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Lianjiang Town
Lianjiang/Lienchiang may refer to: * Lianjiang County (), Fuzhou, Fujian, China (PRC) * Lienchiang County (), also the Matsu Islands, Fujian Province, Republic of China (Taiwan) * Lianjiang, Guangdong (), county-level city of Zhanjiang, Guangdong * Lianjiang, Anhui ( zh; ), town in and subdivision of Dingyuan County Dingyuan County () is a county of Anhui, Anhui Province, China. It is under the administration of Chuzhou city. History The ancestral home of Li Keqiang, the former Premier of the People's Republic of China, was Dingyuan. Human activity in Ding ..., Anhui * Lianjiang, Jiangxi ( zh; ), town in and subdivision of Xingguo County, Jiangxi * Lian River (other), several rivers in China {{geodis ...
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Lianjiang County
Lianjiang (; Foochow Romanized, BUC: Lièng-gŏng) is a counties of China, county on the eastern coast in Fuzhou prefecture-level city, the provincial capital of Fujian, Fujian Province, China. Most of the county is administered by the China, People's Republic of China (PRC), while a number of outlying islands, collectively referred to as the Matsu Islands, are administered as Matsu Islands, Lienchiang County (same Chinese character name in traditional Chinese characters and referred to using Wade–Giles romanization) by the Taiwan, Republic of China (ROC) (now based in Taiwan) ever since their return to ROC control after Japanese occupation in World War II. History Lianjiang, in 282, during the Jin dynasty (266–420), Jin dynasty, was Wenma, named after a shipyard there, Wensha Ship-hamlet (溫麻船屯). It was incorporated into Min Prefecture (閩縣) in 607, during the Sui dynasty. Wenma was changed to the present name and made its own county in 623, during the Tang dyna ...
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Lienchiang County
The Matsu Islands; Foochow Romanized: Mā-cū liĕk-dō̤ ( or ), officially Lienchiang County; Foochow Romanized: Lièng-gŏng-gâing (), are an archipelago of 36 islands and islets in the East China Sea governed by the Republic of China (Taiwan), situated alongside the southeastern coast of mainland China. The archipelago forms the smallest county in the ROC-controlled territories by area and population, as well as one of two counties that is a part of the nominal Fuchien Province. The current Lienchiang County of the ROC was once part of an intact Lienchiang County of Fujian before its effective partition in 1949 following the Chinese Civil War, which resulted in the mainland portion of the county being controlled by the People's Republic of China (PRC), while the offshore islands of Matsu remained under ROC control. The circumstance has made the county the only former geographical unit with the same name that is now divided between the administrations of the ROC and t ...
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Lianjiang, Guangdong
Lianjiang (Postal romanization, postal: Limkong; ) is a county-level city in the Prefecture-level city, municipal region of Zhanjiang, Guangdong. The city has an area of 2,543 square kilometers, and had a population of about 1,363,470 as of 2020. Geography Lianjiang lies in the north of the Leizhou Peninsula and faces Beibu Gulf to the southwest. The city is bordered to the east by Maoming; to the south by Wuchuan, Guangdong, Wuchuan, Potou District, and Suixi County, Guangdong, Suixi County, all in Zhanjiang; to the west by Anpugang Harbour (, part of the Gulf of Tonkin) and Beihai, in Guangxi Province; and to the north by Yulin, Guangxi, Yulin. Lianjiang lies 48 kilometers north of Zhanjiang's city center. Climate Administrative divisions The city is divided into 3 Subdistricts of China, subdistricts and 18 Towns of China, towns. Lianjiang's government is located in . Subdistricts Lianjiang's 3 subdistricts are , , and Chengbei Subdistrict, Lianjiang, Guangdong, Chengbe ...
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Dingyuan County
Dingyuan County () is a county of Anhui, Anhui Province, China. It is under the administration of Chuzhou city. History The ancestral home of Li Keqiang, the former Premier of the People's Republic of China, was Dingyuan. Human activity in Dingyuan County dates back to the Neolithic period, as shown by the Shaojia site in Guanshan Township and the Houjiazhai site in Qilitang Township. During the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods, the area around Dingyuan County was part of the state of Chu. After the Qin Dynasty unified the six states, Yinling and Dongcheng counties were established in what is now Dingyuan, both under the administration of Jiujiang County. In the Western Han Dynasty, the state of Quyang Hou was added to the present-day Dingyuan region, with the three administrative divisions still under Jiujiang's jurisdiction. During the Wang Mang period, the names of Dongcheng, Yinling, and Quyang Houguo were briefly changed. In the Eastern Han Dynasty, the original ...
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Xingguo County
Xingguo County () is a county in south central Jiangxi province, People's Republic of China. It is under the administration of and located in the north of the prefecture-level city of Ganzhou, with a total area of . Its population was 719,830 at the 2010 census. History In 236 during the Three Kingdoms period Pingyang County was set up in the current area of Xingguo County. In 982 during the Northern Song period the county of Xingguo was set up, named after the ''Taipingxingguo'' era (AD 976 – 984) of the emperor of that time. Xingguo was one of the counties controlled by the Chinese Communist Party in the Jiangxi–Fujian Soviet, a constituent entity of the Chinese Soviet Republic from 1931. Xingguo county was the site of pioneering achievements in land reform, educational reform, and organizational development. Mao Zedong praised these successes as part of "Xingguo Model" in 1934, and they became an important point of reference for other Communist Party policy experiments in ...
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