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Fuyang

Fuyang (simplified Chinese: 阜阳; traditional Chinese: 阜陽; pinyin: Fùyáng , previously romanized as Fowyang) is a prefecture-level city in northwestern Anhui province, China. It is bordered by Henan province to the west and the cities of Bozhou to the northeast, Huainan to the southeast, and Lu'an to the south.

Fuyang
阜阳市
Anti-clockwise from the top: Huarun Fuyang City Crossing and Fuyang Theater; Fuyang Museum; Fuyang Normal University; Meiyuan (Plum Garden); Zifu Chansi Temple.
Coordinates (Fuyang municipal government): 32°53′24″N 115°48′50″E / 32.890°N 115.814°E / 32.890; 115.814
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceAnhui
County-level divisions8
Municipal seatYingzhou District
Government
 • CPC SecretarySun Zhengdong (孙正东)
 • MayorLiu Yujie (刘玉杰)
Area
 • Prefecture-level city9,775 km2 (3,774 sq mi)
 • Urban
1,844 km2 (712 sq mi)
 • Metro
1,844 km2 (712 sq mi)
Population
 (2020 census)[1]
 • Prefecture-level city8,200,264
 • Density840/km2 (2,200/sq mi)
 • Urban
2,128,538
 • Urban density1,200/km2 (3,000/sq mi)
 • Metro
2,128,538
 • Metro density1,200/km2 (3,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (CST)
Area code0558
ISO 3166 codeCN-AH-12
GDP(2020)CNY 280.52 billion
GDP per capita(2020)CNY 34208 [2]
License Plate Prefix皖K

Its population was 8,200,264 inhabitants at the 2020 census whom 2,128,538 lived in the built-up (or metro) area made of 3 urban districts Yingzhou, Yingdong and Yingquan.

History edit

 
Fuyang city museum
 
Tomb of Xiahou Zao (front), now located in Fuyang's local museum
 
Tomb of Xiahou Zao (rear). The site of Xiahou Zao's tomb became known as Shuanggudui

Early Ruyin edit

Starting with the Qin dynasty, the region now called Fuyang was called Ruyin (汝陰). Ruyin was classified as part of the ancient province of Yuzhou. In the early Han dynasty, Ruyin was ruled by Xiahou Ying (d. 172 BCE), who fought alongside Liu Bang against the latter's archrival Xiang Yu in the Chu–Han Contention (206–202 BC), and helped Liu Bang establish the Han dynasty. Following the establishment of the Han dynasty, the title conferred upon Xiahou Ying was "Lord of Ruyin" (汝陰侯). The second Lord of Ruyin was Xiahou Ying's son, Xiahou Zao (夏侯灶) (d. 165 BCE), whose tomb was later rediscovered in Fuyang in 1977.[3]

Shuanggudui edit

The site of the second Lord of Ruyin's tomb, called Shuanggudui, was rediscovered in 1977 when Fuyang's municipal airport was undergoing an expansion.[3] Two tombs were found, although only one contained texts. Much like Mawangdui, important classical Chinese texts were found at Shuanggudui that shed new light on ancient Chinese culture and literature. Texts recorded on bamboo strips were found at Shuanggudui, including the Yijing, Classic of Poetry, Zhuangzi, Cang Jie Pian (primer), Classic for Physiognomizing Dogs (相狗經), tables of historical annals, studies of myriad phenomena (萬物), a text on xingqi (行氣, circulating breath), and others.[3]

Ouyang Xiu edit

Ouyang Xiu, one of famous Eight Masters of the Tang and Song, died in 1072 in present-day Fuyang, Anhui. His influence was so great, even opponents like Wang Anshi wrote moving tributes on his behalf. Wang referred to him as the greatest literary figure of his age.

Red Turban Rebellion edit

In the fourteenth century, Han Shantong sought to overthrow the ruling Mongol Yuan dynasty. Han styled himself as the "Great King of Light," claiming to be an incarnation of Maitreya Bodhisattva, and heir to the preceding Song dynasty.[4] Han was a native of Yingzhou, where he began the main thrust of the Red Turban Rebellion in 1351, initially gaining the support of 3000 rebels, and later 10,000.[4] After entering Shandong province, the Red Turban Army merged with other rebel movements, eventually leading indirectly to the founding of the Ming dynasty.

Great Leap Forward edit

 
Anhui province Party secretary Zeng Xisheng (曾希圣) in 1950

According to Chinese government reports in the Fuyang Party History Research Office, between the years 1959 and 1961, 2.4 million people from Fuyang died from famine.[5] Before the famines, in 1958, the population of Fuyang had been 8 million people.[5] During this period, Zeng Xisheng, the provincial Party secretary of Anhui, pursued large water conservation projects that led to insufficient irrigation for local crops, leading to mass starvation.[5] Local cadres, fearing repercussions from Zeng, underreported death rates in their regions, in some cases forcing the starving villagers to hide if there was an official inspection.[5] When Vice Chairman Dong Biwu came to visit the Fuyang region, provincial leaders ordered all corpses to be removed from Dong's travel route, and for edema patients to be rounded up and kept out of sight.[6]

