Chongqing 重庆 |
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— Direct-controlled municipality — | |
Municipality of Chongqing · 重庆市 | |
From top:Yuzhong Skyline , CRT Line 2 Monorail, Chaotianmen Bridge, and Great Hall of the People | |
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Coordinates: | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
County-level divisions | 40 |
Township divisions | 1259 |
Settled | ca. 316 BC |
Government | |
- CPC Chongqing | Bo Xilai Committee Secretary |
- Mayor | Huang Qifan |
Area(ranked 26th) | |
- Direct-controlled municipality | 82,300 km2 (31,776.2 sq mi) |
Elevation | 435 m (1,427 ft) |
Population (2007) | |
- Direct-controlled municipality | 31,442,300 |
- Density | 382/km2 (989.5/sq mi) |
- Urban | 5,087,197 |
- Ranks in China | Populations: 20th; Density: 12th |
- Major nationalities | Han - 91% Tujia - 5% Miao - 2% |
[1] | |
Time zone | China Standard Time (UTC+8) |
Postal code | 4000 00 - 4099 00 |
Area code(s) | 23 |
License plate prefixes | 渝 A, B, C, F, G, H |
ISO 3166-2 | CN-50 |
GDP (2009) | CNY 652.7 billion |
- per capita | CNY 22,909 |
HDI (2008) | 0.783 (18th) — medium |
Website | (Chinese) www.cq.gov.cn (English) english.cq.gov.cn/ |
Ficus lacor Camellia (Camellia japonica) |
Chongqing | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 重庆 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 重慶 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin | Chóngqìng | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | double celebration | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sichuanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Sichuanese | Cong2qin4 |
Chongqing (simplified Chinese: 重庆; pinyin: Chóngqìng; Sichuanese Pinyin: Cong2qin4; Sichuanese pronunciation: [tsʰoŋ21tɕʰin214]; Postal map spelling: Chungking; Wade-Giles: Ch'ung-ch'ing) is a major city in southwestern mainland China and one of the five national central cities. Administratively, it is one of the People's Republic of China's four direct-controlled municipalities (the other three are Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin), and the only such municipality in western China.
The municipality was created on 14 March 1997, succeeding the sub-provincial city administration that was part of Sichuan Province. In 2007, the municipality of Chongqing had a population of 31.4 million.[1] It has jurisdiction over 19 districts, 17 counties, and four autonomous counties. With an area of 82,300 km² (31,800 mi²), it is the largest direct-controlled municipality, larger even than one province and an autonomous region, as well as Taiwan.[2] It is possibly the world's largest municipality by area.
The municipal abbreviation, Yú (渝), was approved by the State Council on 18 April 1997. Chongqing was also a municipality of the Republic of China administration, serving as its wartime capital during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Its abbreviated name is derived from the old name of a part of the Jialing River that runs through Chongqing and feeds the Yangtze River.
Today, it is the economic centre of the Upstream Yangtze area, and outsiders have speculated that, due to its ever-growing number of river bridges and hyper-dense skyline, it will be China's "Chicago on the Yangtze".[3]
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Chongqing is said to be the semi-legendary State of Ba that the Ba people supposedly established during the eleventh century BCE. By 316 BCE, however, it had been overrun by the State of Qin. The Qin emperor ordered a new city to be constructed, which was called Jiang (江州) and Chu Prefecture (楚州).
Chongqing was subsequently renamed in 581 CE (Sui Dynasty) and l;;1102, to Yu Prefecture (渝州) and then Gong Prefecture (恭州). It received its current name in 1189, after Prince Zhao Dun of the Southern Song Dynasty described his crowning as king and then Emperor Guangzong as a "double/repeated happy celebration" (simplified Chinese: 双重喜庆; traditional Chinese: 雙重喜慶; pinyin: shuāngchóng xǐqìng). Hence, Yu Prefecture became Chongqing subprefecture to mark the occasion.
In 1362, (Yuan Dynasty), Ming Yuzhen, a peasant rebelling leader, established the Daxia Kingdom (大夏) at Chongqing for a short time.
