | 京 | |
Yú | CN-CQ | Chongqing Municipality | 重庆市 Chóngqìng Shì |
28,846,170 | 350.50 | 82,300 | CQ | 渝 | |
Mǐn | CN-FJ | Fujian Province[e] | 福建省 Fújiàn Shěng |
Fuzhou (PRC) Jincheng (ROC)[f] |
36,894,216 | 304.15 | 121,580 | FJ | 闽 |
Yuè | CN-GD | Guangdong Province[g] | 广东省 Guǎngdōng Shěng |
Guangzhou | 104,303,132 | 579.46 | 180,000 | GD | 粤 |
Gān (Lǒng) | CN-GS | Gansu Province | 甘肃省 Gānsù Shěng |
Lanzhou | 25,575,254 | 56.29 | 454,300 | GS | 甘(陇) |
Guì | CN-GX | Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region | 广西壮族自治区 Guǎngxī Zhuàngzú Zìzhìqū |
Nanning | 46,026,629 | 195.02 | 236,000 | GX | 桂 |
Guì (Qián) | CN-GZ | Guizhou Province | 贵州省 Guìzhōu Shěng |
Guiyang | 34,746,468 | 197.42 | 176,000 | GZ | 贵(黔) |
Yù | CN-HA | Henan Province | 河南省 Hénán Shěng |
Zhengzhou | 94,023,567 | 563.01 | 167,000 | HA (HEN) | 豫 |
È | CN-HB | Hubei Province | 湖北省 Húběi Shěng |
Wuhan | 57,237,740 | 307.89 | 185,900 | HB (HUB) | 鄂 |
Jì | CN-HE | Hebei Province | 河北省 Héběi Shěng |
Shijiazhuang | 71,854,202 | 382.81 | 187,700 | HE (HEB) | 冀 |
Qióng | CN-HI | Hainan Province[h] | 海南省 Hǎinán Shěng |
Haikou | 9,171,300[8] | 255.04 | 34,000 | HI | 琼 |
Gǎng | CN-HK[i] | Hong Kong Special Administrative Region | 香港特别行政区 Xiānggǎng Tèbié Xíngzhèngqū |
7,061,200 | 6,396.01 | 1,108 | HK | 港 | |
Hēi | CN-HL | Heilongjiang Province | 黑龙江省 Hēilóngjiāng Shěng |
Harbin | 38,312,224 | 84.38 | 454,000 | HL | 黑 |
Xiāng | CN-HN | Hunan Province | 湖南省 Húnán Shěng |
Changsha | 65,683,722 | 312.77 | 210,000 | HN (HUN) | 湘 |
Jí | CN-JL | Jilin Province | 吉林省 Jílín Shěng |
Changchun | 27,462,297 | 146.54 | 187,400 | JL | 吉 |
Sū | CN-JS | Jiangsu Province | 江苏省 Jiāngsū Shěng |
Nanjing | 78,659,903 | 766.66 | 102,600 | JS | 苏 |
Gàn | CN-JX | Jiangxi Province | 江西省 Jiāngxī Shěng |
Nanchang | 44,567,475 | 266.87 | 167,000 | JX | 赣 |
Liáo | CN-LN | Liaoning Province | 辽宁省 Liáoníng Shěng |
Shenyang | 43,746,323 | 299.83 | 145,900 | LN | 辽 |
Ào | CN-MO[j] | Macau Special Administrative Region | 澳门特别行政区 Àomén Tèbié Xíngzhèngqū |
552,300 | 19,044.82 | 29 | MO | 澳 | |
Nèi Měnggǔ (Suí/Měng) | CN-NM | Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region | 内蒙古自治区 Nèi Měnggǔ Zìzhìqū |
Hohhot | 24,706,321 | 20.88 | 1,183,000 | NM | 内蒙古(绥/蒙) |
Níng | CN-NX | Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region | 宁夏回族自治区 Níngxià Huízú Zìzhìqū |
Yinchuan | 6,301,350 | 94.89 | 66,400 | NX | 宁 |
Qīng | CN-QH | Qinghai Province | 青海省 Qīnghǎi Shěng |
Xining | 5,626,722 | 7.80 | 721,200 | QH | 青 |
Chuān (Shǔ) | CN-SC | Sichuan Province | 四川省 Sìchuān Shěng |
Chengdu | 80,418,200 | 165.81 | 485,000 | SC | 川(蜀) |
Lǔ | CN-SD | Shandong Province | 山东省 Shāndōng Shěng |
Jinan | 95,793,065 | 622.84 | 153,800 | SD | 鲁 |
Hù (Shēn) | CN-SH | Shanghai Municipality | 上海市 Shànghǎi Shì |
23,019,148 | 3,630.20 | 6,341 | SH | 沪(申) | |
Shǎn (Qín) | CN-SN | Shaanxi Province | 陕西省 Shǎnxī Shěng |
Xi'an | 37,327,378 | 181.55 | 205,600 | SN (SAA) | 陕(秦) |
Jìn | CN-SX | Shanxi Province | 山西省 Shānxī Shěng |
Taiyuan | 35,712,111 | 228.48 | 156,300 | SX (SAX) | 晋 |
Jīn | CN-TJ | Tianjin Municipality | 天津市 Tiānjīn Shì |
12,938,224 | 1,144.46 | 11,305 | TJ | 津 | |
Tái | CN-TW[k] | Taiwan Province[l] | 台湾省 Táiwān Shěng |
Taipei (PRC claimed) Zhongxing New Village (ROC)[m] |
23,162,123 | 650.97 | 36,161 | TW | 台(臺) |
Xīn | CN-XJ | Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region | 新疆维吾尔自治区 Xīnjiāng Wéiwú'ěr Zìzhìqū |
Ürümqi | 21,813,334 | 13.13 | 1,660,400 | XJ | 新 |
Zàng | CN-XZ | Tibet Autonomous Region | 西藏自治区 Xīzàng Zìzhìqū |
Lhasa | 3,002,166 | 2.44 | 1,228,400 | XZ | 藏 |
Yún (Diān) | CN-YN | Yunnan Province | 云南省 Yúnnán Shěng |
Kunming | 45,966,239 | 116.66 | 394,000 | YN | 云(滇) |
Zhè | CN-ZJ | Zhejiang Province | 浙江省 Zhèjiāng Shěng |
Hangzhou | 54,426,891 | 533.59 | 102,000 | ZJ | 浙 |
- ^ as of 2010
- ^ per km2
- ^ km2
- ^ Abbreviation in the parentheses is informal
- ^ Most of the Fujian Province is administered by the People's Republic of China (PRC) while the Taiwan (ROC) includes Kinmen County (Quemoy) and Lienchiang County (Matsu) formelry under its own streamlined Fujian Province.
