Lintao County
Lintao County
临洮县 | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 35°22′45.92″N 103°51′23.04″E / 35.3794222°N 103.8564000°E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Province | Gansu |
Prefecture-level city | Dingxi |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 545,400 |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Website | www.lintao.gov.cn |
Lintao County simplified Chinese: 临洮县; traditional Chinese: 臨洮縣; pinyin: Líntáo Xiàn) is administratively under the control of Dingxi, Gansu province. In ancient times, Lintao was centered on present day Min County.[citation needed]
Geography
The county is located mostly on the right (eastern) bank of the Tao River, a right tributary of the Yellow River. It borders with Lanzhou in the northeast, with Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture in the west, and with other parts of Dingxi Prefecture-level City in the east and south.
The county seat of Lintao County is in Taoyang Town (洮阳镇; 洮陽鎮; Táoyáng Zhèn); as it is usually the case with Chinese county seats, this is the location that most less-detailed maps label as "Lintao County" or simply "Lintao".
History
Until the 20th century, Lintao was known as Didao (狄道).
The Battle of Didao was fought in the area in 255 CE, during the Three Kingdoms era.
In the 8th century, an anonymous poet of the Tang Dynasty places Chinese General Geshu Han, battling the Tibetans, at the gates of Lintao. [1]
Located at an important Tao River crossing, Didao City (i.e., today's Taoyang Town[2]) was an important trade center during the Northern Song Dynasty (ca. 11-12th century), when the more northern route of the Silk Route was blocked by the Xi Xia state. It is known to have been home to hundreds of foreign merchants at the time, some of whom may have been the ancestors of today's Hui people of Gansu.[3]
Transport
China National Highway 212 (which, in this area, is simultaneously designated as China National Highway 212) crosses the county from the north to the south, on its way from Lanzhou to south-eastern Gansu. Most of the section of this highway within Lintao County has now been converted to an expressway, designated G75 (Lanhai Expressway).
References
- ^ https://100tangpoems.wordpress.com/2016/08/27/100-tang-poems/
- ^ Unless the town has actually been moved at some point since...
- ^ Lipman, Jonathan Neaman (1998). Familiar strangers: a history of Muslims in Northwest China. Hong Kong University Press. p. 30. ISBN 962-209-468-6.