Guangdong Province | |||||||||
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Abbreviations: 粤 (pinyin: Yuè, Jyutping: Jyut6) | |||||||||
Origin of name | 广 guǎng - "Wide" 东 dōng- "East" Lit. "The Eastern Expanse" |
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Administration type | Province | ||||||||
Capital (and largest city) |
Guangzhou | ||||||||
CPC Ctte Secretary | Wang Yang | ||||||||
Governor | Huang Huahua | ||||||||
Area | 177,900 km2 (68,700 sq mi) (15th) | ||||||||
- Latitude | {{{Latitude}}} | ||||||||
- Longitude | {{{Longitude}}} | ||||||||
Population (2008) - Density |
95,440,000 (1st) 536 /km2 (1,390 /sq mi) (7th) |
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GDP ( 2009) - per capita |
CNY 3.91 trillion US$572.12 billion (1st) CNY 40,748 US$5,965 (6th) |
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HDI (2008) | 0.844 (high) (4th) | ||||||||
Ethnic composition | Han - 99% Zhuang - 0.7% Yao - 0.2% |
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Prefecture-level | 21 divisions | ||||||||
County-level | 121 divisions | ||||||||
Township-level* | 1642 divisions | ||||||||
ISO 3166-2 | CN-44 | ||||||||
Official website http://www.gd.gov.cn (Simplified Chinese) |
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Source for population and GDP data:
《中国统计年鉴—2005》 China Statistical Yearbook 2005
Source for nationalities data:
ISBN 7503747382 《2000年人口普查中国民族人口资料》 Tabulation on nationalities of 2000 population census of China
*As at December 31, 2004ISBN 7105054255 |
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Template ■ Discussion ■ WikiProject China |
Guangdong | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 广东 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 廣東 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cantonese Jyutping | gwong2 dung1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin | Guǎngdōng | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Guangdong (simplified Chinese: 广东省; traditional Chinese: 廣東省; pinyin: Guǎngdōng Shěng) is a province on the southern coast of People's Republic of China. The province was previously often written with the alternative English name Kwangtung Province. It surpassed Henan and Sichuan to become the most populous province in China in January 2005, registering 79 million permanent residents and 31 million migrants who lived in the province for at least six months of the year.[1][2] The provincial capital Guangzhou and economic hub Shenzhen are amongst the most populous and important cities in China.
Guangdong is one of China's most prosperous provinces, its GDP has topped the rankings since 1989 amongst all provincial-level divisions. According to provincial annual preliminary statistics,[3] Guangdong's GDP in 2009 reached CNY3,908,159 million, or US$572,121 million, making its economy roughly the same size as that of Turkey or Indonesia.[4] The Guangdong province has the third highest GDP per capita in China, after Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces. The province contributes approximately 12% of China's national economic output, and is home to the production facilities and offices of a wide-ranging set of multinational and Chinese corporations. Guangdong also hosts the largest Import and Export Fair in China called the Canton Fair in Guangdong's capital city Guangzhou.
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"Guang" itself means "expanse" or "vast", and has been associated with the region since the creation of Guang Prefecture in AD 226. "Guangdong" and neighboring Guangxi literally mean "expanse east" and "expanse west". Together, Guangdong and Guangxi are called the "Dual-Guangs" (兩廣 liăng guăng). During the Song dynasty, the two Guang's were formally separated as Guangnan Dong lu (廣南東路) and Guangnan Xi lu (廣南西路), which became abbreviated as Guangdong lu (廣東路) and Guangxi lu (廣西路). The modern abbreviation 粵/粤 (Yue) is related to the Hundred Yue (百越), a collective name for various peoples that lived in Guangdong and other areas in ancient times.
Prior to the introduction of Hanyu Pinyin, the province was known as Kwangtung Province. One should note that Canton, though etymologically derived from a Portuguese transliteration of "Guangdong", only refers to the provincial capital instead of the whole province, as documented by authoritative English dictionaries. The local people of the city of Guangzhou (Canton) and their language are still commonly referred to as Cantonese in English. Because of the prestige of Canton and its accent, Cantonese sensu lato can also be used for the phylogenetically related residents and Chinese dialects outside the provincial capital.
