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Wuchang, Wuhan

Wuchang
武昌区
Wu-Chang
East Lake overlooking Wuchang
Wuchang
Location in Hubei
Coordinates: 30°33′43″N 114°20′25″E / 30.5619°N 114.3404°E / 30.5619; 114.3404[1]
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceHubei
Sub-provincial cityWuhan
Area
 • Total87.42 km2 (33.75 sq mi)
Population
 (2010)[3]
 • Total1,199,127
 • Density13,717/km2 (35,530/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Wuhan district map
Subdivisions of Wuhan, Hubei
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
Core
1 Jiang'an
2 Jianghan
3 Qiaokou
4 Hanyang
5 Wuchang
6 Qingshan
7 Hongshan
Suburban and rural
8 Dongxihu
9 Hannan
10 Caidian
11 Jiangxia
12 Huangpi
13 Xinzhou
Website武昌区政府门户网站 (translation: Wuchang District Government Web Portal (in Simplified Chinese)
Wuchang, Wuhan
Changchun Temple
Traditional Chinese武昌
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWǔchāng
Wade–GilesWu-ch‘ang

Wuchang is one of 13 urban districts of the prefecture-level city of Wuhan, the capital of Hubei Province, China. It is the oldest of the three cities that merged into modern-day Wuhan, and stood on the right (southeastern) bank of the Yangtze River, opposite the mouth of the Han River. The two other cities, Hanyang and Hankou, were on the left (northwestern) bank, separated from each other by the Han River.

The name "Wuchang" remains in common use for the part of urban Wuhan south of the Yangtze River. Administratively, however, it is split between several districts of the City of Wuhan. The historic center of Wuchang lies within the modern Wuchang District, which has an area of 82.4 square kilometres (31.8 sq mi) and a population of 1,003,400.[4] Other parts of what is colloquially known as Wuchang are within Hongshan District (south and south-east) and Qingshan District (north-east). Presently, on the right bank of the Yangtze, it borders the districts of Qingshan (for a very small section) to the northeast and Hongshan to the east and south; on the opposite bank it borders Jiang'an, Jianghan and Hanyang.

On 10 October 1911, the New Army stationed in the city started the Wuchang Uprising, a turning point of the Xinhai Revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China.

History edit

 
The map of "Vou-chang-fou" in Du Halde's 1736 Description of China, based on reports from the Jesuit mission

The old Wuchang county edit

In 221, warlord Sun Quan moved the capital of Eastern Wu from Gong'an county, Jingzhou (northwest of present-day Gong'an county, Hubei) to È county (in present-day Ezhou City), and renamed È to Wuchang (literally prospering from military, regarding its logistics role of the military bases established before the Battle of Red Cliffs). Later in the year Cao Pi proclaimed himself the emperor of Cao Wei.[citation needed] Sun Quan declared independence in the following year, and started to build forts and palaces in Wuchang. Sun Quan proclaimed himself the emperor of Eastern Wu in 229, and moved the capital to Jianye. Sun Hao, the emperor of Eastern Wu between 264 and 280, moved the capital back to Wuchang in 265. In 589, the Wuchang commandery was abolished and the Wuchang county was transferred to a new commandery named Ezhou (headquartered in present-day Wuchang District), and remained in the administration since then.

The present day Wuchang town edit

The Wuchang commandery was set up when È was renamed to Wuchang, and included six counties. In 223 the commandery was renamed to Jiangxia, and the capital of the commandery moved to Xiakou (in present-day Wuchang town). The name of the town was switched back and forth between Wuchang and Jiangxia several times in the following centuries. The present-day version of Wuying Pagoda, the oldest standing architecture in Hubei Province, was built around the time of fall of the Southern Song Dynasty. After 1301, the Wuchang prefecture, headquartered in the town, became the capital of Hubei province.

During the Taiping Rebellion, Wuchang and the surrounding area changed hands several times after the Taiping capture of the city in the Battle of Wuchang (1852).

