Caizichi

Caizichi Subdistrict (Chinese: 蔡子池街道; pinyin: Càizǐchí Jiēdào) is a subdistrict and the seat of Leiyang City in the province of Hunan, China. The subdistrict has an area of 52 km2 (20 sq mi) with a population of 181,173 (as of 2010 census). It has 10 communities under its jurisdiction.[1]

Caizichi

蔡子池
Caizichi
Location of Caizichi Subdistrict in Hunan
Coordinates: 26°24′17″N 112°51′26″E
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceHunan
PrefectureHengyang
CountyLeiyang City
Divisions10 communities
Area
  Total52 km2 (20 sq mi)
Population
 (2010 census)
  Total181,173
  Density3,500/km2 (9,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Area code(s)0734
LanguagesStandard and Gan Chinese

History

The subdistrict of Caizichi is the ancient county seat of Leiyang County. There have been many historical events in the subdistrict.[2] In 208 AD (Three Kingdoms period), Pang Tong was appointed as the county magistrate (Chinese: 县令) of Leiyang.

In 770 AD (Tang Dynasty period),to escape the scourge of war, Du Fu went to Chenzhou from Changsha, when traveling to Leiyang, he encountered flood. After staying for several days, Du Fu died of illness and was buried in 1 kilometer north of county seat (Du Fu's tomb is located in the present First Middle School of Leiyang).[2]

In 1516, Gong Fuquan (Chinese: 龚福全), the head of the Chengui Peasants' Revolt (Chinese: 郴桂农民起义) captured the county seat.[2]

On August 14, 1843, the Supervisor Yang Dapeng (Chinese: 监生阳大鹏) organized about four to five hundred peasants to enter the county seat and ordered the county magistrate Li Jinzhi (Chinese: 知县李金芝) to post a notice for reduction of money and grain tax. In April of the following year, because of the unbearable tax burden, he led more than one thousand of peasants to siege the county seat, After several failed attempts, he was seized and more than 200 peasants were killed by the end of June.[2]

In early May 1918, the two troops of Cheng Qian Department (南军程潜部) of the South Army (National Revolutionary Army) and Wu Peifu Department (北军吴佩孚部) of the North Army (Beiyang Government) met in Leiyang. On June 6, the South Army captured the county seat of Leiyang. On June 15, the two sides negotiated an armistice. The North Army established the county office in the county seat and the county office of North Army is located in Shangbao Street (上堡街), the county was divided to govern by the two troops.[2]

In 1942, 24 Japanese invading planes throwed 44 bombs three times, in this bombing, 128 people died and 244 were injured, 627 rooms and 1 car were destroyed.[2]

Geography

Caizichi is one of six urban subdistricts and the core urban area located in the central part of the city.

Subdivision

The subdistrict of Caizichi has 10 communities under its jurisdiction.[3]

10 communities
  • Hualong Community (化龙社区)
  • Jinnan Community (金南社区)
  • Jinpen Community (金盆社区)
  • Meiqiao Community (梅桥社区)
  • Nanfang Community (南方社区)
  • Nanzheng Community (南正社区)
  • Niezhou Community (聂洲社区)
  • Pailou Community (牌楼社区)
  • Xiguan Community (西关社区)
  • Xihu Community (西湖社区)

Notable people

gollark: I can't hear you, I'm busy working on my business pitch to investors about real-time butterfly tracking.
gollark: I was talking about your rain prediction thing being maybe theoretically possible.
gollark: For instance, you would need position and accelerometer data on the wings of *every butterfly*!
gollark: Not *theoretically possible* as in "it will actually likely be possible to do it within a few centuries".
gollark: Well, *theoretically possible* in that it's not explicitly forbidden as far as I know.

References

  1. "Archived copy" 蔡子池街道简介. Leiyang People's Government. Archived from the original on 2018-04-21. Retrieved 2018-04-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. according to the Brief Records of Caizichi Subdistrict / 蔡子池街道简志, see leiyang.gov Archived 2018-04-21 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Archived copy" 行政区划. Leiyang People's Government. Archived from the original on 2018-04-21. Retrieved 2018-04-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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