The Jiangnan Province of the Ming Dynasty was that 20, and the Jiangnan Province of the Ming Dynasty

Updated on history 2024-02-09
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    "Jiangnan Province" or "Jiangnan Province" is the name of the province in the early years of the Qing Dynasty, and in the second year of Shunzhi of the Qing Dynasty (1645), the "Nanzhili" of the Ming Dynasty was changed to Jiangnan Province, and the seat of governance was in Jiangning (now Nanjing City). In the sixth year of Kangxi (1667), it was divided into Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, but it was customary to still call these two provinces Jiangnan, and even when the township examination (examination of people) in Anhui Province still had to go to the Jiangnan Gongyuan in Nanjing (near today's Confucius Temple in Nanjing) to take the test with candidates from Jiangsu Province. Moreover, this "Jiangnan", which includes Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, is also combined with Jiangxi Province into a larger administrative region - "Liangjiang", which is under the jurisdiction of the governor of Liangjiang.

    In the Ming Dynasty, Jiangsu and Anhui were collectively called "Nanzhili" (called Zhili in the early Ming Dynasty). Because the capital of Nanjing was set at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, Jiangsu and Anhui around the capital were directly under the jurisdiction of Nanjing, so it was called "Zhili". In 1421, after Ming Chengzu moved the capital to Beijing, a small part of the surrounding Beijing, including Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Henan and Shandong, was directly managed by Beijing (Kyoto), also called Zhili.

    But Nanjing is still the capital, the original "Zhili" is still preserved, but for the sake of distinction, it is renamed "South Zhili", and the one in the north is called "North Zhili". It was not until the establishment of the Qing Dynasty that the "Southern Zhili" was abolished, and only the northern Zhili remained.

    Xinghua County in Jiangsu Province was established by the Wu State in the Five Dynasties, and belonged to Yangzhou in the Ming and Qing dynasties, and has not changed as the name of the county.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Jiangnan Province was established in the second year of Shunzhi of the Qing Dynasty (1645), and the provincial capital was located in Jiangning (now Nanjing). Qing Jiangnan Province was formerly known as Nanzhili of the Ming Dynasty Jiangnan Province roughly corresponded to today's Jiangsu Province, Shanghai City, and Anhui Province.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Jiangnan Province in the Ming Dynasty was the "Southern Zhili Province".

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    In the Ming Dynasty, there was no Jiangnan Province at all, only Nanzhili, including most of the current Jiangsu, Anhui, and Shanghai provinces and one city, and Jiangnan Province was established after the Qing Dynasty entered the Central Plains.

    Jiangnan Province, originally the Ming Dynasty Nanjing (South Zhili) area, after the Manchu Qing Dynasty entered the customs, in the Qing Shunzhi two years (1645) along the Ming system set up Jiangnan Cheng announced the political envoy division, that is, abolished the status of Nanjing as the national capital, the governor Yamen was set up in Jiangning Mansion (now Nanjing), in the early years of the Qing Dynasty Kangxi, changed to declare the political envoy department as the province, Jiangnan Cheng announced that the political envoy division was changed to Jiangnan Province. Jiangnan Province was roughly equivalent to present-day Jiangsu, Shanghai, and Anhui provinces. During the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty, it was divided into Anhui and Jiangsu provinces.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The extent of Jiangnan Province roughly corresponds to today's Jiangsu Province, Shanghai City, and Anhui Province. In the Qing Dynasty, Zhejiang Province had 11 prefectures (regions, counties, offices).

    Jiangnan Province inherited the territory of the Ming Dynasty's Nanzhili, and after the establishment of the Qing Dynasty, the Ming Dynasty's Nanzhili was renamed "Jiangnan Province". In the sixth year of Kangxi, Jiangnan Province was divided into two from north to south, divided into Jiangsu Province and Anhui Province.

    Within Jiangsu Province and Anhui Province, there is no unified type of dialect, and they all straddle the three or even four major dialect areas. This was also the means of checks and balances of the feudal rulers at that time.