According to Frank Dikötter, death rates in the Fuyang region were especially high, rivaling those in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge.[7] Dikötter has summarized some of the history of exceptional violence in rural Fuyang during the Great Leap Forward, carried out by local Party members:[8]

Torture was rampant. Iron wire was used to pierce the ears of 'bad elements', while women were stripped and suspended by their hair. In the words of a leader in Jieshou county, 'their breasts were twisted until liquid oozed out'. In Linquan, the use of violence was summarised as follows by the local party boss: 'People died in tragic circumstances, being beaten and hanged to death, deprived of food or buried alive. Some were severely tortured and beaten, having their ears chopped off, their noses dug out, their mouths torn off, and so on, which often caused death. We discovered how extremely serious all of this was once we started investigating.' Murder was common. In Dahuangzhuang, a small village in Linquan, nine out of nineteen cadres had killed at least one villager during the famine. Li Fengying, a team leader, killed five people.

In some cases the violence was directly related to starvation, as in one case in Funan county in 1959:[8]

In late 1959, at the height of the famine, one of the food processing factories belonging to the local grain bureau in Funan county left bean cakes in a courtyard with the gates wide open. As starving farmers tried to pilfer the food, the gates were suddenly locked behind them. 'Some of those who were caught were forced into a grain sack that was tied at the end. Then they were beaten with iron bars. The sacks were covered in blood. Others had their faces carved by knives and then oil rubbed into the wounds.'

Since the 1980s there has been greater official Chinese recognition of the importance of policy mistakes in causing the disaster, and the Party has acknowledged that the disaster was caused mainly by gross mismanagement, using the expression, "Three parts natural disaster and seven parts man-made disaster."[9]

Blood selling edit

In the 1990s, commercial blood selling schemes led to entire villages in Henan and Anhui being infected with the HIV virus. The government in Fuyang, which at that time was headed by Wang Huaizhong (王怀忠), encouraged rural villagers to sell blood as a way to supplement their income.[10] The blood collectors would often draw too much blood, causing their feet to go numb, and sometimes people were even hung upside down against a wall to force blood to flow back into their arms.[10]

As compensation for giving their blood, participants were given 50 yuan along with some food and drink.[10] Many people engaged in this practice due to rural poverty and local corruption, which placed them under great economic stress. As one woman from Fuyang recalls:[10]

We sold blood because we were poor. Wang Huaizhong was in power at that time and the government under him demanded that each farmer pay an extra agricultural tax. If you failed to pay, the officials would take away your pigs, corn, and grain. So the harvest was only good enough for a basic living. But keeping children at school was expensive. Giving out gifts every year cost a family nearly ten thousand yuan. Building rooms to bring in a wife cost thirty thousand to forty thousand yuan. But if the government did not encourage blood selling, we would not have sold blood to make money.

In a 2004 epidemiological survey of Fuyang, it was found that at least three thousand farmers had contracted HIV due to the blood trade.[10]

The Fuyang AIDS Orphan Salvation Association (阜阳市艾滋病贫困儿童救助协会) has done some relief work to help AIDS orphans in Fuyang.[11][12] The 2006 short film, The Blood of Yingzhou District, documents the many challenges faced by AIDS orphans living in rural parts of Fuyang's Yingzhou district.

Wang Huaizhong, who promoted blood selling in Fuyang in the early 1990s, was later promoted to deputy governor of Anhui province.[10] However, in 2001, he was arrested for taking bribes.[13] He was later convicted of accepting bribes totaling 5.17 million yuan, and having 4.8 million yuan of unaccountable assets. After being taken into custody, Wang attempted to bribe investigators into dropping the investigation, and continued to seek bribes from private business owners. In response, the court sentenced him to death, stating, "His attitude was disgusting and he was severely punished in accordance with the law."[13] In February 2004, just two months after his trial, Wang was executed by lethal injection.[14]

Wang Huaizhong had previously pursued the construction of a large airport in Fuyang that was widely regarded as a boondoggle, costing 390 million yuan, but which served only 920 passengers in 2002.[15]

Recent events edit

 
Fuyang's "White House" in Yingquan District

In 2004, there was a food scandal involving fake infant formula being sold in Fuyang. Chinese state media reported that 50–60 children in Fuyang died from the formula, with the children belonging mostly to poor rural families.[16] Fuyang's mayor Liu Qingqiang was reprimanded by the Chinese Communist Party for failing to supervise food safety, while Vice Mayor Ma Mingyue was forced to resign.[17] Subsequently, 55 brands of cheap infant formula were banned after it was discovered they had only traces of the required nutrients.[17]

In early 2007, Chinese state media began reporting that in Yingquan District, a government building dubbed the "White House" was becoming controversial. The construction cost of the "White House" was reported to have reached 30 million yuan, nearly one third of the 100 million yuan annual fiscal income of the entire Yingquan district.[18] Despite being popularly deemed the "White House" (白宫), the building resembles the United States Capitol.