- ^ The Fujian Provincial Government was formed on 1 May 1927 and the provincial government was relocated from Foochow to Kinmen, then Hsintien Township and Taipei County within Taiwan Province in 1956 before moving back to Kinmen on 15 January 1996. The government was abolished on 1 January 2019 with the remaining functions were transferred to the National Development Council and other ministries of the Executive Yuan.[7]
- ^ Most of the Guangdong Province is administered by the People's Republic of China (PRC) while the Taiwan (ROC) includes Pratas Island (also named Tungsha Island or Dongsha Island) as part of the Dongsha Atoll National Park.
- ^ Most of the Hainan Province is administered by the People's Republic of China (PRC) while the Taiwan (ROC) includes Itu Abab/Taiping Island as part of Cijin District, Kaohsiung.
- ^ Has separate ISO 3166-2 code:
HK
- ^ Has separate ISO 3166-2 code:
MO
- ^ Has separate ISO 3166-2 code:
TW
- ^ The People's Republic of China considers Taiwan to be its 23rd province, but Taiwan is currently administrated by the Republic of China. Since 1945, the ROC only controls the island of Taiwan and Penghu. For Kinmen and Matsu, see note on Fujian Province. See also Political status of Taiwan
- ^ The Taiwan Provincial Government was established in September 1945, after the Japanese rule. It was streamlined in December 1998, with administrative functions transferred to the National Development Council and other ministries of the Executive Yuan. In July 2018, the government was abolished, with the budget and most personnel removed.[7]
History
Sui provinces
By the time unity was finally reestablished by the Sui dynasty, the provinces had been divided and redivided so many times by different governments that they were almost the same size as commanderies, rendering the two-tier system superfluous. As such, the Sui merged the two together. In English, this merged level is translated as "prefectures". In Chinese, the name changed between zhou and jun several times before being finally settled on zhou. Based on the apocryphal Nine Province system, the Sui restored nine zhou.[9]
Provinces of the Sui dynasty | ||||||
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Name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Capital | Approximate extent in terms of modern locations | |
Ancient name | Modern location | |||||
Yongzhou | 雍州 | Yōngzhōu | ? | ? | Guanzhong, Gansu, and the Upper Yellow basin | |
Jizhou | 冀州 | Jìzhōu | ? | ? | Shanxi and Northern Hebei, including modern Beijing and Tianjin | |
Yanzhou | 兗州 | 兖州 | Yǎnzhōu | ? | ? | Lower Yellow River area- west of Qingzhou and east of Jizhou |
Qingzhou | 青州 | Qīngzhōu | ? | ? | Shandong Peninsula | |
Yuzhou | 豫州 | Yùzhōu | ? | ? | Henan | |
Xuzhou | 徐州 | Xúzhōu | ? | ? | Modern Xuzhou area- southern Shandong and northern Jiangsu | |
Liangzhou | 梁州 | Liángzhōu | ? | ? | Upper Yangtze- Sichuan Basin + south of the Qinling | |
Jingzhou | 荆州 | 荆州 | Jīngzhōu | ? | ? | Central Yangtze |
Yangzhou | 揚州 | 扬州 | Yángzhōu | ? | ? | Lower Yangtze, entire SE Coast, Hainan, and Northern Vietnam |
Tang provinces
Emperor Taizong (r. 626–649) set up 10 "circuits" (道; dào) in 627 as inspection areas for imperial commissioners monitoring the operation of prefectures, rather than a new primary level of administration. In 639, there were 10 circuits, 43 commanderies (都督府; dūdū fǔ), and 358 prefectures (州 and later 府; fǔ).[10] In 733, Emperor Xuanzong expanded the number of circuits to 15 by establishing separate circuits for the areas around Chang'an and Luoyang, and by splitting the large Shannan and Jiangnan circuits into 2 and 3 new circuits respectively. He also established a system of permanent inspecting commissioners, though without executive powers.[11]
Circuits of the Tang dynasty | |||||||
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Name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Capital | Approximate extent in terms of modern locations | ||
Ancient name | Modern location | ||||||
Duji* | 都畿 | Dūjī | Henan Fu | Luoyang | Luoyang and environs | ||
Guannei | 關內 | 关内 | Guānnèi | Jingzhao Fu | Xi'an | northern Shaanxi, central Inner Mongolia, Ningxia | |
Hebei | 河北 | Héběi | Weizhou | Wei County, Hebei | Hebei | ||
Hedong | 河東 | 河东 | Hédōng | Puzhou | Puzhou, Yongji, Shanxi | Shanxi | |
Henan | 河南 | Hénán | Bianzhou | Kaifeng | Henan, Shandong, northern Jiangsu, northern Anhui | ||
Huainan | 淮南 | Huáinán | Yangzhou | central Jiangsu, central Anhui | |||
Jiannan | 劍南 | 剑南 | Jiànnán | Yizhou | Chengdu | central Sichuan, central Yunnan | |
Jiangnan | 江南 | Jiāngnán | Jiangnanxi + Jiangnandong (see map) | ||||
Qianzhong** | 黔中 | Qiánzhōng | Qianzhou | Pengshui | Guizhou, western Hunan | ||
Jiangnanxi** | 江南西 | Jiāngnánxī | Hongzhou | Nanchang | Jiangxi, Hunan, southern Anhui, southern Hubei | ||
Jiangnandong** | 江南東 | 江南东 | Jiāngnándōng | Suzhou | southern Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, Shanghai | ||
Jingji* | 京畿 | Jīngjī | Jingzhao Fu | Xi'an | Xi'an and environs | ||
Lingnan | 嶺南 | 岭南 | Lǐngnán | Guangzhou | Guangdong, eastern Guangxi, northern Vietnam | ||
Longyou | 隴右 | 陇右 | Lǒngyou | Shanzhou | Ledu County, Qinghai | Gansu | |
Shannan | 山南 | Shānnán | Shannanxi + Shannandong (see map) | ||||
Shannanxi** | 山南西 | Shānnánxī | Liangzhou | Hanzhong | southern Shanxi, eastern Sichuan, Chongqing | ||
Shannandong** | 山南東 | 山南东 | Shānnándōng | Xiangzhou | Xiangfan | southern Henan, Hubei |
* Circuits established under Xuanzong, as opposed to Taizong's original ten circuits.
