Tangshan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

唐山市
Tángshān Shì
Tangshan is highlighted on this map
Administration Type Prefecture-level city
City Seat 39°7′N, 118°5′E
Area
- Total
- Urban center
 
13,472 km²
3,874 km²
Population
- Total
- Urban center
 
7,100,000 (2003)
2,960,000 (2003)
GDP
- Total
- Per Capita
 
¥202.7 billion (2005)
¥10,488 (2005)
CPC Committee Secretary Zhang, He (张和)
Mayor Zhang, Yaohua (张耀华)
Area code 315
Postal Code 063000
License Plate Prefix 冀B

Tangshan (Chinese: 唐山市; pinyin: Tángshān shì) is a mainly industrial prefecture-level city in Hebei province, People's Republic of China. It became known after the 1976 Tangshan earthquake, 8.2 on the Richter scale which flattened the city. The city has since been rebuilt and has become a tourist attraction.

Contents

Tangshan is located in the central section of circum-Bohai Sea Gulf region, facing the Bohai Sea in the south, depends on Yanshan mountain in the north, border Luanhe with Qinhuangdao city in the east, the west adjoin with Beijing, Tianjin. It is a throat strategic area and corridor linking two major regions of North China and Northeast China.

Tangshan is part of North China Plain, with Yanshan Mountain lying its north. The greatest river in Tangshan is Luanhe, which ranks No.2 in North China.

The prefecture-level city of Tangshan administers 16 county-level divisions including 6 districts, 6 counties, 2 county-level cities and 2 county-level farms.

Districts

  • Lunan District (路南区)
  • Lubei District (路北区)
  • Fengrun District (丰润区)
  • Fengnan District (丰南区)
  • Kaiping District (开平区)
  • Guye District (古冶区)

Counties

  • Tanghai (唐海县)
  • Luannan (滦南县)
  • Luan Xian (滦县)
  • Laoting (乐亭县)
  • Qianxi (迁西县)
  • Yutian (玉田县)

County-level Cities

  • Zunhua (遵化市)
  • Qian'an (迁安市)

County-level Farms

  • Lutai Farm (芦台农场)
  • Hangu Farm (汉沽农场)

Tangshan city has a history of over one hundred years. Its name derives from Tangshan Mountain in the urban city, where Tang Taizong's army settled during the war with now North Korea .

Tangshan suffered an earthquake of magnitude 8.2 (7.8 from official report) at 3:42 a.m. on July 28, 1976, the Tangshan earthquake, which resulted in a tragically colossal number of casualties. The official death toll was 255,000, but many experts believe that the actual number of fatalities was two to three times that number, making it the most destructive earthquake in modern history. As a result of the earthquake, most of the town had to be rebuilt.

Tangshan: City View‎
Tangshan: City View‎
Tangshan: Seaport‎
Tangshan: Seaport‎
Tangshan: South Lake Park
Tangshan: South Lake Park

Tangshan: City View‎
Tangshan: City View‎

Tangshan is an important heavy industry city in North China. Its manufactures include machinery, motor vehicles, chemicals, textiles, glass, petroleum products, and cement. It is a coal-mining center since late Qing Dynasty, as Cantonese merchant Tong King-sing opened the first coal mine using modern techniques in Kaiping in 1877.[1] . With the construction of Caifeidian Project, it launches large iron and steel plants, chemical projects, and electricity works. Tangshan is also called "the capital of porcelain in north China".

Historically, the Chinese modern industry started in this city. The first railway in China was built from Xugezhuang(胥各庄) to Tangshan in 1877 and the first fire-resistant material manufactory, and the first and largest cement manufactory were constructed in Tangshan as well.

In 2005, the GDP of Tangshan was ¥202.7 billion, ranked No.1 in all the prefecture-level cities in Hebei Province, and No.19 in China.

  • Ping Opera (Pingju 评剧)
  • Tangshan Shadow Play (Tangshan Piying 唐山皮影)
  • Leting drums (Leting Dagu 乐亭大鼓)


  • Eastern Tombs of the Qing Dynasty
  • Jingzhong Mountain, a religious shrine for the believers of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism
  • The Anti-seismic Monument, landmark of Tangshan, located in The Anti-seismic Square

  1. ^ Ellsworth C.Carlson, The Kaiping Mines, 1877-1912 2d ed (Cambridge, MA: East Asian Research Center, Harvard University, 1971.


Prefecture-level divisions of Hebei
Prefecture-level cities: Baoding | Cangzhou | Chengde | Handan | Hengshui
Langfang | Qinhuangdao | Shijiazhuang | Tangshan | Xingtai | Zhangjiakou
List of Hebei County-level divisions
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