In 1621 (Ming Dynasty), another short-lived kingdom of Daliang (大梁) was established by She Chongming (奢崇明) in Chongqing as its capital.
Between 1627-1645, with the fall of the Ming Dynasty, Chongqing, together with Sichuan, were captured by the Revolts who overthrew the Ming Dynasty across the nation. Later during the Qing Dynasty, immigration to Chongqing and Sichuan took place with the support of Qing emperor.
In 1891, Chongqing became the first inland commerce port open to foreigners.
From 1929, Chongqing became a municipality of the Republic of China. During the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), it was Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's provisional capital and was heavily bombed by the Japanese Air Force. Due to its mountainous environment, many people were saved from the bombing. Many factories and universities were moved from eastern China to Chongqing during WWII, transforming this city from inland port to a heavily industrialized city. In late November 1949 the Nationalist KMT government fled the city.
In 1954, the municipality was demoted to a sub-provincial city within the Sichuan Province of the People's Republic of China.
On 14 March 1997, the Eighth National People's Congress decided to merge the city with the neighbouring Fuling, Wanxian, and Qianjiang prefecture-level districts that it had governed on behalf of the province since September 1996. The resulting single division was the Chongqing Municipality, containing 30,020,000 people in forty-three former counties (without intermediate political levels). The municipality became the spearhead of China's effort to develop its western regions and to coordinate the resettlement of residents from the reservoir areas of the Three Gorges Dam project. Its first official ceremony took place on 18 June 1997.
In 2009, Chongqing hosted the Second "Chinese Bridge" Chinese Proficiency Competition For Foreign Secondary School Students, organised by Hanban, from the October 16 to October 31.
Chinese simple Chongqing(简体中文:重庆) |
Chinese traditional Chongqing(繁体中文:重慶) |
All climactic data listed below comes from Yubei District
Located on the edge of the Yungui Plateau, Chongqing is intersected by the Jialing River and the upper reaches of the Yangtze. It contains Daba Shan in the north, Wu Shan in the east, Wuling Shan in the southeast, and Dalou Mountain to the south.
The city is very hilly and as such it is the unique in China for lacking significant numbers of bicycles.
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Chongqing Municipality is divided into forty county-level subdivisions (three abolished in 1997), consisting of nineteen districts, seventeen counties, and four autonomous counties. At 82,300 km² (31,800 mi²), Chongqing is the largest of the four direct-controlled municipalities of the People's Republic of China, ahead of Beijing[6] and Shanghai.[7] It is even larger than one autonomous region, Ningxia, one province, Hainan, and also the total land area of all territory controlled by the Republic of China.[2] The boundaries of Chongqing municipality reach much farther into the city's hinterland than the boundaries of the other three provincial level municipalities (Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin), and much of its administrative area is rural.
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Pinyin name | Hanzi | Previous associationa |
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Pengshui Miao and Tujia | 彭水苗族土家族自治县 | Qianjiang |
Shizhu Tujia | 石柱土家族自治县 | |
Xiushan Tujia and Miao | 秀山土家族苗族自治县 | |
Youyang Tujia and Miao | 酉阳土家族苗族自治县 |
a Indicates with which district the division was associated below prior to the merging of Chongqing, Fuling, Wanxian (now Wanzhou) and Qianjiang in 1997.
The urban area of Chongqing Municipality (重庆主城区市区) includes the following districts:
Chongqing has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa), with the two-season monsoonal variations typical of South Asia.
As one of the "Three Furnaces" (三大火炉), Chongqing's summers are among the hottest in China, with highs of around 33 °C (91 °F) in August, in the central portions of the city. Yet even in the hottest weather the wind is often cool , making such high temperatures more bearable. Winters are somewhat mild, but damp and overcast. Chongqing's location in the Sichuan Basin causes it to have one of the lowest sunshine totals annually in China.