** Circuits established under Xuanzong by dividing Taizong's Jiangnan and Shannan circuits.
Other Tang-era circuits include the West Lingnan, Wu'an, and Qinhua circuits.
Song provinces
The Song government abolished the previous commissioners and renamed their circuits (路; lù, literally meaning "roads", but however is still usually translated into English as "circuits"). They also added a number of "army" prefectures (軍; jūn). Similarly, Liao and Jurchen Jin dynasties also established circuits as the first-level administrative division.
Circuits of the Northern Song dynasty | ||||||
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Name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Capital | Approximant extent in terms of modern locations | |
Ancient name | Modern location | |||||
Chengdufu | 成都府 | Chéngdūfǔ | Chengdu | central Sichuan | ||
Fujian | 福建 | Fújiàn | Fuzhou | Fujian | ||
Guangnan East | 廣南東 | 广南东 | Guǎngnándōng | Guangzhou | eastern Guangdong | |
Guangnan West | 廣南西 | 广南西 | Guǎngnánxī | Guizhou | Guilin | western Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan |
Hebei East | 河北東 | 河北东 | Héběidōng | Beijing | Daming County, Hebei | eastern Hebei |
Hebei West | 河北西 | Héběixī | Zhending | Zhengding County, Hebei | western Hebei | |
Hedong | 河東 | 河东 | Hédōng | Taiyuan | Shanxi | |
Huainan East | 淮南東 | 淮南东 | Huáinándōng | Yangzhou | central Jiangsu | |
Huainan West | 淮南西 | Huáinánxī | Shouzhou | Fengtai County, Anhui | central Anhui | |
Jiangnan East | 江南東 | 江南东 | Jiāngnándōng | Jiangning Fu | Nanjing | southern Anhui |
Jiangnan West | 江南西 | Jiāngnánxī | Hongzhou | Nanchang | Jiangxi | |
Jingdong East | 京東東 | 京东东 | Jīngdōngdōng | Qingzhou | Qingzhou, Shandong | eastern Shandong |
Jingdong West | 京東西 | 京东西 | Jīngdōngxī | Nanjing | south of Shangqiu, Henan | western Shandong |
Jinghu North | 荊湖北 | 荆湖北 | Jīnghúběi | Jiangling | Hubei, western Hunan | |
Jinghu South | 荊湖南 | 荆湖南 | Jīnghúnán | Tanzhou | Changsha | Hunan |
Jingji | 京畿 | Jīngjī | Chenliu | Chenliu, Kaifeng, Henan | Kaifeng and environs | |
Jingxi North | 京西北 | Jīngxīběi | Xijing | Luoyang | central Henan | |
Jingxi South | 京西南 | Jīngxīnán | Xiangzhou | Xiangfan | southern Henan, northern Hubei | |
Kuizhou | 夔州 | Kuízhōu | Kuizhou | Fengjie County, Chongqing | Chongqing, eastern Sichuan, Guizhou | |
Liangzhe | 兩浙 | 两浙 | Liǎngzhè | Hangzhou | Zhejiang, southern Jiangsu, Shanghai | |
Lizhou | 利州 | Lìzhōu | Xingyuan | Hanzhong | northern Sichuan, southern Shaanxi | |
Qinfeng | 秦鳳 | 秦凤 | Qínfèng | Qinzhou | Tianshui | southern Gansu |
Yongxingjun | 永興軍 | 永兴军 | Yǒngxīngjūn | Jingzhao | Xi'an | Shaanxi |
Zizhou | 梓州 | Zǐzhōu | Zizhou | Santai County, Sichuan | central southern Sichuan |
Yuan provinces
China was reorganised into 11 provinces keeping most of the previous boundaries of provinces created by the previous dynasty unchanged, the Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368) had 2 addition regions: Central region ruled by the Zhongshu Sheng (中書省) and the Tibetan region ruled by the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs (宣政院).