At the end of the Qing Empire, the Wuchang Prefecture (武昌府, then transcribed as 'Ou-tchang-fou') was the capital of the combined provinces of Hubei and Hunan, called the 'two Hu' or Huguang Viceroyalty. It was the seat of the provincial government of Huguang, at the head of which was a viceroy of Huguang. Next to Nanjing and Guangzhou, it was one of the most important vice-royalties in the empire.[citation needed]

It possessed an arsenal and a mint. The provincial government established ironworks for the manufacture of rails and other railway material. As the works did not pay under official management, they were transferred to the director-general of railways. Wuchang was not open to foreign trade and residence, but a considerable number of missionaries, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, lived within the walls. The native population was estimated at 800,000 around 1911, including cities on both banks. At that time, Wuchang was an important junction on the trunk railway from Beijing to Guangzhou; and was on the route of the Sichuan railway.

In Wuchang on October 10, 1911, a revolt broke out against the Qing Dynasty. This event, now called the Wuchang Uprising and celebrated as Double Ten Day, was the catalyst that started the Xinhai Revolution, which led to the development of the Republic of China.

In 1912, the Wuchang prefecture was abolished and a new Wuchang county (just next to the Wuchang county in the Ezhou city) was created. In 1926 the Wuchang town was promoted to a city, and merged with Hankou and Hanyang to form a new city named Wuhan.

 
Map including Wuchang (labeled WU-CH'ANG 武昌) (1953)

After 1949, the more urban part of the Wuchang County was absorbed into the new Wuhan City and was administratively partitioned into Wuchang, Qingshan and Hongshan districts, while the remaining, mostly rural, southern part retained the name of Wuchang County. In 1995, Wuchang County became Jiangxia District of Wuhan.

Geography edit

Administrative divisions edit

Wuchang District administers:[5][6][7]

# Name Chinese (S) Pinyin Romanization
Subdistricts
1 Shidong Subdistrict Rock Cave 石洞街道 Shídòng Jiēdào
2 Yangyuan Subdistrict Yang Garden 杨园街道 Yángyuán Jiēdào
3 Xujiapeng Subdistrict 徐家棚街道 Xūjiāpéng Jiēdào
4 Jiyuqiao Subdistrict 积玉桥街道 Jīyùqiáo Jiēdào
5 Zhonghualu Subdistrict Zhonghua Road 中华路街道 Zhōnghuálù Jiēdào
6 Liangdao Subdistrict 粮道街道 Liángdào Jiēdào
7 Huanghelou Subdistrict Yellow Crane Tower 黄鹤楼街道 Huánghèlóu Jiēdào
8 Ziyang Subdistrict 紫阳街道 Zǐyáng Jiēdào
9 Baishazhou Subdistrict White Sand Islet 白沙洲街道 Báishāzhōu Jiēdào
10 Shouyilu Subdistrict First to Rise in Revolt Road 首义路街道 Shǒuyìlù Jiēdào
11 Zhongnanlu Subdistrict South Central Road 中南路街道 Zhōngnánlù Jiēdào
12 Shuiguohu Subdistrict Fruit Lake 水果湖街道 Shuǐguǒhú Jiēdào
13 Luojiashan Subdistrict Mount Luojia 珞珈山街道 Luòjiāshān Jiēdào
14 Nanhu Subdistrict South Lake 南湖街道 Nánhú Jiēdào
15 Donghu Scenic Area East Lake 东湖风景区街道 Dōnghú Fēngjǐngqū Jiēdào

Notable people edit

See also edit

The Wuchang fish (Megalobrama amblycephala; 武昌鱼; 武昌魚; Wǔchāng yú) is named after the town.