Climate data for Chongqing (Yubei District, 1961-1990) | |||||||||||||
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Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Average high °C (°F) | 9.5 (49.1) |
11.6 (52.9) |
16.8 (62.2) |
22.2 (72) |
25.9 (78.6) |
28.1 (82.6) |
32.2 (90) |
32.8 (91) |
26.5 (79.7) |
21.3 (70.3) |
15.8 (60.4) |
10.9 (51.6) |
21.1 (70) |
Average low °C (°F) | 5.6 (42.1) |
7.0 (44.6) |
10.9 (51.6) |
15.1 (59.2) |
18.9 (66) |
21.5 (70.7) |
24.5 (76.1) |
24.5 (76.1) |
20.4 (68.7) |
16.2 (61.2) |
11.6 (52.9) |
7.2 (45) |
15.3 (59.5) |
Precipitation mm (inches) | 20.1 (0.791) |
19.9 (0.783) |
33.6 (1.323) |
110.1 (4.335) |
156.4 (6.157) |
163.9 (6.453) |
178.1 (7.012) |
136.5 (5.374) |
132.5 (5.217) |
90.8 (3.575) |
49.3 (1.941) |
27.1 (1.067) |
1,118.3 (44.028) |
% Humidity | 83 | 80 | 76 | 77 | 79 | 81 | 76 | 72 | 81 | 84 | 84 | 84 | 79.8 |
Avg. precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) | 10.1 | 9.8 | 11.4 | 14.4 | 17.0 | 16.0 | 12.8 | 10.8 | 15.6 | 15.3 | 14.0 | 10.5 | 157.7 |
Sunshine hours | 22.2 | 31.1 | 70.9 | 96.7 | 104.0 | 101.6 | 178.9 | 201.0 | 88.4 | 66.2 | 38.7 | 24.0 | 1,023.7 |
Source: China Meteorological Administration [4] |
Due to its position on the Yangtze and strong industrial development, Chongqing is known for its fog and suffers from very heavy air pollution. Foggy weather is most prevalent during spring and winter days, which gives this city a nickname of "the Fog Capital" (Chinese: 雾都). This special weather once protected Chongqing from being overrun by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. However, the city government has been aggressively trying to improve its air quality in recent years. The so called "blue sky days" (days with air quality within or better than slight pollution) number have been on the rise.
According to a July 2010 article from the official Xinhua news agency, Chongqing has a population of 32.8 million, including 23.3 million farmers. Among them, 8.4 million farmers have become migrant workers, including 3.9 million working and living in urban areas of Chongqing.[8]
This would mean that the locally registered farmers who work in other jurisdictions number 4.5 million, reducing the local, year-round population of Chongqing in 2010 to 28.3 million, plus those who are registered in other jurisdictions but live and work in Chongqing. According to China's 2005 statistical yearbook, of a total population of 30.55 million, those with residence registered in other jurisdictions but residing in the Chongqing enumeration area numbered 1.4 million, including 46,000 who resided in Chongqing "for less than half year". An additional 83,000 had registered in Chongqing, but not yet settled there.[9]
The 2005 statistical yearbook also lists 15.22 million (49.82%) males and 15.33 million (50.18%) females.[9]
It terms of age distribution in 2004, of the 30.55 million total population, 6.4 million (20.88%) were age 0-14, 20.7 million (67.69%) were 15-64, and 3.5 million (11.46%) were 65 and over.[10]
Of a total 10.47 million households (2004), 1.36 million consisted of one person, 2.94 million 2-person, 3.19 3-person, 1.79 million 4-person, 783,000 5-person, 270,000 6-person, 89,000 7-person, 28,000 8-person, 6,000 9-person, and 10,000 households of 10 or more persons per household.[11]
The politics of Chongqing is structured in a dual party-government system like all other governing institutions in the People's Republic of China.
The Mayor of Chongqing is the highest ranking official in the People's Government of Chongqing. Since Chongqing is a centrally administered municipality, the mayor occupies the same level in the order of precedence as provincial governors. However, in the city's dual party-government governing system, the mayor has less power than the Chongqing Communist Party of China Municipal Committee Secretary, colloquially termed the "Chongqing CPC Party Chief".
Chongqing also has the distinction of being the wartime capital of China during the Second Sino-Japanese war, and for a brief period being the seat of administration for the Republic of China government before its departure to Taiwan.