In 2008, it was widely reported that Zhang Zhi'an (张治安), the Communist Party chief of Yingquan District, nicknamed the "White House Party Chief," had been suspended from his office on June 5, 2008, along several other officials.[19] They were under investigation for the death of Li Guofu (李国福), a businessman who acted as a whistleblower. In Beijing, Li Guofu had accused Zhang of corruption and abuse of power, and hoped that Yingquan District would reclaim the area as farmland.[19] In August 2007, Li Guofu was arrested by the Yingquan government on corruption charges and imprisoned. Zhang interrogated Li, threatening his family, and extracted a confession from him.[20] On March 13, 2008, just hours before he was scheduled to see a lawyer, Li Guofu was found hanged. Although his death was deemed a suicide, media reported that Li Guofu's body was bruised and his mouth was tightly shut, uncharacteristic of a suicide by hanging.[19] On February 8, 2010, Zhang was found guilty of taking bribes, retaliation, and framing an innocent person, and was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve.[21]

In March 2008, an outbreak of hand, foot, and mouth disease began in Fuyang, leading to 25,000 infections, and 42 deaths, by May 13.[22]

In 2017, 18 people died in a car pile-up on an expressway near Fuyang.[23]

Climate edit

Fuyang features a monsoon-influenced humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa) with cool, damp winters and very hot and wet summers. Because the weather is perceived as frequently changing, a common saying among local people is that, "Fuyang has four seasons in spring."

Climate data for Fuyang (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1971–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 20.5
(68.9)
27.7
(81.9)
29.7
(85.5)
34.3
(93.7)
37.7
(99.9)
39.8
(103.6)
40.8
(105.4)
39.0
(102.2)
38.9
(102.0)
34.7
(94.5)
30.4
(86.7)
22.9
(73.2)
40.8
(105.4)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 6.7
(44.1)
10.1
(50.2)
15.4
(59.7)
21.8
(71.2)
27.0
(80.6)
30.8
(87.4)
32.1
(89.8)
31.2
(88.2)
27.6
(81.7)
22.6
(72.7)
15.7
(60.3)
9.1
(48.4)
20.8
(69.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 1.9
(35.4)
4.9
(40.8)
10.0
(50.0)
16.1
(61.0)
21.5
(70.7)
25.7
(78.3)
27.9
(82.2)
26.8
(80.2)
22.5
(72.5)
16.9
(62.4)
10.1
(50.2)
4.0
(39.2)
15.7
(60.2)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −1.9
(28.6)
0.9
(33.6)
5.4
(41.7)
10.9
(51.6)
16.4
(61.5)
21.2
(70.2)
24.3
(75.7)
23.4
(74.1)
18.5
(65.3)
12.3
(54.1)
5.7
(42.3)
0.0
(32.0)
11.4
(52.6)
Record low °C (°F) −14.2
(6.4)
−14.9
(5.2)
−5.5
(22.1)
−0.3
(31.5)
5.9
(42.6)
11.4
(52.5)
17.3
(63.1)
14.4
(57.9)
8.4
(47.1)
0.5
(32.9)
−6.9
(19.6)
−13.1
(8.4)
−14.9
(5.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 28.4
(1.12)
32.0
(1.26)
57.1
(2.25)
58.7
(2.31)
87.6
(3.45)
160.8
(6.33)
209.2
(8.24)
141.7
(5.58)
79.3
(3.12)
53.1
(2.09)
41.6
(1.64)
22.5
(0.89)
972
(38.28)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 6.2 7.2 7.6 7.6 9.4 9.4 12.3 11.9 8.2 7.7 7.3 5.3 100.1
Average snowy days 4.1 2.5 1.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.7 1.6 9.9
Average relative humidity (%) 72 71 70 71 72 73 81 83 78 73 72 71 74
Mean monthly sunshine hours 111.9 116.3 151.5 181.7 185.8 167.9 175.2 162.6 144.7 147.5 137.2 125.8 1,808.1
Percent possible sunshine 35 37 41 46 43 39 40 40 39 42 44 41 41
Source 1: China Meteorological Administration[24][25]
Source 2: Weather China[26]

Administration edit

 
Map including Fuyang (labeled as FOU-YANG (YINGCHOW) 阜陽) (AMS, 1954)

The prefecture-level city of Fuyang administers eight county-level divisions, including three districts, one county-level city and four counties.

Map
Subdivision Simplified Chinese Hanyu Pinyin Population (2020) Area (km2) Density (/km2)
City Proper
Yingdong District 颍东区 Yĭngdōng Qū 538,187 677.3 794.6
Yingquan District 颍泉区 Yĭngquán Qū 598,004 653.5 915.1
Yingzhou District 颍州区 Yĭngzhōu Qū 992,347 612.0 1,621
Rural
Yingshang County 颍上县 Yĭngshàng Xiàn 1,198,830 2,004 598.1
Funan County 阜南县 Fùnán Xiàn 1,183,602 1,817 651.3
Linquan County 临泉县 Línquán Xiàn 1,658,442 1,834 904.4
Taihe County 太和县 Tàihé Xiàn 1,379,982 1,867 739.1
Satellite Cities
Jieshou City 界首市 Jièshŏu Shì 650,870 652.6 997.3
Total 8,200,264 10,118 810.5

Culture edit

 
Ge La Tiao, a popular local dish made with thick noodles

Cuisine edit

The most notable local dish in Fuyang is Ge La Tiao (格拉条), a spicy noodle dish made with thick noodles mixed with sesame sauce, coriander, garlic, chili oil, and other ingredients. Many people native to Fuyang enjoy this dish, but some people who come to Fuyang from other areas may dislike it and find it difficult to digest.