Circuits of the Yuan dynasty | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Capital | Approximant extent in terms of modern locations | ||||
Ancient name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Modern location | |||||
Gansu | 甘肅 | 甘肃 | Gānsù | Ganzhou Circuit | 甘州路 | Gānzhōu Lù | Zhangye | Consist of modern location of Gansu, Ningxia, & eastern Inner Mongolia. | |
Huguang | 湖廣 | 湖广 | Húguǎng | Wuchang Circuit | 武昌路 | Wǔchāng Lù | Wuhan | Consist of modern location of Hunan, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, southern Hubei & western Guangdong. | |
Henanjiangbei | 河南江北 | Hénánjiāngběi | Bianliang Circuit | 汴梁路 | Biànliáng Lù | Kaifeng | Consist of modern location of Henan, northern Hubei, northern Jiangsu, & northern Anhui. | ||
Jiangxi | 江西 | Jiāngxī | Longxing Circuit | 龍興路 | 龙兴路 | Lóngxìng Lù | Nanchang | Consist of modern location of Jiangxi & eastern Guangdong. | |
Jiangzhe | 江浙 | Jiāngzhè | Hangzhou Circuit | 杭州路 | Hángzhōu Lù | Hangzhou | Consist of modern location of Shanghai, Zhejiang, Fujian, southern Jiangsu, & southern Anhui. | ||
Liaoyang | 遼陽 | 辽阳 | Liáoyáng | Liaoyang Circuit | 遼陽路 | 辽阳路 | Liáoyáng Lù | Liaoyang | Consist of modern location of Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning, eastern Hebei, northwestern Inner Mongolia, northern Korea, & Outer Manchuria. |
Lingbei | 嶺北 | 岭北 | Lǐngběi | Hening Circuit | 和寧路 | 和宁路 | Héníng Lù | Kharkhorin | Consist of modern location of Mongolia & southern Siberia. |
Shaanxi | 陝西 | 陕西 | Shǎnxi | Fengyuan Circuit | 奉元路 | Fèngyuán Lù | Xi'an | Consist of modern location of Shaanxi & mid-western Sichuan | |
Sichuan | 四川 | Sìchuān | Chengdu Circuit | 成都路 | Chéngdū Lù | Chengdu | Consist of modern location of western Sichuan & Chongqing | ||
Yunnan | 雲南 | 云南 | Yúnnán | Zhongqing Circuit | 中慶路 | 中庆路 | Zhōngqìng Lù | Kunming | Consist of modern location of Yunnan and Upper Myanmar. |
Zhengdong | 征東 | 征东 | Zhēngdōng | Kaicheng Circuit | 開城路 | 开城路 | Kāichéng Lù | Kaesong | Consist of modern location of southern Korea. |
Central region* | 中書省 | 中书省 | Zhōngshū Shěng | none | Consist of modern location of Beijing, Tianjin, Shanxi, Shandong, northern Henan, central Inner Mongolia, & western Hebei. A direct rule region under Zhongshu Sheng (Central Secretariat). | ||||
Tibetan region* | 宣政院 | Xuānzhèng Yuàn | none | Consist of modern location of Tibet, Qinghai, & western Sichuan. A region set up to supervised Buddhist monks in addition to managing the territory of Tibet under the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs. |
Ming provinces
The Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) kept the province system set up by the Yuan Dynasty, however, it divided the original 10 provinces into 16 provinces, later 2 capital metropolitan areas and 13 provinces (兩京十三省) within China proper and 5 additional military ruled regions.
Circuits of the Yuan dynasty | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Capital | Approximant extent in terms of modern locations | ||||
Ancient name | Traditional Chinese |
Simplified Chinese |
Pinyin | Modern location | |||||
Fujian | 福建 | Fújiàn | Fuzhou Prefecture | 福州府 | Fúzhōu Fǔ | ||||
Guangdong | 廣東 | 广东 | Guǎngdōng | Guangzhou Prefecture | 廣州府 | 广州府 | Guǎngzhōu Gǔ | ||
Guangxi | 廣西 | 广西 | Guǎngxī | Guilin Prefecture | 桂林府 | Guìlín Fǔ | |||
Guizhou | 貴州 | 贵州 | Guìzhōu | Guiyang Prefecture | 貴陽府 | 贵阳府 | Guìyáng Fǔ | ||
Henan | 河南 | Hénán | Kaifeng Prefecture | 開封府 | 开封府 | Kāifēng Fǔ | |||
Huguang | 湖廣 | 湖广 | Húguǎng | Wuchang Prefecture | 武昌府 | Wǔchāng Fǔ | Consist of modern location of Hunan & Hubei. Provincial seat modern location is Wuhan. | ||
Jiangxi | 江西 | Jiāngxī | Nanchang Prefecture | 南昌府 | Nánchāng Fǔ | ||||
Shaanxi | 陝西 | 陕西 | Shǎnxī | Xi'an Prefecture | 西安府 | Xī'ān Fǔ | Consist of modern location of Shaanxi, Gansu, & Ningxia. | ||
Shandong | 山東 | 山东 | Shāndōng | Jinan Prefecture | 濟南府 | 济南府 | Jǐnán Fǔ | ||
Shanxi | 山西 | Shānxī | Taiyuan Prefecture | 太原府 | Tàiyuán Fǔ | ||||
Sichuan | 四川 | Sìchuān | Chengdu Prefecture | 成都府 | Chéngdū Fǔ | Consist of modern location of Chongqing & eastern Sichuan. | |||
Yunnan | 雲南 | 云南 | Yúnnán | Yunnan Prefecture | 雲南府 | 云南府 | Yúnnán Fǔ | Provincial seat modern location is Kunming. | |
Zhejiang | 浙江 | Zhèjiāng | Hangzhou Prefecture | 杭州府 | Hángzhōu Fǔ | ||||
Jiaozhi | 交趾 | Jiāozhǐ | Jiaozhou Prefecture | 交州府 | Jiāozhōu Fǔ | Consist of modern location of northern Vietnam. 1407–1428 | |||
North Zhili | 北直隸 | 北直隶 | Běizhílì | Shuntian Prefecture | 順天府 | 顺天府 | Shùntiān Fǔ | Consist of modern location of Beijing, Tianjin, & Hebei. Provincial seat modern location is Beijing. | |
South Zhili | 南直隸 | 南直隶 | Nánzhílì | Yingtian Prefecture | 應天府 | 应天府 | Yìngtiān Fǔ | Consist of modern location of Shanghai, Jiangsu, & Anhui. Provincial seat modern location is Nanjing. | |
Nurgan* | 奴兒干 | 奴儿干 | Nú'ergàn | none | Consist of modern location of Heilongjiang, Jilin, central-eastern Inner Mongolia, & Outer Manchuria. 1409–1616 | ||||
Liaodong* | 遼東 | 辽东 | Liáodōng | none | Consist of modern location of Liaoning. 1375–1621 | ||||
Ü-Tsang* | 烏斯藏 | 乌斯藏 | Wūsīzàng | none | Consist of modern location of Tibet. 1372–1565 | ||||
Dokham* | 朵甘 | Duǒgān | none | Consist of modern location of Qinghai & western Sichuan. 1372–1644 | |||||
Elis* | 俄力思 | Élìsī | none | Consist of modern location of Ngari, Tibet. 1375–1565 |
Qing provinces
By the latter half of the Qing Dynasty (1644–1912), there were 18 provinces, all of them in China proper (內地十八省). Jiangsu and Anhui were originally one province called Jiangnan, with its capital at Nanjing. There was no discrete time period when the two halves of Jiangnan were split, but rather, this was a gradual process.