Preceded by Guangzhou |
Capital of China 1937-1945 |
Succeeded by Nanjing |
Preceded by Guangzhou |
Capital of the Republic of China (during the Chinese Civil War) 1949 |
Succeeded by Chengdu |
Chongqing was separated from Sichuan province and made into a municipality in its own right in March 1997[12] in order to accelerate its development and subsequently China's relatively poorer western areas (see China Western Development strategy).[13] An important industrial area in western China,[14] Chongqing is also rapidly urbanizing. For instance, statistics[15] suggest that new construction added approximately 137,000 square meters (1.5 million square feet) daily of usable floor space to satisfy demands for residential, commercial and factory space. In addition, more than 1,300 people moved into the city daily, adding almost 100 million yuan (US$15 million) to the local economy.
Traditionally, due to its geographical remoteness, Chongqing and neighboring Sichuan are important military bases in weapons research and development.[16] Chongqing's industries have now diversified but unlike eastern China, its export sector is small due to its inland location. Instead, factories producing local-oriented consumer goods such as processed food, autos, chemicals, textiles, machinery and electronics are common.
Chongqing is China's third largest center of motor vehicle production and the largest for motorcycles. In 2007, it had an annual output capacity of 1 million automobiles and 8.6 million motorcycles.[17] Leading makers of cars and motor bikes include Changan Automotive Corp - China's fourth biggest automaker and Lifan Hongda Enterprise. The municipality is also one of the 9 largest iron and steel centres in China and one of the three major aluminium producers. Important manufacturers include Chongqing Iron and Steel Company and South West Aluminium - Asia's largest aluminum plant.[18] Agriculture remains significant. Rice and fruits (especially oranges) are the area's main produce. Natural resources are also abundant with large deposits of coal, natural gas, and more than 40 kinds of minerals such as strontium and manganese,[19] although the mining sector has been criticised for being wasteful, heavily-polluting, and unsafe.[20] Chongqing is also planned to be the site of a 10-million-ton-capacity refinery operated by CNPC (parent company of PetroChina) to process imported crude oil from the Sino-Burma pipelines. The pipeline itself, though not yet finished, will eventually run from Sittwe (in Myanmar's western coast) through Kunming in Yunnan province before reaching Chongqing[21] and it will provide China with fuels sourced from Myanmar, the Middle East, and Africa. Recently, there has been a drive to move up the value chain by shifting towards hi-tech and knowledge-intensive industries resulting in new development zones such as the Chongqing New North Zone (CNNZ).[22] Chongqing's local government is hoping through the promotion of favorable economic policies for the electronics and information technology sectors, that it can create a 400 billion RMB high tech manufacturing hub which will surpass its auto industry and account for 25% of its exports.[23]
The city has also invested heavily in infrastructure to attract investment.[17][24] The network of roads and railways connecting Chongqing to the rest of China have been expanded and upgraded reducing logistical costs. Furthermore, the nearby Three Gorges Dam - the world's largest - will not only supply Chongqing with power once completed but also allows ocean-going ships to reach Chongqing's Yangtze River port.[25] These infrastructure improvements have led to the arrivals of several foreign investors in industries ranging from auto to finance and retailing such as Ford, Mazda, HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, Wal-Mart, and Carrefour.[26]
Chongqing's nominal GDP in 2009 reached 652.8 billion yuan (US$95.5 billion) while registering an annual growth of 14.3%. However, its overall economic performance is still lagging behind eastern coastal cities such as Shanghai. For instance, its per capita GDP was 22,909 yuan (US$3,301) - below the national average. Nevertheless, there is a massive government support to transform Chongqing into the region's economic, trade, and financial centre and use the municipality as a platform to open up the country's western interior to further development.[27]
In the first decade of the 21st century, the city became notorious for organised crime and corruption. Gangsters oversaw businesses involving billions of yuan and the corruption reached into the law-enforcement and justice systems. In 2009, city authorities under the auspices of municipal Communist Party secretary Bo Xilai undertook a massive crackdown, arresting 4,893 suspected gangsters, 'outlaws' and corrupt cadres, leading to optimism that the period of gangsterism was over.[28]
However, local Chinese media later highlighted the apparent reliance by the authorities on torture to extract confessions upon which convictions were based. In December 2009, one defence lawyer was controversially arrested and sentenced to 18 months in prison for "coaching his client to make false claims of torture" and in July 2010, another lawyer released videotapes of his client describing the torture in detail.[29][30]
The city includes a number of economic and technological development zones:
Chongqing is served by the Chongqing People's Broadcast Station as the largest radio station. The only municipal-level TV network is Chongqing TV station, claimed to be the 4th largest television station. Chongqing Daily is the largest newspaper group, controlling more than 10 newspapers and one website.