Other notable local dishes include:

The most common type of Chinese tea in Fuyang is Huangshan Maofeng, followed by other teas such as Lu'an Guapian, Keemun black tea (Qimen Hongcha), and Taiping Houkui. Teas from outside the region are also popular, such as Tieguanyin and Longjing.

Transportation edit

 
Pedestrian overpass in Fuyang's busy downtown area

Automobile edit

The G36 Nanjing–Luoyang Expressway goes through Fuyang, and runs from Nanjing, Jiangsu to the east, to Luoyang, Henan to the west.

Rail edit

Fuyang has a large railway station, and is a railway transportation hub for Anhui province. The Shangqiu-Hefei-Hangzhou High-speed Rail was opened in 2019, which serve Fuyang through the new Fuyang West railway station.[28]

Air edit

Flights to and from major cities in China are possible through Fuyang Airport.

Education edit

 
Fuyang Normal University, the largest higher learning institution

The city of Fuyang includes the following institutions of higher learning:[29]

  • Fuyang Normal University (阜阳师范大学)
  • Fuyang Vocational and Technical College (阜阳职业技术学院)
  • Fuyang Vocational College of Science and Technology (阜阳科技职业学院)

Fuyang Normal University is the largest institution of higher learning in the city of Fuyang. The university has three campuses with over 21,000 students and over 1100 full-time teachers.[30]

Notable people edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "China: Ānhuī (Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map". www.citypopulation.de. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  2. ^ Fuyang mayor
  3. ^ a b c Shaughnessy, Edward L. (2014), Unearthing the Changes: Recently Discovered Manuscripts of the Yi Jing (I Ching) and Related Texts, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-16184-8
  4. ^ a b Rowe, William. Crimson Rain: Seven Centuries of Violence in a Chinese County. 2006. p. 50
  5. ^ a b c d Zhou Xun. Forgotten Voices of Mao's Great Famine, 1958-1962: An Oral History. 2013. pp. 138-139, 292
  6. ^ Yang, Jisheng, Edward Friedman, Jian Guo, and Stacy Mosher. Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. Print. p. 312
  7. ^ Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958-62. Walker & Company, 2010. p. 317
  8. ^ a b Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958-62. Walker & Company, 2010. p. 319
  9. ^ Yang, Jisheng, Edward Friedman, Jian Guo, and Stacy Mosher. Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. Print. pp. 452-3
  10. ^ a b c d e f Kleinman, Arthur. Yunxiang Yan. Jing Jun. Sing Lee. Everett Zhang. Deep China: The Moral Life of the Person. 2011. pp. 88-89
  11. ^ "Orphanage workers ease the plight of China's AIDS children". China Human Rights.
  12. ^ "China - Aids Orphans Salvation Association of Fuyang (AOS)". UNESCO.
  13. ^ a b "Anhui vice-governor gets death penalty". China Daily. 2003-12-30. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  14. ^ "Corrupt official executed for bribery". China Daily. 2004-02-12. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  15. ^ "Former provincial vice-governor sentenced to death". The Age. 2003-12-30. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  16. ^ Francie Grace (2004-05-10). "Arrests In Fake Baby Formula Case". CBS News.
  17. ^ a b Raksha Shetty (2004-06-09). "Fake Milk Powder Causes Baby Death". CBS News.
  18. ^ "Local officials need oversight". China Daily. 2007-01-24.
  19. ^ a b c "Officials investigated over petitioner's death in prison". China Daily (Xinhua). 2008-06-23.
  20. ^ Wang Jingqiong (2009-11-20). ""White house director" on trial for corruption".
  21. ^ Lan Tian (2010-02-09). "Death sentence for "White House boss"". China Daily.
  22. ^ Repass GL, Palmer WC, Stancampiano FF (September 2014). "Hand, foot, and mouth disease: Identifying and managing an acute viral syndrome". Cleve Clin J Med. 81 (9): 537–43. doi:10.3949/ccjm.81a.13132. PMID 25183845.
  23. ^ F_126. "East China road accident death toll rises to 18 - People's Daily Online". en.people.cn.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ 中国气象数据网 – WeatherBk Data (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  25. ^ 中国气象数据网 (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  26. ^ 阜阳 - 气象数据 -中国天气网 (in Chinese). Weather China. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  27. ^ 田三卷膜.
  28. ^ "中部地区大动作!高铁阜阳西站开门迎客". from the original on 2019-12-01. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  29. ^ "List of Higher Education Institutes in Anhui Province". china.org.cn. Retrieved 2015-12-28.
  30. ^ "Prospectus of Fuyang Normal University". 学校简介. Fuyang Normal University. from the original on 2021-10-06. Retrieved 2022-10-27.