References edit

  1. ^ Google (2014-07-02). "Wuchang" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2014-07-02.
  2. ^ "Wuhan Statistical Yearbook 2010" (PDF). Wuhan Statistics Bureau. p. 15. Retrieved 2011-07-30.
  3. ^ (in Simplified Chinese). Wuhan Statistics Bureau. 2011-05-11. Archived from the original on 2011-10-25. Retrieved 2011-06-11.
  4. ^ (in Chinese). official website of Wuchang District Government. Archived from the original on 2008-03-24. Retrieved 2008-04-19.
  5. ^ 武汉市武昌区区属部门预决算及“三公”经费预决算信息 (in Simplified Chinese). Wuchang District People's Government. Retrieved 27 December 2017. 石洞街 杨园街 徐家棚街 积玉桥街 中华路街 粮道街 黄鹤楼街 紫阳街 白沙洲街 首义路街 中南路街 水果湖街 珞珈山街 南湖街
  6. ^ 武昌区历史沿革 [Historical Development of Wuchang District] (in Simplified Chinese). XZQH.org. 7 July 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2017. 2010年第六次人口普查,武昌区常住总人口1214287人,其中:积玉桥街道60323人,杨园街道109485人,徐家棚街道123918人,粮道街道64704人,中华路街道44262人,黄鹤楼街道60909人,紫阳街道61135人,白沙洲街道76226人,首义路街道69562人,中南路街道216216人,水果湖街道178628人,珞珈山街道75128人,石洞街道6664人,南湖街道52596人,东湖风景区街道(武昌)14531人。
  7. ^ 2017年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码:武昌区 [2017 Statistical Area Numbers and Rural-Urban Area Numbers: Wuchang District]. National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China. 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2018. 统计用区划代码 名称 420106001000 积玉桥街办事处 420106002000 杨园街办事处 420106003000 徐家棚街办事处 420106005000 粮道街办事处 420106006000 中华路街办事处 420106007000 黄鹤楼街办事处 420106008000 紫阳街办事处 420106009000 白沙洲街办事处 420106010000 首义路街办事处 420106011000 中南路街办事处 420106012000 水果湖街办事处 420106013000 珞珈山街办事处 420106014000 石洞街办事处 420106015000 南湖街办事处 420106490000 东湖风景区街道(武昌)