Guangdong was far away from the centre of ancient Chinese civilization in the north China plain. It was populated by peoples collectively known as the Hundred Yue, who may have been Kradai and related to the Zhuang people in modern Guangxi.
Chinese administration in the region began with the Qin Dynasty. After establishing the first unified Chinese empire, the Qin expanded southwards and set up Nanhai Commandery at Panyu, near what is now part of Guangzhou. It used to be independent as Nanyue between the fall of Qin and the reign of Emperor Wu of Han. The Han Dynasty administered Guangdong, Guangxi, and northern Vietnam as Jiaozhi Province. Under the Wu Kingdom of the Three Kingdoms period, Guangdong was made its own province, the Guang Province, in 226.
As time passed, the demographics of what is now Guangdong slowly shifted to (Han) Chinese-dominance, especially during several periods of massive migration from the north during periods of political turmoil and/or nomadic incursions from the fall of the Han Dynasty onwards. For example, internal strife in northern China following the rebellion of An Lushan resulted in a 75% increase in the population of Guangzhou prefecture between 740s-750s and 800s-810s.[5] As more migrants arrived, the local population was gradually assimilated to Han Chinese culture,[6] or displaced.
Together with Guangxi, Guangdong was made part of Lingnan Circuit (political division Circuit), or Mountain-South Circuit, in 627 during the Tang Dynasty. The Guangdong part of Lingnan Circuit was renamed Guangnan East Circuit guǎng nán dōng lù in 971 during the Song Dynasty (960-1279). "Guangnan East" is the source of "Guangdong".
As Mongols from the north engaged in their conquest of China in the 13th century, the Southern Song Dynasty retreated southwards, eventually ending up in today's Guangdong. The Battle of Yamen 1279 in Guangdong marked the end of the Southern Song Dynasty (960-1279).
During the Mongol Yuan Dynasty, Guangdong was a part of Jiangxi. Its present name, "Guangdong Province" was given in early Ming Dynasty.
Since the 16th century, Guangdong has had extensive trade links with the rest of the world. European merchants coming northwards via the Straits of Malacca and the South China Sea, particularly the Portuguese and British, traded extensively through Guangzhou. Macau, on the southern coast of Guangdong, was the first European settlement in 1557.
In the 19th century, it was the opium trade through Guangzhou that triggered the Opium Wars, opening an era of foreign incursion and intervention in China. In addition to Macau, which was then a Portuguese colony, Hong Kong was ceded to the British, and Kwang-Chou-Wan to the French.
In the 19th century, Guangdong was also the major port of exit for labourers to Southeast Asia and the West, i.e. United States and Canada. As a result, many overseas Chinese communities have their origins in Guangdong. The Cantonese language therefore has proportionately more speakers among overseas Chinese people than mainland Chinese. In the US, there is a large number of Chinese who are descendants of immigrants from the otherwise unremarkable Guangdong region of Taishan (Toisan in Cantonese), who speak a distinctive dialect of Cantonese called Taishanese (or Toishanese).
During the 1850s, the first revolt of the Taiping Rebellion took place in Guangdong. Because of direct contact with the West, Guangdong was the center of anti-Manchu and anti-imperialist activity. The generally acknowledged founder of modern China, Sun Yat-Sen, was from Guangdong.
During the early 1920s of the Republic of China, Guangdong was the staging area for Kuomintang (KMT) to prepare for the Northern Expedition, an effort to bring the various warlords of China back under the central government. Whampoa Military Academy was built near Guangzhou to train military commanders.
In recent years, the province has seen extremely rapid economic growth, aided in part by its close trading links with Hong Kong, which borders it. It is now the province with the highest gross domestic product in China.
In 1952, a small section of Guangdong's coastline was given to Guangxi, giving it access to the sea. This was reversed in 1955, and then restored in 1965. Hainan Island was originally part of Guangdong but it was separated as its own province in 1988.