External links edit

  • Government website of Fuyang Archived 2012-12-01 at archive.today
  • Website of Fuyang Normal University
  • Website of Fuyang Vocational and Technical College

fuyang, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, puyang, simplified, chinese, 阜阳, traditional, chinese, 阜陽, pinyin, fùyáng, previously, romanized, fowyang, prefecture, level, city, northwestern, anhui, province, china, bordered, henan, province, west, citi. For other uses see Fuyang disambiguation Not to be confused with Puyang Fuyang simplified Chinese 阜阳 traditional Chinese 阜陽 pinyin Fuyang previously romanized as Fowyang is a prefecture level city in northwestern Anhui province China It is bordered by Henan province to the west and the cities of Bozhou to the northeast Huainan to the southeast and Lu an to the south Fuyang 阜阳市Prefecture level cityAnti clockwise from the top Huarun Fuyang City Crossing and Fuyang Theater Fuyang Museum Fuyang Normal University Meiyuan Plum Garden Zifu Chansi Temple Coordinates Fuyang municipal government 32 53 24 N 115 48 50 E 32 890 N 115 814 E 32 890 115 814CountryPeople s Republic of ChinaProvinceAnhuiCounty level divisions8Municipal seatYingzhou DistrictGovernment CPC SecretarySun Zhengdong 孙正东 MayorLiu Yujie 刘玉杰 Area Prefecture level city9 775 km2 3 774 sq mi Urban1 844 km2 712 sq mi Metro1 844 km2 712 sq mi Population 2020 census 1 Prefecture level city8 200 264 Density840 km2 2 200 sq mi Urban2 128 538 Urban density1 200 km2 3 000 sq mi Metro2 128 538 Metro density1 200 km2 3 000 sq mi Time zoneUTC 8 CST Area code0558ISO 3166 codeCN AH 12GDP 2020 CNY 280 52 billionGDP per capita 2020 CNY 34208 2 License Plate Prefix皖KIts population was 8 200 264 inhabitants at the 2020 census whom 2 128 538 lived in the built up or metro area made of 3 urban districts Yingzhou Yingdong and Yingquan Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Ruyin 1 2 Shuanggudui 1 3 Ouyang Xiu 1 4 Red Turban Rebellion 1 5 Great Leap Forward 1 6 Blood selling 1 7 Recent events 2 Climate 3 Administration 4 Culture 4 1 Cuisine 5 Transportation 5 1 Automobile 5 2 Rail 5 3 Air 6 Education 7 Notable people 8 Notes 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Fuyang city museum nbsp Tomb of Xiahou Zao front now located in Fuyang s local museum nbsp Tomb of Xiahou Zao rear The site of Xiahou Zao s tomb became known as ShuangguduiEarly Ruyin edit Starting with the Qin dynasty the region now called Fuyang was called Ruyin 汝陰 Ruyin was classified as part of the ancient province of Yuzhou In the early Han dynasty Ruyin was ruled by Xiahou Ying d 172 BCE who fought alongside Liu Bang against the latter s archrival Xiang Yu in the Chu Han Contention 206 202 BC and helped Liu Bang establish the Han dynasty Following the establishment of the Han dynasty the title conferred upon Xiahou Ying was Lord of Ruyin 汝陰侯 The second Lord of Ruyin was Xiahou Ying s son Xiahou Zao 夏侯灶 d 165 BCE whose tomb was later rediscovered in Fuyang in 1977 3 Shuanggudui edit The site of the second Lord of Ruyin s tomb called Shuanggudui was rediscovered in 1977 when Fuyang s municipal airport was undergoing an expansion 3 Two tombs were found although only one contained texts Much like Mawangdui important classical Chinese texts were found at Shuanggudui that shed new light on ancient Chinese culture and literature Texts recorded on bamboo strips were found at Shuanggudui including the Yijing Classic of Poetry Zhuangzi Cang Jie Pian primer Classic for Physiognomizing Dogs 相狗經 tables of historical annals studies of myriad phenomena 萬物 a text on xingqi 行氣 circulating breath and others 3 Ouyang Xiu edit Ouyang Xiu one of famous Eight Masters of the Tang and Song died in 1072 in present day Fuyang Anhui His influence was so great even opponents like Wang Anshi wrote moving tributes on his behalf Wang referred to him as the greatest literary figure of his age Red Turban Rebellion edit In the fourteenth century Han Shantong sought to overthrow the ruling Mongol Yuan dynasty Han styled himself as the Great King of Light claiming to be an incarnation of Maitreya Bodhisattva and heir to the preceding Song dynasty 4 Han was a native of Yingzhou where he began the main thrust of the Red Turban Rebellion in 1351 initially gaining the support of 3000 rebels and later 10 000 4 After entering Shandong province the Red Turban Army merged with other rebel movements eventually leading indirectly to the founding of the Ming dynasty Great Leap Forward edit nbsp Anhui province Party secretary Zeng Xisheng 曾希圣 in 1950According to Chinese government reports in the Fuyang Party History Research Office between the years 1959 and 1961 2 4 million people from Fuyang died from famine 5 Before the famines in 1958 the population of Fuyang had been 8 million people 5 During this period Zeng Xisheng the provincial Party secretary of Anhui pursued large water conservation projects that led to insufficient irrigation for local crops leading to mass starvation 5 Local cadres fearing repercussions from Zeng underreported death rates in their regions in some cases forcing the starving villagers to hide if there was an official inspection 5 When Vice Chairman Dong Biwu came to visit the Fuyang region provincial leaders ordered all corpses to be removed from Dong s travel route and for