New provinces
- Xinjiang (新疆省) 1884–1912
- Fengtian (奉天省) 1907–1912
- Jilin (吉林省) 1907–1912
- Heilongjiang (黑龍江省) 1907–1912
- Taiwan (臺灣省) 1885–1895
Each province had a xunfu (巡撫; xúnfǔ; translated as "governor"), a political overseer on behalf of the emperor, and a tidu (提督; tídū; translated as "captain general"), a military governor. In addition, there was a zongdu (總督; zǒngdū), a general military inspector or governor general, for every two to three provinces.
Outer regions of China (those beyond China proper) were not divided into provinces. Military leaders or generals (將軍; jiāngjūn) oversaw Manchuria (consisting of Fengtian (now Liaoning), Jilin, Heilongjiang), Xinjiang, and Mongolia, while vice-dutong (副都統; fù dūtǒng) and civilian leaders headed the leagues (盟長; méng zhǎng), a subdivision of Mongolia. The ambans (駐藏大臣; zhù cáng dàchén) supervised the administration of Tibet.
In 1884 Xinjiang became a province; in 1907 Fengtian, Jilin, and Heilongjiang were made provinces as well. Taiwan became a province in 1885, but China ceded Taiwan to Japan in 1895. As a result, there were 22 provinces in China (Outer China and China proper) near the end of the Qing Dynasty.
ROC provinces (1912–1949)
The Republic of China, established in 1912, set up four more provinces in Inner Mongolia and two provinces in historic Tibet, bringing the total to 28. In 1931, Ma Zhongying established Hexi in the northern parts of Gansu but the ROC never acknowledged the province. However, China lost four provinces with the establishment of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo in Manchuria. After the defeat of Japan in World War II in 1945, China re-incorporated Manchuria as 10 provinces, and assumed control of Taiwan as a province. As a result, the Republic of China in 1946 had 35 provinces. Although the Republic of China now only controls one province (Taiwan), and some islands of a second province (Fujian), it continues to formally claim all 35 provinces (including those that no longer form part of the area of the People's Republic of China).
- Andong (安東省) 1947–1949
- Anhui (安徽省)
- Fujian (福建省)
- Gansu (甘肅省)
- Guangdong (廣東省)
- Guangxi (廣西省)
- Guizhou (貴州省)
- Heilongjiang (黑龍江省)
- Zhili (直隸省) renamed Hebei (河北省)
- Hejiang (合江省) 1947–1949
- Henan (河南省)
- Hexi (河西省) 1931, not acknowledged by ROC
- Hubei (湖北省)
- Hunan (湖南省)
- Jiangsu (江蘇省)
- Jiangxi (江西省)
- Jilin (吉林省)
- Liaobei (遼北省) 1947–1949
- Fengtian (奉天省) renamed Liaoning (遼寧省)
- Nenjiang (嫩江省) 1947–1949
- Ningxia (寧夏省) 1928–1949
- Qahar (察哈爾省) 1928–1949
- Qinghai (青海省) 1928–1949
- Rehe (熱河省) 1928–1949
- Shaanxi (陝西省)
- Shandong (山東省)
- Shanxi (山西省)
- Sichuan (四川省)
- Songjiang (松江省) 1947–1949
- Suiyuan (綏遠省) 1928–1949
- Taiwan (臺灣省) 1945–1949
- Xing'an (興安省) 1947–1949
- Xikang (西康省) 1928–1949
- Xinjiang (新疆省)
- Yunnan (雲南省)
- Zhejiang (浙江省)
Other province-level divisions
- Chuanbian Special Administrative Region (川邊特別行政區) 1914–1935
- Dongsheng Special Region (東省特別行政區) 1923–1932
- Hainan Special Administrative Region (海南特別行政區) 1944–1949
- Qahar Special Administrative Region (察哈爾特別行政區) 1914–1928
- Rehe Special Administrative Region (熱河特別行政區) 1914–1928
- Suiyuan Special Administrative Region (綏遠特別行政區) 1914–1928
- Weihai Special Administrative Region (威海衛特別行政區) 1930–1945
- Mongolia Area (蒙古地方) 1928–1946
- Tibet Area (西藏地方) 1928–1949
- Beiping Yuan-controlled Municipality (北平市) 1928–1949
- Chongqing Yuan-controlled Municipality (重慶市) 1939–1949
- Dalian Yuan-controlled Municipality (大連市) 1945–1949
- Guangzhou Yuan-controlled Municipality (廣州市) 1930, 1947–1949
- Hankou Yuan-controlled Municipality (漢口市) 1927–1949
- Harbin Yuan-controlled Municipality (哈爾濱市) 1946–1949
- Nanjing Yuan-controlled Municipality (南京市) 1927–1949
- Qingdao Yuan-controlled Municipality (青島市) 1929–1949
- Shanghai Yuan-controlled Municipality (上海市) 1927–1949
- Shenyang Yuan-controlled Municipality (瀋陽市) 1947–1949
- Tianjin Yuan-controlled Municipality (天津市) 1928–1949
- Xi'an Yuan-controlled Municipality (西安市) 1948–1949
List of PRC/ROC province-level divisions
abolished claimed
Greater administrative areas
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Translation | Capital | Hanzi | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Huabei | 华北 | Huáběi | "North China" | Beijing | 北京 | 1949–1954 | |
