Jining District

Jining District (Mongolian script: ᠵᠢᠨᠢᠩ ᠲᠣᠭᠣᠷᠢᠭ; Chinese: 集宁区) is an urban district that serves as the administrative seat of Ulanqab, a region governed as a prefecture-level city in the mid-western part of Inner Mongolia, China. It has an area of approximately 114.2 km² and is in the southern foothills of the Yinshan mountains.

Jining

集宁区ᠵᠢᠨᠢᠩᠲᠣᠭᠣᠷᠢᠭ

Tsining, Chi-ning
District
Jining South Railway Station, c. 2013
CountryPeople's Republic of China
Autonomous regionInner Mongolia
Prefecture-level cityUlanqab
City establishedApril 1956
District establishedApril 2004
Area
  Total114.2 km2 (44.1 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
  Total377,100
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Postal code
012000
Area code(s)0474
Websitehttp://www.jnq.gov.cn/
Jining District
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese集宁区
Traditional Chinese集寧區
Mongolian name
Mongolian CyrillicЖинин тойрог
Mongolian scriptᠵᠢᠨᠢᠩᠲᠣᠭᠣᠷᠢᠭ

As of 2011, it had a population of roughly 377,100, including members of the Mongol, Hui, Manchu, Daur, Tibetan, Uyghur, Hmong, and Yi national minorities.

Administratively speaking, Ulanqab is a "city" and Jining a "district", in reality Jining is a de facto city, while Ulanqab is an administrative division covering a much larger area. See prefecture-level city for more information on this arrangement.

Jining South Railway Station (集宁南站) serves as a railway intersection to the border town of Erenhot to the north, Hohhot and Baotou to the west, and Shanxi province's Datong to the south.

History

Map including Jining (labeled as 集寧 CHI-NING (P'ING-TI-CH'ÜAN)) (AMS, 1963)

Recorded human activity in the Jining area dates back to the Shang Dynasty. It was originally named Bingzhou (并州). In the Song Dynasty it was part of the Yunzhong Commandery (云中府); it was placed under the administration of Datong during the Jin dynasty (1115–1234). During the Yuan Dynasty, it was named "Jining" for the first time. In 1675, the Jining area was placed under the administration of the Plain Yellow Banner of Chahar Province, and in 1750 was transferred to Fengzhen City's administration. In 1922, it was renamed Jining and became a municipality, and the following year a county. In 1948 Jining fell under the control of the Communist Party. The urban core was subsequently renamed Chengguan Town (roughly, "urban district"), then Pingdiquan Town (平地泉), then finally back to Jining in April 1956.

In 2004, Ulanqab League, to which it is the seat of government, was 'converted' to a prefecture-level city, and Jining is correspondingly changed from a county-level city to a district. Ulanqab is named Chaborte in the writings of P. Evariste Huc.

Transportation

Jining is a major transport node in central Inner Mongolia. It is on the Beijing-Baotou railway, and the terminus of the Jining-Erenhot Railway, making the city a short connection away from urban centres such as Hohhot, Baotou, Zhangjiakou, Datong, and Beijing. High-speed rail access is available to Hohhot and Baotou; travel time to the regional capital is approximately an hour.

Jining is also on the route of China National Highway 208, China National Highway 110, and the G6 Beijing–Lhasa Expressway.

Intercity buses are available to neighboring cities and towns.

Natural resources

The Jining area is a source of limestone and turquoise.

gollark: Bold of you to assume I have money.
gollark: They keep consistently ordering the wrong ones somehow.
gollark: Specifically, random cheap DC motors.
gollark: We are using """motors""" for "robotics purposes" at school.
gollark: How exciting.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.