    During the Qing Dynasty, Zhejiang was roughly the same as it is now, with the provincial capital of Hangzhou. During the Jiaqing period of the Qing Dynasty (1820), Zhejiang Province had 11 prefectures, including Hangzhou. The 11 provinces are:

    Hangzhou, Jiaxing, Huzhou, Ningbo, Shaoxing, Taizhou, Jinhua, Quzhou, Yanzhou, Wenzhou, Chuzhou.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Nanjing in the Ming Dynasty was called Yingtianfu.

    In the first month of the nineteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1421), the Jinshan court of the Ming Dynasty officially moved the capital to Beijing, with Shuntianfu Beijing as the capital and Yingtianfu as the capital. It was renamed Nanjing from Beijing, and the scope of today's Anhui, Jiangsu, and Shanghai provinces and one city was collectively called "Nanzhili".

    Nanjing, referred to as Nanjing, is the capital of Jiangsu Province, a sub-provincial city, a megacity, and the core city of Nanjing metropolitan area. As of 2021, the city has 11 districts under its jurisdiction, with a total area of square kilometers. The built-up area is square kilometers, with a permanent population of 10,000 people, an urban population of 10,000 people, and an urbanization rate.

    Topography

    Nanjing is known as the "Shishu Natural Geology Museum", and a variety of landform units such as floodplains, water-rich soft soils, hills, and karsts coexist. Nanjing belongs to the hilly area of Ningzhen, mainly low hills, low mountains account for the total land area, hills account for 53%, plains, depressions and rivers and lakes occupy 53%.

    The Ningzhen Mountains and the old mountains in the north of the river are in the middle of the city, and there are the Hengshan and Donglu Mountains in the south of the hills and hills of the Qinhuai River Basin. Nanjing's plane is long from north to south and narrow from east to west, forming a positive north-south direction, with a straight-line distance of 150 kilometers from north to south, and a width of 50 to 70 kilometers from east to west in the middle. The north and south ends are about 30 kilometers wide from east to west, and the south is a geomorphological complex composed of topographic units such as low mountains, hills, river valley plains, lakeside plains and riverside lands.

    The above content reference: Encyclopedia - Nanjing.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    After the stabilization of the Qing Dynasty, the administrative division was almost the same as now, that is, it was larger than now, with two more provinces!

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    At the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, Anhui and Jiangsu were Jiangnan Provinces, and Zhejiang Province was named after the early Qing Dynasty.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    <>1, the Ming Dynasty Nanjing called Yingtianfu, also known as Jingshi, Nanjing, is the name of Nanjing in the Ming Dynasty, the capital of the early Ming Dynasty, after the Yongle period moved the capital to Shuntianfu, Yingtianfu as the capital. Yingtianfu has jurisdiction over Shangyuan, Jiangning, Jurong, Liyang, Lishui, Gaochun, Jiangpu and Liuheba counties. In the middle of the Ming Dynasty, the population of Nanjing reached 1.2 million, which was the largest and most populous city in the country and the largest city in the world.

    2. In the sixteenth year of the Yuan Dynasty (1356), Zhu Yuanzhang personally led his troops to break through Jiqing Road (now Nanjing) in ten days in three routes; In March of the same year, Jiqing Road was changed to Yingtianfu, and the name of "Yingtian" means "Shangying Heaven's will". In August of the first year of Hongwu in the Ming Dynasty (1368), it was built as Nanjing and was the capital division of the Ming Dynasty; In the nineteenth year of Yongle (1421), Ming Chengzu moved north, with Shuntianfu as the capital and Nanjing Yingtianfu as the capital. In the second year of Shunzhi Bending Tour of the Qing Dynasty (1645), the Manchu Qing Dynasty conquered Yingtianfu and renamed it Jiangning Mansion.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Zipu of Nanjing Yingtianfu.

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