Historical time zones of China

In 1912, the Central Observatory of the Republic of China in Peking (now romanised as Beijing) divided the country into five time zones, namely Kunlun Time Zone (GMT+5.5), Sinkiang-Tibet Time Zone (GMT+6), Kansu-Szechuan Time Zone (GMT+7), Chungyuan Standard Time Zone (GMT+8), and Changpai Time Zone (GMT+8.5). These time zones were ratified in 1939 in the standard time conference of the Ministry of Interior of the Executive Yuan.

These time zones were no longer in effective use after 1949, in the Chinese Civil War the People's Republic of China was established on mainland China. The new government had its own policies regarding time zones.

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Kunlun

The Kunlun Time Zone (崑崙時區) was assigned to the area around the Kunlun mountain ranges in the far west of China, based on the time on the longitude 82°30′E. Administrative divisions within this time zone were:

Sinkiang-Tibet

The Sinkiang-Tibet Time Zone (新藏時區) was named after the administrative divisions of Sinkiang and Tibet, which had the majority of their land lying in this time zone. The time zone also covered the western halves of their neighbouring administrative divisions. The time in this time zone was based on that on the longitude 90°E. Administrative divisions within this time zone included:

Kansu-Szechuan

The Kansu-Szechuan Time Zone (隴蜀時區) covered the mid-western part of China, based on the longitude 105°E. Administrative divisions within this time zone were:

Chungyuan

The Chungyuan Standard Time Zone (中原標準時區), or Central Standard Time Zone, covered the densely populated area of the ROC, including the then capital Nanking. As political and social environments have been changing, the term "Chungyuan Standard Time" is now rarely in use in Taiwan, while National Standard Time becomes the alternative. The time in this time zone was, however, based on the longitude 120°E. Administrative divisions in this time zone were:

Changpai

The Changpai Time Zone (長白時區) covered Northeast China. Named after the Changpai mountain range on the border between China and Korea, it was based on that on the longitude 127°30′E. Administrative divisions within this time zone included:

See also