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Northwestern China

Geographical region of China


Geographical region of China

FieldValue
native_name中国西北地区
native_name_langChinese
settlement_typeRegion
population_total103528786
population_footnotes
{{cite weburlhttp://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202105/t20210510_1817185.html
titleMain Data of the Seventh National Population Census
publisherNational Bureau of Statistics of China
url-statusdeadarchiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511031334/http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202105/t20210510_1817185.html
archivedateMay 11, 2021
population_density_km231
population_demonymNorthwestern Chinese
image_mapNorthwest China.svg
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
area_total_km23107900
blank_nameGDP
blank_info2022
blank1_name- Total
blank1_info¥7.040 trillion
$1.047 trillion
blank2_name- Per Capita
blank2_info¥68,000
$10,110
seat_typeLargest city
seatXi'an

|url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511031334/http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202105/t20210510_1817185.html $1.047 trillion $10,110

Northwestern China () is a region in the People's Republic of China. It consists of five provincial administrative regions, namely Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia, and Xinjiang.

The region is characterized by a (semi-)arid continental climate. It has a diverse population including significant ethnic minorities such as Hui, Uyghurs and Tibetans. Culturally, the region has historically been influenced by the Silk Road.

Historic security considerations

Chinese dynasties from the Qin (221 BC to 207 BC) to the Qing period (1644 CE to 1911 CE) placed high priority on maintaining stability and security in the region, motivated by concerns about potential threats from the Northwest.

Security concerns have continued under modern governments. During the Republic of China period, the government was only able to exercise loose control in the Northwest. In 1933, Pan-Islamic and Pan-Turkic separatists declared an Islamic Republic of East Turkestan based on constitutionally-enshrined Sharia law. The short-lived separatist Islamic Republic was not recognized by any other countries and was suppressed after three months of existence.

With Soviet Union backing, separatists declared a second short-lived East Turkestan Republic in 1944 based in Yining. The Soviet Union withdrew its support in June 1946. A separatist movement drawing on the legacy of the short-lived East Turkestan Republics continues today.

During land reform movement

During China's land reform movement (which began after the defeat of the Japanese in the Second Sino-Japanese War and continued in the early years of the People's Republic of China), the Communist Party encouraged rural women in achieving a "double fanshen" - a revolutionary transformation as both a peasant and a feminist awakening as a woman. The progress of Hui women in Northwestern China was promoted as by the Party as an example of such a success. Through the rural movement, Hui women were said to have not just received land, but also "freedom over their own bodies." Hui women embraced political participation and the rural revolution. The land reform movement succeeded among Hui people because activists first won over elder generations.

Industry

In the first half of the 20th century, industrial development in China's northwest was state-led.

Administrative divisions

GBISO No.ProvinceChinese NameCapitalPopulationDensity (per km2)Area (km2)Abbreviation/Symbol
11066,400NXNíng}}

Cities with urban area over one million in population

#CityUrban areaDistrict areaCity properProv.Census date
1**Xi'an**11,904,80512,283,92212,952,907SN[2020](2020-chinese-census)
2**Ürümqi**3,575,0004,054,369XJ2020
3**Lanzhou**3,474,8583,042,8634,359,446GS2020
4**Yinchuan**1,901,7931,901,7932,859,074NX2020
5**Xining**1,954,7951,954,7952,467,965QH2020
6**Baoji**1,862,1181,475,9623,321,853SN2020
7**Tianshui**1,212,7911,212,7911,212,791GS2020

References

References

  1. "Home - Regional - Quarterly by Province". China NBS.
  2. Chen, Yaning. (2014-03-23). "Water Resources Research in Northwest China". Springer Science & Business Media.
  3. Dillon, Michael. (2013-12-16). "China's Muslim Hui Community: Migration, Settlement and Sects". Routledge.
  4. "Chinese Section of the Silk Road: Land routes in Henan Province, Shaanxi Province, Gansu Province, Qinghai Province, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region; Sea Routes in Ningbo City, Zhejiang Province and Quanzhou City, Fujian Province - from Western-Han Dynasty to Qing Dynasty".
  5. Zhao, Huasheng. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  6. DeMare, Brian James. (2019). "Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution". [[Stanford University Press]].
  7. DeMare, Brian James. (2019). "Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution". [[Stanford University Press]].
  8. Hirata, Koji. (2024). "Making Mao's Steelworks: Industrial Manchuria and the Transnational Origins of Chinese Socialism". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  9. CHGIS. "Database Design".
  10. [[ISO 3166-2:CN]] ([[International Organization for Standardization. ISO]] [[ISO 3166-2. 3166-2]] codes for the provinces of China)
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