Chongqing is the biggest inland river port in western China. Historically, most of its transportation, especially to eastern China, is via the Yangtze River.
Chongqing is a major rail hub in south central China.
Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport, located in Yubei district, north of Chongqing, provides links to most parts of China and to other countries. In year 2007, a total of 10,355,730 person-time transporting volume was reported, which ranks this airport as the 10th largest one in China and the third largest one in southwest China.
The three main forms of public transport in Chongqing are CRT rapid transit, intercity railway, and the ubiquitous bus system.
According to the Chongqing Municipal Government's ambitious plan in May 2007, Chongqing is going to invest 150 billion RMB over 13 years to finish a system that combines underground metro lines with light rail. By 2020 this network will consist of 6 straight lines and 1 circular line; Line 1 will be an underground metro while Lines 2 and 3 will be light rail. These improvements will add 363.5 kilometers of road and railway to the existing transportation infrastructure and 93 new train stations will be added to the 111 stations that are already in place. As of 2005[update] only one rail line, the 19 km long Chongqing light rail line 2 (project 1), had been finished.
By 2050 Chongqing is planned to have ten railway lines, totaling 513 kilometres, with 270 stations.[31]
Chongqing has a number of tourist attractions.
As the provisional Capital of China for almost ten years (1937 to 1945), it was also known as one of the three headquarters of the Allies. Chongqing has many historical World War II buildings or sites(unfortunately some of them were destroyed):
Besides those historical places, Chongqing also has many other attractions:
The native language spoken in Chongqing is Southwestern Mandarin. More precisely, most parts of Chongqing, except for Xiushan, speak Sichuanese: including the primary Chengdu-Chongqing dialect and Minjiang dialect spoken in Jiangjin and Qijiang.[32] There are also some Chinese speakers of Xiang and Hakka in Chongqing, due to the great immigration wave to Sichuan region, named Huguang Filled Sichuan (湖广填四川), during Ming and Qing Dynasty. Besides, in the southeatern part of Chonqing, formally known as Qiangjiang Prefecture (黔江地区), Miao and Tujia language is also used by some Miao and Tujia people.[33]
Chongqing University | 重庆大学 | founded in 1929 |
Southwest University | 西南大学 | founded in 1906 |
Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications | 重庆邮电大学 | founded in 1950 |
Chongqing Institute of Technology | 重庆理工大学 | founded in 1941 |
Chongqing Jiaotong University | 重庆交通大学 | |
Chongqing Normal University | 重庆师范大学 | |
Chongqing Technology and Business University | 重庆工商大学 | |
Chongqing Three Gorges University | 重庆三峡学院 | |
Yangtze Normal University | 长江师范学院 | founded in 1931 |
Sichuan Fine Arts Institute | 四川美术学院 | |
Sichuan International Studies University | 四川外语学院 | founded in 1950 |
Southwest University of Political Science and Law | 西南政法大学 | |
Third Military Medical University | 第三军医大学 | |
Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences | 重庆文理学院 | |
Chongqing Medical University | 重庆医科大学 | |
Chongqing University of Science and Technology | 重庆科技学院 | |
Logistical Engineering Corps Academy | 后勤工程学院 | founded in 1961 |
Professional sports teams in Chongqing include:
Chongqing is twinned with:
Chongqing Municipality has a Memorandum of Understanding (a form of twinning arrangement) with Wales, UK and became a 'sister region' of Wales in March 2008.[35]
In June 2007, a twinning agreement between Chongqing and Sør-Trøndelag was signed.[36]
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