• Source: Taihe County, Jiangxi
    • Taihe County (simplified Chinese: 泰和县; traditional Chinese: 泰和縣; pinyin: Tàihé Xiàn) is a county of southwest Jiangxi province, People's Republic of China, situated on the west (left) bank of the Gan River. It is under the jurisdiction of the prefecture-level city of Ji'an, 37 kilometres (23 mi) to the north-northeast.
      Its area is almost the size of that of Rhode Island.


      Administrative divisions


      ์Nowadays, Taihe County consists of 16 towns and 6 townships.

      16 towns

      6 townships


      History




      = Ancient Times

      =
      According to contemporary archeological finds, Taihe County's history dates back to the Western Zhou period. During the Spring and Autumn periods, as well as the Warring States era, present-day Taihe County was controlled by the States of Wu, Yue, and Chu in turn. During the Qin dynasty, it belonged to Jiujiang Commandery. During the Qin dynasty, Luling County was founded in the region. Its jurisdiction covered most of today's Ji'an and Ganzhou regions, with the county seat located by the Hesui River within the present-day Taihe County. During the Western Han Dynasty, Wang Mang renamed it Hengting County. Luling County reclaimed it during the start of the Eastern Han period. In the first year of Xingping (194 AD), Xichang County was founded. Sun Ce detached Luling Commandery from Yuzhang Commandery and made Xichang County the capital of Luling Commandery. The county seat of Xichang was situated west of the current county seat. In the fifth year of Jiahe (236 AD) under Eastern Wu, Luling Commandery was divided, and Luling South Commandery Commandant was appointed. In the second year of Baoding (267 AD), Luling Commandery was partitioned again, and Ancheng Commandery (now Anfu County) was founded. During the Western Jin dynasty’s Taikang era, the commandery seat was moved to Shiyang County, located about twenty li northeast of today's Jishui County.


      = Medieval Times

      =
      During the Wei, Jin, and Southern and Northern Dynasties period, large-scale migrations from the north occurred due to wars, bringing with them more advanced farming techniques from the north. This led to continuous development of agricultural production in the Gan River valley of the Ji-Tai Basin, and Taihe gradually became an important agricultural region. In the tenth year of the Sui emperor Kaihuang (590 AD), Dongchang, Suixing, and Yongxin Counties were merged into Xichang County, which was renamed Anfeng County. The following year (591 AD), due to the area's fertile land, it was renamed Taihe County. In the fifth year of Tang emperor Wude (622 AD), Taihe was elevated to Nanping Prefecture, but three years later, the prefecture was abolished, and the name was reverted to Taihe County (with “Tai” changed to “Tai”).


      = Early Modern Times

      =

      From the Tang dynasty to the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, the economy of the Ji-Tai Basin continued to develop. The hilly and mountainous areas on both sides of the basin were gradually developed as well, and the population increased. Taihe County’s jurisdiction was gradually divided, first separating Yongxin County and Suichuan County from Taihe, and later separating Wanan County from Suichuan and Taihe. By the mid-Northern Song dynasty, the county's borders had shrunk to nearly their present-day size, with few significant changes afterward. In the first year of the Yuan emperor Yuanzhen (1294 AD), Taihe was elevated to the status of a prefecture. In the second year of the Ming emperor Hongwu (1369 AD), Taihe Prefecture was abolished and reverted to Taihe County (changing “Tai” back to “Tai”).


      Climate




      Notes and references




      Further reading


      John W. Dardess (1996). A Ming Society: Tʻai-ho County, Kiangsi, Fourteenth to Seventeenth Centuries. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20425-6.
      Qian Hang (钱杭; Qián Háng; Ch'ien Hang), 传统与转型: 江西泰和农村宗族形态; Chuántǒng yǔ Zhuǎnxíng: Jiāngxī Tàihé Nóngcūn Zōngzú Xíngtài; Ch'uan-t'ung yu chuan-hsing: Chiang-hsi Tai-ho nung-ts'un tsung-tsu hsing-t'ai. 上海社会科学院出版社, 1995 (Shanghai). See profile at Google Books.


      External links


      (in Chinese and English) Government site - Google translation

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