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This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters. |
Pucheng County (Chinese: 浦城县; Pǔchéng Xiàn) is a county under the jurisdiction of the municipality of Nanping, in northernmost Fujian province.
The county is named for the Nanpuxi (南浦溪) River, a major tributary to the Minjiang River.
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Situation
Pucheng comprises 3383.02 square km in the Wuyishan mountain range which separates Fujian and Jiangxi provinces. It borders Songxi County to the southeast, Jianyang City to the south and Wuyishan City (location of the famous UNESCO park) to the west, all within Nanping. The municipality of Shangrao, JX, borders to the northwest; those of Quzhou, to the north, and Lishui, to the east, are in Zhejiang.
Administrative divisions
The county administers 2 street offices, 9 towns and 8 townships. The county executive, legislature and judiciary are in Nanpu Street Office, together with the CPC and PSB branches.[1]
Street offices (街道, jiedao)
- Nanpu (南浦) - the county seat
- Hebin (河滨)
Towns (镇, zhen)
- Fuling (富岭)
- Shibei (石陂)
- Lingjiang (临江)
- Xianyang (仙阳)
- Shuibeijie (水北街)
- Yongxing (永兴)
- Zhongxin (忠信)
- Liantang (莲塘)
- Jiumu (九牧)
Townships (乡, xiang)
- 万安
- 古楼
- 山下
- 枫溪
- 濠村
- 管厝
- 盘亭
- 官路
Demographics
As of 2000 Pucheng had a population of approximately 320,000.
Language
Pucheng dialect shares some features with Wu, but is classed among the Southern Chinese languages. It is however not demonstrably a member of the Min language group (which covers almost all of Fujian), and pending further research must stand as an isolate - the sole exemplar of the Pucheng group of Southern Chinese.[2] Some Wu dialects and the Min Bei dialect of Shibei are also spoken in Pucheng.
Archaeology
In 2006 mound tombs of the Wuyue Kingdom were discovered in Guanjiu village. (The kingdom was contemporary with the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods of the Yellow River-centred Hans). Considered a strongly significant element of Wuyue culture, these are the first such tombs discovered in Fujian Province. 72 bronze funerary articles were excavated from the tombs, making the excavation the largest harvest of bronze items in Fujian archaeological history.
Notes & References
- ^ Fujian Sheng Dituce, China Map Publishing, 1999, ISBN 7-5031-2176-9. p.43
- ^ Norman, Jerry, Chinese, Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN 0 521 29653 6. p.243
External links
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