edema patients to be rounded up and kept out of sight 6 According to Frank Dikotter death rates in the Fuyang region were especially high rivaling those in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge 7 Dikotter has summarized some of the history of exceptional violence in rural Fuyang during the Great Leap Forward carried out by local Party members 8 Torture was rampant Iron wire was used to pierce the ears of bad elements while women were stripped and suspended by their hair In the words of a leader in Jieshou county their breasts were twisted until liquid oozed out In Linquan the use of violence was summarised as follows by the local party boss People died in tragic circumstances being beaten and hanged to death deprived of food or buried alive Some were severely tortured and beaten having their ears chopped off their noses dug out their mouths torn off and so on which often caused death We discovered how extremely serious all of this was once we started investigating Murder was common In Dahuangzhuang a small village in Linquan nine out of nineteen cadres had killed at least one villager during the famine Li Fengying a team leader killed five people In some cases the violence was directly related to starvation as in one case in Funan county in 1959 8 In late 1959 at the height of the famine one of the food processing factories belonging to the local grain bureau in Funan county left bean cakes in a courtyard with the gates wide open As starving farmers tried to pilfer the food the gates were suddenly locked behind them Some of those who were caught were forced into a grain sack that was tied at the end Then they were beaten with iron bars The sacks were covered in blood Others had their faces carved by knives and then oil rubbed into the wounds Since the 1980s there has been greater official Chinese recognition of the importance of policy mistakes in causing the disaster and the Party has acknowledged that the disaster was caused mainly by gross mismanagement using the expression Three parts natural disaster and seven parts man made disaster 9 Blood selling edit In the 1990s commercial blood selling schemes led to entire villages in Henan and Anhui being infected with the HIV virus The government in Fuyang which at that time was headed by Wang Huaizhong 王怀忠 encouraged rural villagers to sell blood as a way to supplement their income 10 The blood collectors would often draw too much blood causing their feet to go numb and sometimes people were even hung upside down against a wall to force blood to flow back into their arms 10 As compensation for giving their blood participants were given 50 yuan along with some food and drink 10 Many people engaged in this practice due to rural poverty and local corruption which placed them under great economic stress As one woman from Fuyang recalls 10 We sold blood because we were poor Wang Huaizhong was in power at that time and the government under him demanded that each farmer pay an extra agricultural tax If you failed to pay the officials would take away your pigs corn and grain So the harvest was only good enough for a basic living But keeping children at school was expensive Giving out gifts every year cost a family nearly ten thousand yuan Building rooms to bring in a wife cost thirty thousand to forty thousand yuan But if the government did not encourage blood selling we would not have sold blood to make money In a 2004 epidemiological survey of Fuyang it was found that at least three thousand farmers had contracted HIV due to the blood trade 10 The Fuyang AIDS Orphan Salvation Association 阜阳市艾滋病贫困儿童救助协会 has done some relief work to help AIDS orphans in Fuyang 11 12 The 2006 short film The Blood of Yingzhou District documents the many challenges faced by AIDS orphans living in rural parts of Fuyang s Yingzhou district Wang Huaizhong who promoted blood selling in Fuyang in the early 1990s was later promoted to deputy governor of Anhui province 10 However in 2001 he was arrested for taking bribes 13 He was later convicted of accepting bribes totaling 5 17 million yuan and having 4 8 million yuan of unaccountable assets After being taken into custody Wang attempted to bribe investigators into dropping the investigation and continued to seek bribes from private business owners In response the court sentenced him to death stating His attitude was disgusting and he was severely punished in accordance with the law 13 In February 2004 just two months after his trial Wang was executed by lethal injection 14 Wang Huaizhong had previously pursued the construction of a large airport in Fuyang that was widely regarded as a boondoggle costing 390 million yuan but which served only 920 passengers in 2002 15 Recent events edit nbsp Fuyang s White House in Yingquan DistrictIn 2004 there was a food scandal involving fake infant formula being sold in Fuyang Chinese state media reported that 50 60 children in Fuyang died from the formula with the children belonging mostly to poor rural families 16 Fuyang s mayor Liu Qingqiang was reprimanded by the Chinese Communist Party for failing to supervise food safety while Vice Mayor Ma Mingyue was forced to resign 17 Subsequently 55 brands of cheap infant formula were banned after it was discovered they had only traces of the required nutrients 17 