Province of China

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(Redirected from Provinces of the PRC)
Administrative divisions of the
People's Republic of China
This article is part
of the series:
Political divisions of China
Province level
Provinces
Autonomous regions
Municipalities
Special administrative regions
Prefecture level
Prefectures
Autonomous prefectures
Prefecture-level cities
(incl. Sub-provincial cities)
Leagues
County level
Counties
Autonomous counties
County-level cities
(incl. Sub-prefecture-level cities)
Districts
Banners
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Township level
Townships
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Sumu
Ethnic sumu
District public offices

A province, in the context of China, is a translation of sheng (省 shěng), which is an administrative division of China. Together with municipalities and autonomous regions, provinces make up the first level (known as the province level) of administrative division in Mainland China. The Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau are often said to be province-level as well, though in reality they have much more autonomy than regular provinces, autonomous regions, or municipalities.

Theoretically, provinces are also the first level division of the Republic of China on Taiwan, though this role has been greatly diminished.

The People's Republic of China currently administers 22 provinces, out of a total of 33 province level divisions, and claims, but does not control, a so-called "23rd province" of Taiwan. The Republic of China (Taiwan) administers and controls the entirety of Taiwan, as well as some offshore islands, including Kinmen and Matsu, very near to Fujian province of the People's Republic of China (PRC), as well as the capital city of Taipei and the municipality of Kaohsiung.

In the People's Republic of China (PRC), every province has a Communist Party of China provincial committee, headed by a secretary. The committee secretary is first-in-charge of the province, rather than the governor of the provincial government.

Contents

Alternative meanings

"Province" is also a translation of zhou, a division of the Han Dynasty, as well as circuits, a division of the Tang Dynasty and Song Dynasty.

See History of the political divisions of China.

List and map

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Provinces administered by the People's Republic of China
Name Chinese (S) pinyin Abbreviation Capital Chinese pinyin List of county-level divisions
Anhui安徽Ānhuī皖 wǎnHefei合肥HéféiList of county-level divisions
Fujian福建Fújiàn闽 mǐnFuzhou福州FúzhōuList of county-level divisions
Gansu甘肃Gānsù甘 gān or 陇 lǒngLanzhou兰州LánzhōuList of county-level divisions
Guangdong广东Guǎngdōng粤 yuèGuangzhou广州GuǎngzhōuList of county-level divisions
Guizhou贵州Guìzhōu黔 qián or 贵 guìGuiyang贵阳GuìyángList of county-level divisions
Hainan海南Hǎinán琼 qióngHaikou海口HǎikǒuList of county-level divisions
Hebei河北Héběi冀 jìShijiazhuang石家庄ShíjiāzhuāngList of county-level divisions
Heilongjiang黑龙江Hēilóngjiāng黑 hēiHarbin哈尔滨Hā'ěrbīnList of county-level divisions
Henan河南Hénán豫 yùZhengzhou郑州ZhèngzhōuList of county-level divisions
Hubei湖北Húběi鄂 èWuhan武汉WǔhànList of county-level divisions
Hunan湖南Húnán湘 xiāngChangsha长沙ChángshāList of county-level divisions
Jiangsu江苏Jiāngsū苏 sūNanjing南京NánjīngList of county-level divisions
Jiangxi江西Jiāngxī赣 gànNanchang南昌NánchāngList of county-level divisions
Jilin吉林Jílín吉 jíChangchun长春ChángchūnList of county-level divisions
Liaoning辽宁Liáoníng辽 liáoShenyang沈阳ShěnyángList of county-level divisions
Qinghai青海Qīnghǎi青 qīngXining西宁XīníngList of county-level divisions
Shaanxi陕西Shǎnxī陕 shǎn or 秦 qínXi'an西安Xī'ānList of county-level divisions
Shandong山东Shāndōng鲁 lǔJinan济南JǐnánList of county-level divisions
Shanxi山西Shānxī晋 jìnTaiyuan太原TàiyuánList of county-level divisions
Sichuan四川Sìchuān川 chuān or 蜀 shǔChengdu成都ChéngdūList of county-level divisions
Yunnan云南Yúnnán滇 diān or 云 yúnKunming昆明KūnmíngList of county-level divisions
Zhejiang浙江Zhèjiāng浙 zhèHangzhou杭州HángzhōuList of county-level divisions

History

The provinces of China were first set up during the Yuan Dynasty. There were initially 10 provinces. By the time the Qing Dynasty was established, there were 18, all of which were in China proper. These were:

For every province, there was a xunfu (governor, 巡撫), a political overseer on behalf of the emperorand a tidu (提督), a military governor. In addition, there was a zongdu (viceroy, 總督), a general military inspector or "governor general", for every two to three provinces.

Outer regions of China (those beyond "China proper") were not divided into provinces. Manchuria (consisting of Fengtian (now Liaoning), Jilin, Heilongjiang), Xinjiang, and Mongolia were overseen by military leaders or generals (將軍) and vice-dutong (副都統), and civilian leaders were heads of the leagues (盟長), a subdivision of Mongolia. Tibet was administratively overseen by the ambans (驻藏大臣).

In 1878, Xinjiang became a province, in 1909, Fengtian, Jilin, and Heilongjiang were made provinces as well. Taiwan was made a province in 1887, but it was ceded to Japan in 1895. As a result, there were 22 provinces in China (Outer China and China proper) near the end of the Qing Dynasty.

The Republic of China, established in 1912, set up 4 more provinces in Inner Mongolia and 2 provinces in historic Tibet, bringing the total to 28. 4 provinces were however lost with the establishment of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo in Manchuria. After the defeat of Japan in World War II, Manchuria was reincorporated as 10 provinces, and Taiwan was also returned to China. As a result, the Republic of China had 35 provinces. Although the Republic of China now only controls one province (Taiwan Province) and some islands of a second province (Fujian), it continues to claim (in theory at least) 35 provinces.

The People's Republic of China abolished many of the provinces in the 1950s and converted a number of them into autonomous regions. Hainan was set up as a separate province in 1988, bringing the total number of provinces to 22.

Various facts about the provinces

  • The largest province is Qinghai but also has the smallest population of just over 5.3 million.
  • Eight of the provinces (excluding the Republic of China (Taiwan) have a sea coast. The remaining 14 are land-locked.
  • Guangdong, Shandong and Liaoning all have a major peninsula.
  • Guangdong is the only province bordering the only two Special Administrative Region of China.
  • Separated from Guangdong and established in 1988, Hainan is the youngest province of China.
  • Aside from Hainan (which is not physically attached to any provinces), all provinces share borders with at least two or more provinces except for Heilongjiang.

See also

id:Daftar Provinsi Tiongkok ru:Провинции КНР zh:中国一级行政区