Guangdong faces the South China Sea to the south and has a total of 4,300 km of coastline. Leizhou Peninsula is on the southwestern end of the province. There are a few inactive volcanoes on Leizhou Peninsula. The Pearl River Delta is the convergent point of three upstream rivers: the East River, North River, and West River. The river delta is filled with hundreds of small islands. The province is geographically separated from the north by a few mountain ranges collectively called the Southern Mountain Range (南岭). The highest peak in the province is Shikengkong 1,902 meters above sea level.
Guangdong borders Fujian province to the northeast, Jiangxi and Hunan provinces to the north, Guangxi autonomous region to the west, and Hong Kong and Macau Special Administrative Regions to the south. Hainan province is offshore across from the Leizhou Peninsula. Certain of the Pratas Islands which have traditionally been regarded as part of Guangdong Province are administered by the Government of the Republic of China on Taiwan.[7]
Cities around the Pearl River Delta include Dongguan, Foshan, Guangzhou, Huizhou, Jiangmen, Shenzhen, Shunde, Taishan, Zhongshan and Zhuhai. Other cities in the province include Chaozhou, Chenghai, Kaiping, Nanhai, Shantou, Shaoguan, Xinhui, Zhanjiang, Zhaoqing, Yangjiang and Yunfu.
Guangdong has a humid subtropical climate (tropical in the far south), with short, mild, dry, winters and long, hot, wet summers. Average daily highs in Guangzhou in January and July are 18 °C (64 °F) and 33 °C (91 °F) respectively, although the humidity makes it feel much hotter in summer. Frost is rare on the coast but may happen a few days each winter well inland.
This is a trend of official estimates of the gross domestic product of the Province of Guangdong with figures in millions of Chinese Yuan:
Year | Gross domestic product |
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1980 | 24,521 |
1985 | 55,305 |
1990 | 140,184 |
1995 | 538,132 |
2000 | 966,223 |
2008 | 3,570,000 |
2009 | 3,908,159 |
After the communist takeover and until the start of the Deng Xiaoping reforms in 1978, Guangdong was an economic backwater, although a large underground, service-based economy has always existed. Economic development policies encouraged industrial development in the interior provinces which were weakly linked to Guangdong via transportation links. The government policy of economic autarchy made Guangdong's access to the ocean irrelevant.
Deng Xiaoping's open door policy radically changed the economy of the province as it was able to take advantage of its access to the ocean, proximity to Hong Kong, and historical links to overseas Chinese. In addition, until the 1990s when the Chinese taxation system was reformed, the province benefited from the relatively low rate of taxation placed on it by the central government due to its post-Liberation status of being economically backward.
Although Shanghai is often cited as evidence of China's success, Guangdong's economic boom exemplifies the reality of the vast labor-intensive manufacturing powerhouse China has become, and all the rewards and shortcomings that come with it. Guangdong's economic boom began with the early 1990s and has since spread to neighboring provinces, and also pulled their populations inward. The economy is based on manufacturing and export.
The province is now one of the richest in the nation, with the highest GDP among all the provinces, although wage growth has only recently begun to rise due to a large influx of migrant workers from neighboring provinces. Its nominal GDP for 2009 was 3.91 trillion yuan (US$570 billion).
In 2009, Guangdong's primary, secondary, and tertiary industries were worth 201 billion yuan, 1.93 trillion yuan, and 1.78 trillion yuan respectively.[8] Its per capita GDP reached 40,748 yuan (about US$5,965).[9] Guangdong contributes approximately 12% of the total national economic output.[10] Now, it has three of the six Special Economic Zones: Shenzhen, Shantou and Zhuhai. The affluence of Guangdong, however, remains very much concentrated near the Pearl River Delta.