Dongbei | 东北 | Dōngběi | "Northeast" | Shenyang | 沈阳 | 1949–1954 | |
Huadong | 华东 | Huádōng | "East China" | Shanghai | 上海 | 1949–1954 | |
Zhongnan | 中南 | Zhōngnán | "South Central" | Wuhan | 武汉 | 1949–1954 | |
Xibei | 西北 | Xīběi | "Northwest" | Xi'an | 西安 | 1949–1954 | |
Xinan | 西南 | Xīnán | "Southwest" | Chongqing | 重庆 | 1949–1954 |
Provinces
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andong | 安东 | Āndōng | 安 ān | Tonghua | 通化 | 1949 abolished → Liaodong, Jilin |
Anhui | 安徽 | Ānhuī | 皖 wǎn | Hefei | 合肥 | 1949 abolished → Wanbei, Wannan; 1952 reverted |
Chahar | 察哈尔 | Cháhā'ěr | 察 chá | Zhangjiakou | 张家口 | 1952 abolished → Inner Mongolia, Hebei |
Fujian | 福建 | Fújiàn | 闽 mǐn | Fuzhou (PRC) Jincheng (ROC) |
福州 | parts of the Fujian Province consisting of Kinmen and Matsu are part of Taiwan (ROC) |
Gansu | 甘肃 | Gānsù | 甘 gān | Lanzhou | 兰州 | 1958 Ningxia split into its own autonomous region |
Guangdong | 广东 | Guǎngdōng | 粤 yuè | Guangzhou | 广州 | 1952 & 1965 Fangchenggang, Qinzhou, Beihai → Guangxi; 1955 reverted 1988 Hainan split into its own province |
Guangxi | 广西 | Guǎngxī | 桂 guì | Nanning | 南宁 | 1958 province → autonomous region |
Guizhou | 贵州 | Guìzhōu | 黔 qián | Guiyang | 贵阳 | |
Hainan | 海南 | Hǎinán | 琼 qióng | Haikou | 海口 | |
Hebei | 河北 | Héběi | 冀 jì | Baoding (1949–54; 1967–68) Tianjin (1954–67) Shijiazhuang (present) |
保定 天津 石家庄 |
1967 Tianjin split into its own municipality |
Hejiang | 合江 | Héjiāng | 合 hé | Jiamusi | 佳木斯 | 1949 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Heilongjiang | 黑龙江 | Hēilóngjiāng | 黑 hēi | Qiqihar (1949–54) Harbin (present) |
齐齐哈尔 哈尔滨 |
1952 part of Xing'an split into Inner Mongolia |
Henan | 河南 | Hénán | 豫 yù | Kaifeng (1949–54) Zhengzhou (present) |
开封 郑州 |
|
Hubei | 湖北 | Húběi | 鄂 è | Wuhan | 武汉 | |
Hunan | 湖南 | Húnán | 湘 xiāng | Changsha | 长沙 | |
Jiangsu | 江苏 | Jiāngsū | 苏 sū | Nanjing | 南京 | 1949 abolished → Subei, Subnan; 1952 reverted |
Jiangxi | 江西 | Jiāngxī | 赣 gàn | Nanchang | 南昌 | |
Jilin | 吉林 | Jílín | 吉 jí | Jilin (1949–54) Changchun (present) |
吉林 长春 |
1952 north part split into Inner Mongolia |
Liaobei | 辽北 | Liáoběi | 洮 táo | Liaoyuan | 辽源 | 1949 abolished → Jilin, Liaoning |
Liaodong | 辽东 | Liáodōng | 关 guān | Dandong | 丹东 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Liaoning | 辽宁 | Liáoníng | 辽 liáo | Shenyang | 沈阳 | 1949 abolished → Liaodong, Liaoxi; 1954 reverted 1952 north part split into Inner Mongolia |
Liaoxi | 辽西 | Liáoxī | 辽 liáo | Jinzhou | 锦州 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Nenjiang | 嫩江 | Nènjiāng | 嫩 nèn | Qiqihar | 齐齐哈尔 | 1949 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Ningxia | 宁夏 | Níngxià | 宁 níng | Yinchuan | 银川 | 1954 province → Gansu |
Mudanjiang | 牡丹江 | Mǔdānjiāng | 丹 dān | Mudanjiang | 牡丹江 | 1949 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Pingyuan | 平原 | Píngyuán | 平 píng | Xinxiang | 新乡 | 1952 abolished → Henan, Shandong |
Qinghai | 青海 | Qīnghǎi | 青 qīng | Xining | 西宁 | |
Rehe | 热河 | Rèhé | 热 rè | Chengde | 承德 | 1955 abolished → Inner Mongolia, & Liaoning |
Sichuan | 四川 | Sìchuān | 川 chuān | Chengdu | 成都 | 1949 abolished → Chuanbei, Chuandong, Chuannan, Chuanxi; 1952 reverted 1997 Chongqing split into its own municipality |
Shaanxi | 陕西 | Shǎnxī | 陕 shǎn | Xi'an | 西安 | |
Shandong | 山东 | Shāndōng | 鲁 lǔ | Jinan | 济南 | |
Shanxi | 山西 | Shānxī | 晋 jìn | Taiyuan | 太原 | |
Songjiang | 松江 | Sōngjiāng | 松 sōng | Harbin | 哈尔滨 | 1954 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Suiyuan | 绥远 | Suíyuǎn | 绥 suí | Hohhot | 呼和浩特 | 1954 abolished → Inner Mongolia |
Taiwan | 台湾 | Táiwān | 台 tái | Taipei Zhongxing New Village (ROC only) |
台北 | claimed since the founding of the PRC in 1949 |
Xikang | 西康 | Xīkāng | 康 kāng | Kangding (1949–50) Ya'an (1950–55) |
康定 雅安 |
1955 abolished → Sichuan, Yunnan, Tibet Autonomous Region |
Xing'an | 兴安 | Xīng'ān | 兴 xīng | Hulunbuir | 呼伦贝尔 | 1949 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Xinjiang | 新疆 | Xīnjiāng | 疆 jiāng | Ürümqi | 乌鲁木齐 | 1955 province → autonomous region |
Yunnan | 云南 | Yúnnán | 滇 diān | Kunming | 昆明 | |
Zhejiang | 浙江 | Zhèjiāng | 浙 zhè | Hangzhou | 杭州 |
Autonomous regions
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guangxi | 广西 | Guǎngxī | 桂 guì | Nanning | 南宁 | 1958 province → autonomous region |