In early 2007 Chinese state media began reporting that in Yingquan District a government building dubbed the White House was becoming controversial The construction cost of the White House was reported to have reached 30 million yuan nearly one third of the 100 million yuan annual fiscal income of the entire Yingquan district 18 Despite being popularly deemed the White House 白宫 the building resembles the United States Capitol In 2008 it was widely reported that Zhang Zhi an 张治安 the Communist Party chief of Yingquan District nicknamed the White House Party Chief had been suspended from his office on June 5 2008 along several other officials 19 They were under investigation for the death of Li Guofu 李国福 a businessman who acted as a whistleblower In Beijing Li Guofu had accused Zhang of corruption and abuse of power and hoped that Yingquan District would reclaim the area as farmland 19 In August 2007 Li Guofu was arrested by the Yingquan government on corruption charges and imprisoned Zhang interrogated Li threatening his family and extracted a confession from him 20 On March 13 2008 just hours before he was scheduled to see a lawyer Li Guofu was found hanged Although his death was deemed a suicide media reported that Li Guofu s body was bruised and his mouth was tightly shut uncharacteristic of a suicide by hanging 19 On February 8 2010 Zhang was found guilty of taking bribes retaliation and framing an innocent person and was sentenced to death with a two year reprieve 21 In March 2008 an outbreak of hand foot and mouth disease began in Fuyang leading to 25 000 infections and 42 deaths by May 13 22 In 2017 18 people died in a car pile up on an expressway near Fuyang 23 Climate editFuyang features a monsoon influenced humid subtropical climate Koppen Cwa with cool damp winters and very hot and wet summers Because the weather is perceived as frequently changing a common saying among local people is that Fuyang has four seasons in spring Climate data for Fuyang 1991 2020 normals extremes 1971 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 5 68 9 27 7 81 9 29 7 85 5 34 3 93 7 37 7 99 9 39 8 103 6 40 8 105 4 39 0 102 2 38 9 102 0 34 7 94 5 30 4 86 7 22 9 73 2 40 8 105 4 Mean daily maximum C F 6 7 44 1 10 1 50 2 15 4 59 7 21 8 71 2 27 0 80 6 30 8 87 4 32 1 89 8 31 2 88 2 27 6 81 7 22 6 72 7 15 7 60 3 9 1 48 4 20 8 69 5 Daily mean C F 1 9 35 4 4 9 40 8 10 0 50 0 16 1 61 0 21 5 70 7 25 7 78 3 27 9 82 2 26 8 80 2 22 5 72 5 16 9 62 4 10 1 50 2 4 0 39 2 15 7 60 2 Mean daily minimum C F 1 9 28 6 0 9 33 6 5 4 41 7 10 9 51 6 16 4 61 5 21 2 70 2 24 3 75 7 23 4 74 1 18 5 65 3 12 3 54 1 5 7 42 3 0 0 32 0 11 4 52 6 Record low C F 14 2 6 4 14 9 5 2 5 5 22 1 0 3 31 5 5 9 42 6 11 4 52 5 17 3 63 1 14 4 57 9 8 4 47 1 0 5 32 9 6 9 19 6 13 1 8 4 14 9 5 2 Average precipitation mm inches 28 4 1 12 32 0 1 26 57 1 2 25 58 7 2 31 87 6 3 45 160 8 6 33 209 2 8 24 141 7 5 58 79 3 3 12 53 1 2 09 41 6 1 64 22 5 0 89 972 38 28 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 6 2 7 2 7 6 7 6 9 4 9 4 12 3 11 9 8 2 7 7 7 3 5 3 100 1Average snowy days 4 1 2 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 1 6 9 9Average relative humidity 72 71 70 71 72 73 81 83 78 73 72 71 74Mean monthly sunshine hours 111 9 116 3 151 5 181 7 185 8 167 9 175 2 162 6 144 7 147 5 137 2 125 8 1 808 1Percent possible sunshine 35 37 41 46 43 39 40 40 39 42 44 41 41Source 1 China Meteorological Administration 24 25 Source 2 Weather China 26 Administration edit nbsp Map including Fuyang labeled as FOU YANG YINGCHOW 阜陽 AMS 1954 The prefecture level city of Fuyang administers eight county level divisions including three districts one county level city and four counties Yingzhou District 颍州区 Yingdong District 颍东区 Yingquan District 颍泉区 Jieshou City 界首市 Taihe County 太和县 Linquan County 临泉县 Funan County 阜南县 Yingshang County 颍上县 Map nbsp Yingzhou Yingdong Yingquan LinquanCounty TaiheCounty FunanCounty YingshangCounty Jieshou city Subdivision Simplified Chinese Hanyu Pinyin Population 2020 Area km2 Density km2 City ProperYingdong District 颍东区 Yĭngdōng Qu 538 187 677 3 794 6Yingquan District 颍泉区 Yĭngquan Qu 598 004 653 5 915 1Yingzhou District 颍州区 Yĭngzhōu Qu 992 347 612 0 1 621RuralYingshang County 颍上县 Yĭngshang Xian 1 198 830 2 004 598 1Funan County 阜南县 Funan Xian 1 183 602 1 817 651 3Linquan County 临泉县 Linquan Xian 1 658 442 1 834 904 4Taihe County 太和县 Taihe Xian 1 379 982 1 867 739 1Satellite CitiesJieshou City 界首市 Jieshŏu Shi 650 870 652 6 997 3Total 8 200 264 10 118 810 5Culture edit nbsp Ge La Tiao a popular local dish made with thick noodlesCuisine edit The most notable local dish in Fuyang is Ge La Tiao 格拉条 a spicy noodle dish made with thick noodles mixed with sesame sauce coriander garlic chili oil and other ingredients Many people native to Fuyang enjoy this dish but some people who come to Fuyang from other areas may dislike it and find it difficult to digest Other notable local dishes include Taihe Yangrou Banmian 太和羊肉板面 a very common noodle dish served in Fuyang This dish includes wide flat noodles along with Chinese cabbage lamb and red chili peppers Fen Ji 粉鸡 a chicken soup made with cellophane noodles breaded chicken quail eggs dasheen powder and other seasonings Zhen Tou Mo 枕头馍 a type of large steamed bread which is often compared in size and shape to a pillow Tian