Jiangshan

Jiangshan (Chinese: 江山; pinyin: Jiāngshān) is a county-level city located in Quzhou prefecture, in the southwest of Zhejiang Province, China, bordering Jiangxi province to the west. Located about 250 kilometers southwest of Hangzhou, the provincial capital, it is the only county-level city in the prefecture. In 1999, Jiangshan's population stood at 563,196. The city is named aptly: Jiang means river and Shan means mountain; a river runs through the city and scenic Mt. Jianglang sits on its border.[1]

Jiangshan

江山市

Kiangshan
Xiakou
Jiangshan
Location in Zhejiang
Coordinates: 28°44′10″N 118°37′30″E
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceZhejiang
Prefecture-level cityQuzhou
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Mount Jianglang of Jiangshan

USA Today described Jiangshan as a "fairly prosperous city in one of China's most developed provinces".[2]

The Jiangshanian Age of the Cambrian Period of geological time is named for Jiangshan.

Administrative division

It has 3 streets, 11 towns, 5 townships, 13 communities, and 292 administrative villages:

  • Street: Hushan Street, Shuangta Street, Qinghu Street
  • Town: Town on more than four all towns, villages and towns celebrate, Fenglin Township , the town of Gap , benches town , shimenzhen, Big Town, the altar stone town, new town pond, Nianbadu town.
  • Township:Dachen Township, Bowl Kiln Township, Tangyuankou Township, Zhangcun Township , and Baoan Township

Education

Among the handful of schools in Jiangshan is Jiangshan Experimental Primary School, which is part of Zhejiang University's Global TEFL network. The program sends native English-speakers to their network schools to teach English for periods of 2–4 weeks.[3] Aside from these teachers, Jiangshan sees few Westerners because of its relative geographical obscurity. Jiangshan High School is also in Jiangshan.[2]

gollark: The economy *does matter*, though, even in a "lives saved" sense. As someone on the interweb put it:> Damage to productivity eventually results in damage to people, since we use part of our productivity to preserve life.
gollark: Well, we could engineer humans with better DNA error correction or something, eventually.
gollark: Forever might be an overestimate, but cancer generally will probably stick around for a while as it is a complex and hard-to-cure thing.
gollark: ... maybe these are just hard problems which they're working on, rather than some kind of conspiracy?
gollark: It seems like the problem here might be lack of systems to track and respond to demand, since I think lots of people probably would be willing to pay some money for a ventilator to be available if they need it during this pandemic.

References

  1. "Zhejiang." (Archive) China Daily.
  2. "Asiana crash deaths ID'd as 2 Chinese teens." (Contributing: Sunny Yang; The Associated Press). USA Today. July 7, 2013. Retrieved on July 7, 2013. "Teacher Ye Lianjun told Chinese television that there were 34 people traveling in the Jiangshan Middle School group — five teachers and 29 students."
  3. About « An American in Jiangshan
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