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Huainan

 
 
Huainan (hwī-nän), city (1994 est. pop. 769,200), N central Anhui prov., China. Established after 1949 as the center of China's chief coal-mining region, it is the site of a major colliery. Chemicals, iron, steel, and machinery are produced, and food and tobacco are processed.


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Huainan
淮南
—  Prefecture-level city  —
Chinese transcription(s)
 - Simplified 淮南
 - Traditional
 - Pinyin Huáinán
Country China
Province Anhui
County-level divisions 6
Township-level divisions 66
City seat Tianjia'an District
(32°37′N 116°59′E / 32.617°N 116.983°E / 32.617; 116.983)
Government
 - CPC Secretary Yang Zhenchao (杨振超)
 - Mayor Cao Yong (曹勇)
Area
 - Total 2,596.4 km2 (1,002.5 sq mi)
Time zone China Standard (UTC+8)
Area code(s) 554
GDP
GDP per capita
License Plate Prefix 皖D
Postal Code 242100(Fengtai County)

Huainan (Chinese: 淮南pinyin: Huáinán) is a prefecture-level city with 1,076,000 inhabitants in central Anhui province, People’s Republic of China. It borders the provincial capital of Hefei to the south, Lu’an to the southwest, Fuyang to the west, Bozhou to the northwest, Bengbu to the northeast and Chuzhou to the east.

The name traditionally refers to the entire area south of the Huai River and north of the Yangtze River, which includes the present day central Anhui. The historic political center of the Huainan area lay in Shouchun (present day Shou County).

Contents

Administration

The prefecture-level city of Huainan administers six county-level divisions, including five districts and one county.

These are further divided into 66 township-level divisions, including 24 towns, 23 townships and 19 subdistricts.

History

Summer in Huainan.
Pedestrian Bridge at Huainan

The name Huainan first came into existence in 203 BC, when Liu Bang bestowed upon Ying Bu, one of his most trusted generals, the title of the King of Huainan. The capital of the Kingdom of Huainan was situated in the present day Lu'an. Later, after Ying Bu was executed, the title was transferred and the capital moved to Shouchun (present day Shou County).

In 164 BC, the kingdom was divided into three, one of which retained the name Huainan and continued to be administered from Shouchun. This was governed by Liu An, a notable scholar who authored the great Daoist classic, the Huainanzi. When Liu An committed suicide in 122 BC, the kingdom was abolished and the area renamed Jiujiang Commandery, which was its old name before 203 BC.

Towards the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Yuan Shu declared himself emperor of the so-called Cheng Dynasty and renamed the commandery Huainan Commandery. This entity remained generally intact till the Northern Song Dynasty, when it divided into the eastern and the western halves in 1071. This division was converted to a north-south one, with the line drawn along the Huai River, following a peace pact between the ruling bodies of the Southern Song Dynasty and Jin Empire.

The divided state persisted till the area was claimed by the Communist Party of China on January 18, 1949. The party renamed the area Huainan Coalmine Special District for its rich coal resources.

Economy

Huainan is a major production center for coal, with an output of 43.28 million tons in 2006.

Education

External links


 
 
Learn More
Anhui (province, China)
Datong District
King of Huainan

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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