The Chinese phrase Four Great Ancient Capitals of China (simplified Chinese: 中国四大古都; traditional Chinese: 中國四大古都; pinyin: Zhōngguó Sì Dà Gǔdū) traditionally refers to Beijing (the current capital of the People's Republic), Nanjing, Luoyang, and Chang'an (Xi'an).
Due to additional evidence discovered since the 1930s, other historical capitals have been included in the list. The later phrase Seven Ancient Capitals of China includes Kaifeng (added in the 1920s as the fifth ancient capital), Hangzhou (the sixth, added in the 1930s), and Anyang (a proposal by numerous archaeologists in 1988, after which it finally became the seventh ancient capital). In 2004, the China Ancient Capital Society officially added Zhengzhou as an eighth due to archaeological finds from the early Shang Dynasty there.
Contents |
In alphabetical order:
Government | Capital | Period |
---|---|---|
Xia | Song (崇) | Gun |
Yangcheng (陽城) | Yu[2] | |
Chu (鉏) | Yi | |
Qiongshi (窮石) | Yi, Hanzhuo | |
Zhen (斟) | Taikang | |
Diqiu (帝丘) | Xiang | |
Yuan (原) | Zhu | |
Laoqiu (老丘) | Zhu | |
Xihe (西河) | Yinjia | |
Zhen (斟) | Jie | |
Henan (河南) | Jie[3] | |
Shang | Bo (亳) | Shang Tang[3] |
Fan (蕃) | Xie | |
Dishi (砥石) | Zhaoming | |
Shang (商) | Zhaoming | |
Shangqiu (商邱) | Xiangtu | |
Foot of Mount Tai ("泰山麓") | Xiangtu | |
Shangqiu (商邱) | Xiangtu | |
Yin (殷) | Shanghou | |
Shangqiu (商邱) | Yinhou | |
Bo ("西"亳) | Tang | |
Xiao (囂) | Zhongding | |
Xiang (相) | Hedanjia | |
Xing (邢) | Zuyi | |
Bi (庇) | Zuyi | |
Yan (奄) | Nan'geng | |
Yin (殷) | Pan'geng | |
Zhou (Western) | Zongzhou (宗周, Western capital) | 1046 BC—771 BC |
Chengzhou (成周, Eastern capital) | 1046 BC—771 BC | |
Zhou (Eastern) | Chengzhou (成周) | 770 BC—367 BC |
"Henan" (河南, capital of the Western Zhou State) | 367 BC—256 BC | |
Gong (鞏, capital of the Eastern Zhou State) | 367 BC—249 BC | |
Qin | Xiquanqiu (西犬丘) | |
Pingyang (平陽) | —677 BC | |
Yong (雍) | 677 BC— | |
Jingyang (涇陽) | —383 BC | |
Liyang (櫟陽) | 383 BC—250 BC | |
Xianyang (咸陽) | 350 BC—207 BC | |
Han (Western) | Luoyang (雒陽) | 202 BC |
Liyang (櫟陽) | 202 BC—200 BC | |
Chang'an (長安) | 200 BC—8 BC | |
Xin | Chang'an (長安) | 8 CE—23 CE |
Han (Eastern) | Luoyang (雒陽) | 25—190 |
Chang'an (長安) | 191—195 | |
Xu (許) | 196—220 | |
Wei (Three Kingdoms) |
Luoyang (洛陽) | 220—265 |
Han (Three Kingdoms) |
Chengdu (成都) | 221—263 |
Wu (Three Kingdoms) |
Jianye (建業) | 227—279 |
Jin (Western) | Luoyang (洛陽) | 265—313 |
Chang'an (長安) | 313—316 | |
Jin (Eastern) | Jiankang (建康) | 317—420 |
Wei (Northern dynasties) |
Pingcheng (平城) | 386—493 |
Luoyang (洛陽) | 493—534 | |
Ye (鄴, capital of the Eastern Wei State) | 534—550 | |
Chang'an (長安, capital of the Western Wei State) | 535—557 | |
Qi (Northern dynasties) |
Ye (鄴) | 550—577 |
Zhou (Northern dynasties) |
Chang'an (長安) | 557—581 |
Song (Southern dynasties) |
Jiankang (建康) | 420—479 |
Qi (Southern dynasties) |
Jiankang (建康) | 479—502 |
Liang (Southern dynasties) |
Jiankang (建康) | 502—557 |
Chen (Southern dynasties) |
Jiankang (建康) | 557—589 |
Sui | Dongdu (東都) | 581—618 |
Daxing (大興, auxiliary capital) | 581—618 | |
Tang | Chang'an (長安) | 618—690 |
Zhou | Chang'an (長安) | 690—705 |
Tang | Chang'an (長安) | 705—904 |
Luoyang (洛陽) | 904—907 | |
Liang (Five dynasties) |
Dongdu (東都) | 907—923 |
Tang (Five dynasties) |
Dongdu (東都) | 923—936 |