External links edit

  • Official website of Wuchang District Government

wuchang, wuhan, wuchang, redirects, here, other, uses, wuchang, disambiguation, wuchang, 武昌区wu, changdistricteast, lake, overlooking, wuchangwuchanglocation, hubeicoordinates, 5619, 3404, 5619, 3404, countrypeople, republic, chinaprovincehubeisub, provincial, . Wuchang redirects here For other uses see Wuchang disambiguation Wuchang 武昌区Wu ChangDistrictEast Lake overlooking WuchangWuchangLocation in HubeiCoordinates 30 33 43 N 114 20 25 E 30 5619 N 114 3404 E 30 5619 114 3404 1 CountryPeople s Republic of ChinaProvinceHubeiSub provincial cityWuhanArea 2 Total87 42 km2 33 75 sq mi Population 2010 3 Total1 199 127 Density13 717 km2 35 530 sq mi Time zoneUTC 8 China Standard Wuhan district mapSubdivisions of Wuhan Hubei12345678910111213Core1 Jiang an2 Jianghan3 Qiaokou4 Hanyang5 Wuchang6 Qingshan7 HongshanSuburban and rural8 Dongxihu9 Hannan10 Caidian11 Jiangxia12 Huangpi13 XinzhouWebsite武昌区政府门户网站 translation Wuchang District Government Web Portal in Simplified Chinese Wuchang WuhanChangchun TempleTraditional Chinese武昌TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinWǔchangWade GilesWu ch ang Wuchang is one of 13 urban districts of the prefecture level city of Wuhan the capital of Hubei Province China It is the oldest of the three cities that merged into modern day Wuhan and stood on the right southeastern bank of the Yangtze River opposite the mouth of the Han River The two other cities Hanyang and Hankou were on the left northwestern bank separated from each other by the Han River The name Wuchang remains in common use for the part of urban Wuhan south of the Yangtze River Administratively however it is split between several districts of the City of Wuhan The historic center of Wuchang lies within the modern Wuchang District which has an area of 82 4 square kilometres 31 8 sq mi and a population of 1 003 400 4 Other parts of what is colloquially known as Wuchang are within Hongshan District south and south east and Qingshan District north east Presently on the right bank of the Yangtze it borders the districts of Qingshan for a very small section to the northeast and Hongshan to the east and south on the opposite bank it borders Jiang an Jianghan and Hanyang On 10 October 1911 the New Army stationed in the city started the Wuchang Uprising a turning point of the Xinhai Revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China Contents 1 History 1 1 The old Wuchang county 1 2 The present day Wuchang town 2 Geography 2 1 Administrative divisions 3 Notable people 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp The map of Vou chang fou in Du Halde s 1736 Description of China based on reports from the Jesuit missionThe old Wuchang county edit See also Ezhou In 221 warlord Sun Quan moved the capital of Eastern Wu from Gong an county Jingzhou northwest of present day Gong an county Hubei to E county in present day Ezhou City and renamed E to Wuchang literally prospering from military regarding its logistics role of the military bases established before the Battle of Red Cliffs Later in the year Cao Pi proclaimed himself the emperor of Cao Wei citation needed Sun Quan declared independence in the following year and started to build forts and palaces in Wuchang Sun Quan proclaimed himself the emperor of Eastern Wu in 229 and moved the capital to Jianye Sun Hao the emperor of Eastern Wu between 264 and 280 moved the capital back to Wuchang in 265 In 589 the Wuchang commandery was abolished and the Wuchang county was transferred to a new commandery named Ezhou headquartered in present day Wuchang District and remained in the administration since then The present day Wuchang town edit The Wuchang commandery was set up when E was renamed to Wuchang and included six counties In 223 the commandery was renamed to Jiangxia and the capital of the commandery moved to Xiakou in present day Wuchang town The name of the town was switched back and forth between Wuchang and Jiangxia several times in the following centuries The present day version of Wuying Pagoda the oldest standing architecture in Hubei Province was built around the time of fall of the Southern Song Dynasty After 1301 the Wuchang prefecture headquartered in the town became the capital of Hubei province During the Taiping Rebellion Wuchang and the surrounding area changed hands several times after the Taiping capture of the city in the Battle of Wuchang 1852 At the end of the Qing Empire the Wuchang Prefecture 武昌府 then transcribed as Ou tchang fou was the capital of the combined provinces of Hubei and Hunan called the two Hu or Huguang Viceroyalty It was the seat of the provincial government of Huguang at the head of which was a viceroy of Huguang Next to Nanjing and Guangzhou