In 2008 its foreign trade also grew 7.8% from the previous year and is also by far the largest of all of China. By numbers, Guangdong's foreign trade accounts for more than a quarter of China's US$2.56 trillion foreign trade or roughly US$683 billion.[11]
Guangdong officially became the most populous province in January 2005.[1][2] Official statistics had traditionally placed Guangdong as the 4th most populous province of China with about 80 million people (also, Sichuan, traditionally the most populous province, was divided into Sichuan and Chongqing in 1997) but recently released information suggests that there are an additional 30 million migrants who reside in Guangdong for at least six months every year, making it the most populous province with a population of more than 110 million.[14] The massive influx of migrants from other provinces, dubbed the "floating population", is due to Guangdong's booming economy and high demand for labor.
Guangdong is also the ancestral home of large numbers of overseas Chinese. Most of the railroad laborers in Canada, Western United States and Panama in the 19th century came from Guangdong. Many people from the region also travelled to the US / California during the gold rush of 1849, and also to Australia during its gold rush a decade or so later. Emigration in recent years has slowed with economic prosperity, but this province is still a major source of immigrants to North America and elsewhere in the world.
The majority of the province's population is Han Chinese. Within the Han Chinese, the largest subgroup in Guangdong are the Cantonese people. Two other major groups are the Teochew people in Chaoshan and the Hakka people in Meizhou. There is a small Yao population in the north. Other smaller minority groups include She, Miao, Li, and Zhuang.
Guangdong is governed by a dual-party system like the rest of China. The premier is in charge of provincial affairs; however, the Party Secretary keeps things in check.
Hong Kong and Macau, while historically parts of Guangdong before becoming colonies of the United Kingdom and Portugal respectively, are Special Administrative Regions, a first-order administrative division on the same level as Guangdong. Furthermore, the Basic Laws of both SARs explicitly forbid provincial governments from intervening in local politics. As a result, many issues with Hong Kong and Macao, such as border policy and water rights, have been settled by negotiations between the SARs' governments and the Guangdong provincial government.
Guangdong and the greater Guangzhou area is served by several Radio Guangdong stations and Guangdong TV. There is an English programme produced by Radio Guangdong which broadcasts information about this region to the entire world through the World Radio Network.
The central region, which is also the political and economic center, is populated predominantly by Cantonese speakers, though the influx in the last three decades of millions of Putonghua-speaking immigrants has diminished Cantonese linguistic dominance somewhat. This region is associated with Cantonese cuisine (simplified Chinese: 粤菜; traditional Chinese: 粵菜). Cantonese opera (simplified Chinese: 粤剧; traditional Chinese: 粵劇) is a form of Chinese opera popular in Cantonese speaking areas. It is very famous. Related Yue dialects are spoken in most of the western half of the province.
The area comprising the cities of Chaozhou, Shantou and Jieyang in coastal east Guangdong, known as Chaoshan, forms its own cultural sphere. The Teochew people here, alongside with Hailufeng people in Shanwei, speak Teochew (simplified Chinese: 潮语, traditional Chinese: 潮語), which is a Min dialect closely related to Min-nan and their cuisine is Teochew cuisine(simplified Chinese: 潮州菜; traditional Chinese: 潮州菜). Teochew opera (simplified Chinese: 潮剧, traditional Chinese: 潮劇) is also very famous with a unique form.
The Hakka people live in large areas of Guangdong, including Huizhou, Meizhou, Shenzhen, Heyuan, Shaoguan and other areas. Much of the Eastern part of Guangdong is populated by the Hakka people except for the Chaozhou and Hailufeng area. Hakka culture include Hakka cuisine (客家菜), Han opera (simplified Chinese: 汉剧; traditional Chinese: 漢劇), Hakka Hanyue and sixian (traditional instrumental music) and Hakka folk songs (客家山歌).
Putonghua (Mandarin Chinese) is the language used in education and government and in areas where there are migrants from other provinces, above all in Shenzhen. Cantonese maintains a strong position in common usage and media, even in eastern areas of the province where the local dialects are non-Yue ones.