Jin (Five dynasties) |
Dongjing (東京) | 936—947 |
Han (Five dynasties) |
Dongjing (東京) | 947—950 |
Zhou (Five dynasties) |
Dongjing (東京) | 951—960 |
Song (Northern) | Dongjing (東京) | 960—1127 |
Song (Southern) | Lin'an (臨安) | 1127—1279 |
Liao, Empire of the Khitan |
Shangjing (上京) | 907—1120 |
Nanjing (南京) | 1122—1123 | |
Tokmok (虎思斡耳朵) | 1134—1218 | |
Jin | Shangjing (上京) | 1115—1153 |
Zhongdu (中都) | 1153—1214 | |
Nanjing (南京) | 1214—1234 | |
Western Xia | Xingqing | 1038—1227 |
Yuan | ||
Shangdu (上都) | May 1264 — 1276 | |
Dadu (大都) | 1276 — August 1368 | |
Shangdu (上都) | August 1368 — 1369 | |
Ming | Nanjing (南京) | 23 January 1368 — 2 February 1421 |
Beijing (北京) | 2 February 1421 — 25 April 1644 | |
Nanjing (南京) | 1644 — 1645 | |
Fuzhou (福州) | 1645 — 1646 | |
Zhaoqing (肇慶) | 1646 — 25 April 1662 | |
Later Jin | Feiala (費阿拉) | 1587 — 1603 |
Hetuala (赫圖阿拉) | 1603 — 1619 | |
Jiefan (界凡) | 1619 — September 1620 | |
Sarhu (薩爾滸) | September 1620 — April 1621 | |
Dongjing (東京) | April 1621 — 11 April 1625 | |
Shengjing (盛京) | 11 April 1625 — 1636 | |
Qing | Shengjing (盛京) | 1636 — 20 September 1644 |
Beijing (北京) | 20 September 1644 — 12 February 1912[4] | |
Republic of China | Nanjing (南京) | 1 January 1912 — 2 April 1912 (Provisional Government) |
Beijing (北京) | 2 April 1912 — 30 May 1928 (Beiyang Government)[4] |
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Fengtian (奉天) | 30 May 1928 — 29 December 1928 (Beiyang Government) |
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Guangzhou (廣州) | 1 July 1925 — 21 February 1927 (Guangzhou Nationalist Government) |
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Wuhan (武漢) | 21 February 1927 — 19 August 1927 (Wuhan Nationalist Government)[5] |
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Nanjing (南京) | 18 April 1927 — 20 November 1937 (the Nanjing decade)[4] |
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Beiping (北平) | 9 September 1930 — 23 September 1930 (Beiping Nationalist Government) |
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Taiyuan (太原) | 23 September 1930 — 4 November 1930 (Beiping Nationalist Government) |
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Guangzhou (廣州) | 28 May 1931 — 22 December 1931 (Guangzhou Nationalist Government) |
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Chongqing (重慶) | 21 November 1937 — 5 May 1946 (during the Second Sino-Japanese War)[4] |
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Nanjing (南京) | 30 March 1940 — 10 August 1945 (Wang Jingwei Government) |
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Nanjing (南京) | 5 May 1946 — 23 April 1949[4] | |
Guangzhou (廣州) | 23 April 1949 — 14 October 1949 (during the Chinese Civil War) |
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Chongqing (重慶) | 14 October 1949 — 30 November 1949 (during the Chinese Civil War) |
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Chengdu (成都) | 30 November 1949 — 27 December 1949 (during the Chinese Civil War) |
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Xichang (西昌) | 27 December 1949 — 27 March 1950 (during the Chinese Civil War) |
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Taipei (臺北) | 10 December 1949 — Present | |
People's Republic of China | Beijing (北京) | 10 October 1949 — Present |