San Juan Mo 田三卷膜 a type of pancake wrapped in the shape of a cone stuffed with bean sprouts tofu and other ingredients with sauce on top 27 The most common type of Chinese tea in Fuyang is Huangshan Maofeng followed by other teas such as Lu an Guapian Keemun black tea Qimen Hongcha and Taiping Houkui Teas from outside the region are also popular such as Tieguanyin and Longjing Transportation edit nbsp Pedestrian overpass in Fuyang s busy downtown areaAutomobile edit The G36 Nanjing Luoyang Expressway goes through Fuyang and runs from Nanjing Jiangsu to the east to Luoyang Henan to the west Rail edit Fuyang has a large railway station and is a railway transportation hub for Anhui province The Shangqiu Hefei Hangzhou High speed Rail was opened in 2019 which serve Fuyang through the new Fuyang West railway station 28 Air edit Flights to and from major cities in China are possible through Fuyang Airport Education edit nbsp Fuyang Normal University the largest higher learning institutionThe city of Fuyang includes the following institutions of higher learning 29 Fuyang Normal University 阜阳师范大学 Fuyang Vocational and Technical College 阜阳职业技术学院 Fuyang Vocational College of Science and Technology 阜阳科技职业学院 Fuyang Normal University is the largest institution of higher learning in the city of Fuyang The university has three campuses with over 21 000 students and over 1100 full time teachers 30 Notable people editGuan Zhong 645 BC Spring and Autumn period era politician and economist Lu Meng 178 219 Three Kingdoms era military general serving the Kingdom of Wu Ni Sichong 1868 1924 Chinese general part of the Anhui clique until resigning in 1920 due to the disastrous defeat in the Zhili Anhui War Dai Houying 1938 1996 Chinese woman novelist Xie Yi 1967 Chinese chemist Deng Linlin 1992 Chinese gymnastNotes edit China Anhui Prefectures Cities Districts and Counties Population Statistics Charts and Map www citypopulation de Retrieved 23 December 2022 Fuyang mayor a b c Shaughnessy Edward L 2014 Unearthing theChanges Recently Discovered Manuscripts of theYi Jing I Ching and Related Texts New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 16184 8 a b Rowe William Crimson Rain Seven Centuries of Violence in a Chinese County 2006 p 50 a b c d Zhou Xun Forgotten Voices of Mao s Great Famine 1958 1962 An Oral History 2013 pp 138 139 292 Yang Jisheng Edward Friedman Jian Guo and Stacy Mosher Tombstone The Great Chinese Famine 1958 1962 New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2012 Print p 312 Dikotter Frank Mao s Great Famine The History of China s Most Devastating Catastrophe 1958 62 Walker amp Company 2010 p 317 a b Dikotter Frank Mao s Great Famine The History of China s Most Devastating Catastrophe 1958 62 Walker amp Company 2010 p 319 Yang Jisheng Edward Friedman Jian Guo and Stacy Mosher Tombstone The Great Chinese Famine 1958 1962 New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2012 Print pp 452 3 a b c d e f Kleinman Arthur Yunxiang Yan Jing Jun Sing Lee Everett Zhang Deep China The Moral Life of the Person 2011 pp 88 89 Orphanage workers ease the plight of China s AIDS children China Human Rights China Aids Orphans Salvation Association of Fuyang AOS UNESCO a b Anhui vice governor gets death penalty China Daily 2003 12 30 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Corrupt official executed for bribery China Daily 2004 02 12 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Former provincial vice governor sentenced to death The Age 2003 12 30 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Francie Grace 2004 05 10 Arrests In Fake Baby Formula Case CBS News a b Raksha Shetty 2004 06 09 Fake Milk Powder Causes Baby Death CBS News Local officials need oversight China Daily 2007 01 24 a b c Officials investigated over petitioner s death in prison China Daily Xinhua 2008 06 23 Wang Jingqiong 2009 11 20 White house director on trial for corruption Lan Tian 2010 02 09 Death sentence for White House boss China Daily Repass GL Palmer WC Stancampiano FF September 2014 Hand foot and mouth disease Identifying and managing an acute viral syndrome Cleve Clin J Med 81 9 537 43 doi 10 3949 ccjm 81a 13132 PMID 25183845 F 126 East China road accident death toll rises to 18 People s Daily Online en people cn a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 中国气象数据网 WeatherBk Data in Simplified Chinese China Meteorological Administration Retrieved 27 June 2023 中国气象数据网 in Simplified Chinese China Meteorological Administration Retrieved 27 June 2023 阜阳 气象数据 中国天气网 in Chinese Weather China Retrieved 29 November 2022 田三卷膜 中部地区大动作 高铁阜阳西站开门迎客 Archived from the original on 2019 12 01 Retrieved 2022 11 05 List of Higher Education Institutes in Anhui Province china org cn Retrieved 2015 12 28 Prospectus of Fuyang Normal University 学校简介 Fuyang Normal University Archived from the original on 2021 10 06 Retrieved 2022 10 27 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fuyang city Anhui Government website of Fuyang Archived 2012 12 01 at archive today Website of Fuyang Normal University Website of Fuyang Vocational and Technical College Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fuyang amp oldid 1181365131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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