Inner Mongolia | 内蒙古 | Nèi Měnggǔ | 蒙 měng | Ulaanhot (1947–50) Hohhot (present) |
乌兰浩特 呼和浩特 |
1947 created; 1969 truncated → Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Jilin, Gansu, Ningxia; 1979 reverted |
Ningxia | 宁夏 | Níngxià | 宁 níng | Yinchuan | 银川 | 1958 special region → autonomous region |
Tibet | 西藏 | Xīzàng | 藏 zàng | Lhasa | 拉萨 | 1965 area → autonomous region |
Xinjiang | 新疆 | Xīnjiāng | 疆 jiāng | Ürümqi | 乌鲁木齐 | 1955 province → autonomous region |
Municipalities
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anshan | 鞍山 | Ānshān | 鞍 ān | Tiedong District | 铁东区 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Beijing (PRC) | 北京 | Běijīng | 京 jīng | Dongcheng District Tongzhou District |
东城区 通州区 |
|
Benxi | 本溪 | Běnxī | 本 běn | Pingshan District | 平山区 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Changchun | 长春 | Chángchūn | 春 chūn | Nanguan District | 南关区 | 1953 created; 1954 abolished → Jilin |
Chongqing (PRC) | 重庆 | Chóngqìng | 渝 yú | Yuzhong District | 渝中区 | 1954 abolished → Sichuan; 1997 reverted |
Dalian → Lüda | 大连→旅大 | Dàlián | 连 lián | Xigang District | 西岗区 | 1949 abolished → Luda, 1950 reverted, 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Fushun | 抚顺 | Fǔshùn | 抚 fǔ | Shuncheng District | 顺城区 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Guangzhou | 广州 | Guǎngzhōu | 穗 suì | Yuexiu District | 越秀区 | 1954 abolished → Guangdong |
Harbin | 哈尔滨 | Hā'ěrbīn | 哈 hā | Nangang District | 南岗区 | 1953 created, 1954 abolished → Heilongjiang |
Kaohsiung (ROC) | 高雄 | Gāoxióng | 高 gāo | Lingya District Fongshan District |
苓雅區 鳳山區 |
|
Nanjing | 南京 | Nánjīng | 宁 níng | Xuanwu District | 玄武区 | 1952 abolished → Jiangsu |
New Taipei (ROC) | 新北 | Xīnběi | 新北 xīnběi | Banqiao District | 板橋區 | |
Shanghai (PRC) | 上海 | Shànghǎi | 沪 hù | Huangpu District | 黄浦区 | |
Shenyang | 沈阳 | Shěnyáng | 沈 shěn | Shenhe District | 沈河区 | 1954 abolished → Liaoning |
Taichung (ROC) | 臺中 | Táizhōng | 中 zhōng | Xitun District | 西屯區 | |
Tainan (ROC) | 臺南 | Táinán | 南 nán | Anping District Xinying District |
安平區 新營區 |
|
Taipei (ROC) | 臺北 | Táiběi | 北 běi | Xinyi District | 信義區 | |
Taoyuan (ROC) | 桃園 | Táoyuán | 桃 táo | Taoyuan District | 桃園區 | |
Tianjin (PRC) | 天津 | Tiānjīn | 津 jīn | Heping District | 和平区 | 1954 abolished → Hebei, 1967 reverted |
Hankou → Wuhan | 汉口→武汉 | Wǔhàn | 汉 hàn | Jiang'an District | 江岸区 | 1949 abolished → Hubei |
Xi'an | 西安 | Xī'ān | 镐 hào | Weiyang District | 未央区 | 1954 abolished → Shaanxi |
Special administrative regions
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hong Kong | 香港 | Xiānggǎng | 港 gǎng | Hong Kong | 香港 | created 1997 (Transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong) |
Macau | 澳门 | Àomén | 澳 ào | Macau | 澳门 | created 1999 (Transfer of sovereignty over Macau) |
Administrative territories
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chuanbei | 川北 | Chuānběi | 充 chōng | Nanchong | 南充 | 1950 created; 1952 abolished → Sichuan |
Chuandong | 川东 | Chuāndōng | 渝 yú | Chongqing | 重庆 | 1950 created; 1952 abolished → Sichuan |
Chuannan | 川南 | Chuānnán | 泸 lú | Luzhou | 泸州 | 1950 created; 1952 abolished → Sichuan |
Chuanxi | 川西 | Chuānxī | 蓉 róng | Chengdu | 成都 | 1950 created; 1952 abolished → Sichuan |
Hainan | 海南 | Hǎinán | 琼 qióng | Haikou | 海口 | 1949 abolished → Guangdong |
Lüda | 旅大 | Lǚdà | 旅 lǚ | Dalian | 大连 | 1949 created; 1950 abolished → Dalian |
Subei | 苏北 | Sūběi | 扬 yáng | Yangzhou | 扬州 | 1949 created; 1952 abolished → Jiangsu |
Sunan | 苏南 | Sūnán | 锡 xī | Wuxi | 无锡 | 1949 created; 1952 abolished → Jiangsu |
Wanbei | 皖北 | Wǎnběi | 合 hé | Hefei | 合肥 | 1949 created; 1952 abolished → Anhui |
Wannan | 皖南 | Wǎnnán | 芜 wú | Wuhu | 芜湖 | 1949 created; 1952 abolished → Anhui |
Regions
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tibet | 西藏 | Xīzàng | 藏 zàng | Lhasa | 拉萨 | 1965 region → autonomous region |
Territories
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Abbreviation | Capital | Hanzi | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qamdo | 昌都 | Chāngdū | 昌 chāng | Qamdo | 昌都 | 1965 merged into Tibet |
The People's Republic of China abolished many of the provinces in the 1950s and converted a number of them into autonomous regions. Hainan became a separate province in 1988, bringing the total number of provinces under PRC control to 22.