List of current professional sports clubs based in Guangdong:
Sport | League | Tier | Club | City | Stadium |
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Football | Chinese Super League | 1st | Shenzhen Ruby | Shenzhen | Shenzhen Stadium |
Football | China League One | 2nd | Guangzhou FC | Guangzhou | Yuexiushan Stadium |
Football | China League One | 2nd | Guangdong Sunray Cave | Guangzhou | Provincial Stadium |
Football | China Women's Super League | 1st | Guangdong Highsun | Foshan | Century Lotus Stadium |
Futsal | China Futsal League | 1st | Guangzhou Sports Act | Guangzhou | Sports Univ Stadium |
Basketball | Chinese Basketball Association | 1st | Guangdong Winnerway | Dongguan | Dongguan Stadium |
Basketball | Chinese Basketball Association | 1st | Dongguan New Century | Dongguan | Dalang Stadium |
Basketball | National Basketball League | 1st | Guangzhou Free Man | Guangzhou | Mega Center Stadium |
Basketball | National Basketball League | 1st | Guangzhou Huangpu | Guangzhou | Huangpu Stadium |
Basketball | National Basketball League | 1st | Guangdong Changan | Dongguan | Dongguan Stadium |
Basketball | Women's Basketball Association | 1st | Guangdong Asia Aluminum | Zhaoqing | Zhaoqing Stadium |
Volleyball | Men's Volleyball League Div A | 1st | Guangdong Jianlong | Taishan | Taishan Stadium |
Volleyball | Women's Volleyball League Div A | 1st | Guangdong Evergrande | Guangzhou | Evergrande Stadium |
Volleyball | Women's Volleyball League Div B | 2nd | Guangdong Jianlong | Taishan | Taishan Stadium |
Baseball | China Baseball League | 1st | Guangdong Leopards | Guangzhou | Huangcun Stadium |
Notable attractions include Danxia Mountain, Yuexiu Hill in Guangzhou, Star Lake and the Seven Star Crags, Dinghu Mountain, and the Zhongshan Sun Wen Memorial Park for Sun Yat-sen in Zhongshan.
Map | # | Name | Hanzi | Hanyu Pinyin | Administrative Seat |
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— Sub-provincial city — | |||||
9 | Guangzhou | 廣州市 | Guǎngzhōu Shì | Yuexiu District | |
21 | Shenzhen | 深圳市 | Shēnzhèn Shì | Futian District | |
— Prefecture-level city — | |||||
1 | Qingyuan | 清遠市 | Qīngyuǎn Shì | Qingcheng District | |
2 | Shaoguan | 韶關市 | Sháoguān Shì | Zhenjiang District | |
3 | Heyuan | 河源市 | Héyuán Shì | Yuancheng District | |
4 | Meizhou | 梅州市 | Méizhōu Shì | Meijiang District | |
5 | Chaozhou | 潮州市 | Cháozhōu Shì | Fengxi District | |
6 | Zhaoqing | 肇慶市 | Zhàoqìng Shì | Duanzhou District | |
7 | Yunfu | 雲浮市 | Yúnfú Shì | Yuncheng District | |
8 | Foshan | 佛山市 | Fóshān Shì | Chancheng District | |
10 | Dongguan | 東莞市 | Dōngguǎn Shì | Dongguan | |
11 | Huizhou | 惠州市 | Hùizhōu Shì | Huicheng District | |
12 | Shanwei | 汕尾市 | Shànwěi Shì | Chengqu District | |
13 | Jieyang | 揭陽市 | Jiēyáng Shì | Rongcheng District | |
14 | Shantou | 汕頭市 | Shàntóu Shì | Jinping District | |
15 | Zhanjiang | 湛江市 | Zhànjiāng Shì | Chikan District | |
16 | Maoming | 茂名市 | Màomíng Shì | Maonan District | |
17 | Yangjiang | 陽江市 | Yángjiāng Shì | Jiangcheng District | |
18 | Jiangmen | 江門市 | Jiāngmén Shì | Pengjiang District | |
19 | Zhongshan | 中山市 | Zhōngshān Shì | Zhongshan | |
20 | Zhuhai | 珠海市 | Zhūhǎi Shì | Xiangzhou District |
The above division govern, in total, 49 districts, 30 county-level cities, 42 counties, and three autonomous counties. For county-level divisions, see the list of administrative divisions of Guangdong.
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