it was one of the most important vice royalties in the empire citation needed It possessed an arsenal and a mint The provincial government established ironworks for the manufacture of rails and other railway material As the works did not pay under official management they were transferred to the director general of railways Wuchang was not open to foreign trade and residence but a considerable number of missionaries both Roman Catholic and Protestant lived within the walls The native population was estimated at 800 000 around 1911 including cities on both banks At that time Wuchang was an important junction on the trunk railway from Beijing to Guangzhou and was on the route of the Sichuan railway In Wuchang on October 10 1911 a revolt broke out against the Qing Dynasty This event now called the Wuchang Uprising and celebrated as Double Ten Day was the catalyst that started the Xinhai Revolution which led to the development of the Republic of China In 1912 the Wuchang prefecture was abolished and a new Wuchang county just next to the Wuchang county in the Ezhou city was created In 1926 the Wuchang town was promoted to a city and merged with Hankou and Hanyang to form a new city named Wuhan nbsp Map including Wuchang labeled WU CH ANG 武昌 1953 After 1949 the more urban part of the Wuchang County was absorbed into the new Wuhan City and was administratively partitioned into Wuchang Qingshan and Hongshan districts while the remaining mostly rural southern part retained the name of Wuchang County In 1995 Wuchang County became Jiangxia District of Wuhan Geography editAdministrative divisions edit Wuchang District administers 5 6 7 Name Chinese S Pinyin RomanizationSubdistricts1 Shidong Subdistrict Rock Cave 石洞街道 Shidong Jiedao2 Yangyuan Subdistrict Yang Garden 杨园街道 Yangyuan Jiedao3 Xujiapeng Subdistrict 徐家棚街道 Xujiapeng Jiedao4 Jiyuqiao Subdistrict 积玉桥街道 Jiyuqiao Jiedao5 Zhonghualu Subdistrict Zhonghua Road 中华路街道 Zhōnghualu Jiedao6 Liangdao Subdistrict 粮道街道 Liangdao Jiedao7 Huanghelou Subdistrict Yellow Crane Tower 黄鹤楼街道 Huanghelou Jiedao8 Ziyang Subdistrict 紫阳街道 Zǐyang Jiedao9 Baishazhou Subdistrict White Sand Islet 白沙洲街道 Baishazhōu Jiedao10 Shouyilu Subdistrict First to Rise in Revolt Road 首义路街道 Shǒuyilu Jiedao11 Zhongnanlu Subdistrict South Central Road 中南路街道 Zhōngnanlu Jiedao12 Shuiguohu Subdistrict Fruit Lake 水果湖街道 Shuǐguǒhu Jiedao13 Luojiashan Subdistrict Mount Luojia 珞珈山街道 Luojiashan Jiedao14 Nanhu Subdistrict South Lake 南湖街道 Nanhu Jiedao15 Donghu Scenic Area East Lake 东湖风景区街道 Dōnghu Fengjǐngqu JiedaoNotable people editSaint Francis Regis Clet one of the Martyr Saints of China executed in Wuchang in 1840 Li Bingbing actress and singer Jayne Meadows American stage film and television actressSee also editThe Wuchang fish Megalobrama amblycephala 武昌鱼 武昌魚 Wǔchang yu is named after the town References edit Google 2014 07 02 Wuchang Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 2014 07 02 Wuhan Statistical Yearbook 2010 PDF Wuhan Statistics Bureau p 15 Retrieved 2011 07 30 武汉市2010年第六次全国人口普查主要数据公报 in Simplified Chinese Wuhan Statistics Bureau 2011 05 11 Archived from the original on 2011 10 25 Retrieved 2011 06 11 Profile of Wuchang District in Chinese official website of Wuchang District Government Archived from the original on 2008 03 24 Retrieved 2008 04 19 武汉市武昌区区属部门预决算及 三公 经费预决算信息 in Simplified Chinese Wuchang District People s Government Retrieved 27 December 2017 石洞街 杨园街 徐家棚街 积玉桥街 中华路街 粮道街 黄鹤楼街 紫阳街 白沙洲街 首义路街 中南路街 水果湖街 珞珈山街 南湖街 武昌区历史沿革 Historical Development of Wuchang District in Simplified Chinese XZQH org 7 July 2014 Retrieved 27 December 2017 2010年第六次人口普查 武昌区常住总人口1214287人 其中 积玉桥街道60323人 杨园街道109485人 徐家棚街道123918人 粮道街道64704人 中华路街道44262人 黄鹤楼街道60909人 紫阳街道61135人 白沙洲街道76226人 首义路街道69562人 中南路街道216216人 水果湖街道178628人 珞珈山街道75128人 石洞街道6664人 南湖街道52596人 东湖风景区街道 武昌 14531人 2017年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码 武昌区 2017 Statistical Area Numbers and Rural Urban Area Numbers Wuchang District National Bureau of Statistics of the People s Republic of China 2017 Retrieved 20 October 2018 统计用区划代码 名称 420106001000 积玉桥街办事处 420106002000 杨园街办事处 420106003000 徐家棚街办事处 420106005000 粮道街办事处 420106006000 中华路街办事处 420106007000 黄鹤楼街办事处 420106008000 紫阳街办事处 420106009000 白沙洲街办事处 420106010000 首义路街办事处 420106011000 中南路街办事处 420106012000 水果湖街办事处 420106013000 珞珈山街办事处 420106014000 石洞街办事处 420106015000 南湖街办事处 420106490000 东湖风景区街道 武昌 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wuchang District nbsp Look up Wuchang Wu ch ang Wu chang or Ou tchang in Wiktionary the free dictionary Official website of Wuchang District Government Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wuchang Wuhan amp oldid 1194037848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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