In contrast, the Republic of China also had a number of provinces under its control such as Taiwan and Fujian, which the ROC currently administers, though the ROC abolished the Xinjiang Provincial Office in 1992. In 1998, after streamlining of the two provinces, some of its powers from the Taiwan and Fujian Provincial Governments were gradually transferred to county governments. This fractured further between 2018 and 2019 when the ROC central government de facto abolished the provincial governments with most of the remaining powers given to the Executive Yuan.
Lost territories of China
During the 20th century, China claimed that numerous neighbouring countries and regions in Asia were lost territories of China.[12][13] Many of these lost territories were under the rule of Imperial Chinese dynasties or were tributary states.[12] Sun Yat-sen claimed that these territories were lost due to unequal treaties, forceful occupation and annexation, and foreign interference. Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong, among others, were supportive of these claims.[14] China published a series of maps during this time known as a Map of National Shame (simplified Chinese: 国耻地图; traditional Chinese: 國恥地圖; pinyin: Guóchǐ dìtú) which showcased some of the lost territories that had links to various Imperial Chinese dynasties.
Name | Hanzi | Pinyin | Note |
---|---|---|---|
South Tibet[13] (part of modern-day Arunachal Pradesh) | 藏南 (South Tibet)/
阿鲁纳恰尔邦 (Arunachal Pradesh) |
Zàng nán (South Tibet)/
Ā lǔ nà qià ěr bāng (Arunachal Pradesh) |
Lost to the British Empire |
The Great Northeast (Left bank of Amur River)[13] | — | — | Lost to the Russian Empire |
The Great Northeast[13] (Outer Manchuria) | — | — | Lost to the Russian Empire |
Bhutan[12] | 不丹 | Bù dān | Lost to the British Empire |
Ryukyu Islands[13] | 琉球群岛 | Liúqiú qúndǎo | Lost to the Empire of Japan |
Annam[13] (modern-day Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos) | 安南都 | Ānnán dū hù fǔ | Lost to French Empire |
Burma[13] | 缅甸 | Miǎndiàn | Lost to the British Empire |
Sikkim[13] | 锡金邦 | Xíjīn bāng | Lost to the British Empire |
Ceylon[12] (Sri Lanka) | 锡兰 | Xī lán | Visited by Admiral Zheng He in the early 15th century. First colonised by the Portuguese Empire, then the Dutch Empire, and finally the British Empire. |
Malaya[13] (part of modern-day Malaysia and Singapore) | 马来亚 | Mǎ lái yà | Lost to the British Empire |
Taiwan and Penghu[12] | 台湾 (Taiwan)/
澎湖县 (Penghu) |
Táiwān (Taiwan)/
Pēnghú xiàn (Penghu) |
Lost to the Empire of Japan |
Korea[13] | 朝鲜 | Cháoxiǎn | Lost to the Empire of Japan |
Pamir Mountains/Ladakh area[13] | — | — | Lost to the Russian Empire and the British Empire |
Nepal[12] | 尼泊尔 | Níbó'ěr | Lost to the British Empire |
Thailand[12] | 泰国 | Tàiguó | Became independent between British and French territories in 1904 |
Andaman and Nicobar Islands[13] | 安达曼群岛 | Āndá màn qúndǎo | Lost to the British Empire |
Sulu Archipelago[12] | 苏禄群岛 | Sū lù qúndǎo | Lost to the Spanish Empire |
Sakhalin[13] (in Chinese, Kuye) | 库页岛 (Kuye)
萨哈林岛 (Sakhalin) |
Kùyè dǎo (Kuye)
Sàhālín dǎo (Sakhalin) |
Lost to the Russian Empire and the Empire of Japan |
Java[12] | 爪哇岛 | Zhǎowā dǎo | Lost to the Dutch Empire |
Borneo[12] (part of modern-day Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei) | 婆罗洲 | Póluó zhōu | Lost to the British Empire and the Dutch Empire |
Economies
The provinces in southeast coastal area of China – such as Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian and (mainly) Guangdong – tend to be more industrialized, with regions in the hinterland less developed.
See also
- Federalism in China
- List of Chinese administrative divisions by GDP
- List of Chinese administrative divisions by population
- List of current Chinese provincial leaders
- Regional discrimination in China
- Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China
- Tiao-kuai
- Yangtze Delta
- Zhou (country subdivision)
References
- ^ Hwang, Jim (October 1999). "Gone with the Times". Taiwan Review. Archived from the original on 2012-02-26. Retrieved 2012-01-11.
- ^ "Macao in Figures". Government of the Macao Special Administrative Region Statistics and Census Service. 2016. Archived from the original on 2018-11-05. Retrieved 2018-08-15.
- ^ 6-1 自然资源划 [6-1 Overview of natural resources] (in Chinese). Xinjiang Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
- ^ 省委书记能任免省长吗?省委书记和省长的级别谁大. 周公网讯网 (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2017-09-17. Retrieved 2018-08-20.
- ^ "GB/T 2260 codes for the provinces of China". Archived from the original on 2004-03-05. Retrieved 2011-10-30.
- ^ ISO 3166-2:CN (ISO 3166-2 codes for the provinces of China)
- ^ a b "Taiwan Provincial Government Official Website". Retrieved 17 July 2018.
- ^ "Doing Business in China – Survey". Ministry Of Commerce – People's Republic Of China. Archived from the original on 2013-08-05. Retrieved 5 August 2013.
- ^ "What were the ancient 9 provinces? Archived 2016-06-05 at the Wayback Machine" on www.chinahistoryforum.com
- ^ Twitchett 1979, pp. 203, 205.
- ^ Twitchett 1979, p. 404.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tseng, Hui-Yi (2017). Revolution, State Succession, International Treaties and the Diaoyu/Diaoyutai Islands. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 66. ISBN 9781443893688.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kim, Samuel S. (1979). China, the United Nations, and World Order. Princeton University Press. p. 43. ISBN 9780691100760.
- ^ Tzou, Byron N. (1990). China and International Law: The Boundary Disputes. Praeger. p. 77. ISBN 9780275934620.
External links
- Interactive Dbresearch.com: WebMap — with economic indicators for all Chinese Provinces.