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Qitai County


FieldValue
nameQitai County
native_namezh-hans
ug-Arab
other_nameKitai, Gucheng
settlement_typeCounty
image_mapLocation_of_Qitai_within_Xinjiang_(China).png
map_captionLocation of Qitai (pink) in Changji Prefecture (yellow) and Xinjiang
pushpin_mapXinjiang#China
pushpin_labelQitai
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Xinjiang
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameChina
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Xinjiang
subdivision_type2Autonomous prefecture
subdivision_name2Changji
seat_typeCounty seat
seatQitai Town
unit_prefMetric
area_urban_footnotes--
area_rural_footnotes--
area_metro_footnotes--
area_magnitude--
area_total_km216645
population_footnotes
population_total219,811
population_as_of2020
population_density_km2auto
timezone1China Standard
utc_offset1+8
postal_code_typePostal code
area_code0994
website

ug-Arab tags -- Qitai County (), also known as Gucheng County (; ), is a county in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China under the administration of the Changji Hui Autonomous Prefecture. It covers an area of 16,641 km2 and had a population of 230,000.

Qitai County's county seat is in Qitai Town. Gucheng Township is nearby.

Name

There are several theories regarding the origin of the place name "Qitai." One explanation is that in the 24th year of the Qianlong reign of the Qing Dynasty (1759 AD), seven fortresses were built in what is now Laoqitai Town, Qitai County. This seventh fortress east of Ürümqi was called "Qitai" (Seven Fortresses). Since the Chinese characters for "seven" (七, qī) and "strange/unique" (奇, qí) are homophones, the name later evolved into "Qitai." Another theory is that in the old county seat (now Laoqitai Town), due to water shortages, every household dug wells with uniquely shaped "well platforms" called "qi" (奇), which was later abbreviated as Qitai. A third theory suggests that "Qitai" is a transliteration of "Khitan" (契丹), a historic ethnic group.{{cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180130204953/http://culture.ts.cn/content/2009-02/19/content_3850652.htm |archive-date=2018-01-30 |access-date=2018-01-30 |url-status=dead

History

In 119 BC (4th year of Emperor Wu's Yuanshou era), Zhang Qian led his second mission to the Western Regions, opening diplomatic relations with states such as Wusun and Dayuan.

By 68 BC (2nd year of Emperor Xuan's Dijing era), General Zheng Ji conquered Jushi, and the region came under Han control; the Han government then established agricultural colonies and administrative offices.

In 629 AD (14th year of Tang Taizong's Zhenguan), General Li Jing led a successful campaign against the Eastern Turks, after which the Tang dynasty solidified its control over the northern silk route.

In 640 AD, under Tang Zhenguan 14, Pulai County (蒲类县) was established northwest of modern Qitai, under Tingzhou prefecture; by 702 AD, it fell under the Northern Protectorate administration, and by 732 AD the post of military governor was permanently stationed there.

Located on one of the main routes of the Silk Road, the old Gucheng (often referred in the European writing of the past as "Ku Ch'eng-tze", Kucheng, Kuchengtze, etc., using Wade-Giles or Postal Romanization systems), was the western terminal for one of the caravan routes across the Gobi Desert. Owen Lattimore in The Desert Road to Turkestan leaves an account of his travel along this route in 1926–27.

"Under the special circumstances of the caravan trade, camel traffic usually overshoots Hami ["the most easterly point on the arterial cart roads of Chinese Turkestan"], going on all the way to Ku Ch'eng-tze. This is partly because the pastures near Ku Ch'eng-tze are more adequate to caravan needs, but still more because, transport being cheaper by camel than by cart, it is to the advantage of merchants to have their goods carried as far as possible by caravan."

Qitai briefly held city status. In 1953, the Xinjiang Provincial Government—before the region became an autonomous region—promoted the county seat of populous Qitai County to "Qitai City." However, following the 20 September 1954 Constitution of the People's Republic of China, which required all local governments to establish revolutionary committees, the autonomous region abolished the City People's Government in 1956. Qitai Town People's Committee was created, administering the town's 12 subdistricts reorganized into 10 residents' committees, under the Qitai County People's Committee. Since then, Qitai City has ceased to exist. 

Qitai has long been a place of multi-century Han Chinese settlement. The local dialect, often referred to as Xinjiang Mandarin or Xinjiang topolect, is considered a highly representative example of Mandarin in Xinjiang. It has been widely used in the region and even featured in performances by famed local sketch comedian Zhao Guozhu, whose "Xinjiang Sketches" are based on the Qitai dialect—earning the county a reputation as a center of Han cultural development in Xinjiang.

In the Cold War era, the United States established a station near Qitai to monitor Soviet nuclear and missile tests, replacing its former station in Iran.

Climate

|Jan record high C = 5.1 |Jan record low C = -35.5 |Feb record high C = 7.7 |Feb record low C = -37.6 |Mar record high C = 26.0 |Mar record low C = -31.4 |Apr record high C = 34.5 |Apr record low C = -13.7 |May record high C = 36.0 |May record low C = -3.0 |Jun record high C = 37.6 |Jun record low C = 2.2 |Jul record high C = 39.1 |Jul record low C = 6.8 |Aug record high C = 40.5 |Aug record low C = 0.1 |Sep record high C = 36.1 |Sep record low C = -3.5 |Oct record high C = 30.3 |Oct record low C = -12.9 |Nov record high C = 25.1 |Nov record low C = -31.9 |Dec record high C = 12.4 |Dec record low C = -40.1

Economy

Qitai County is the leading grain producer in Xinjiang, ranks second in cultivated land area, and leads in flour and meat production. The county has approximately 2.5 million mu (≈166,700 ha) of arable land, with 1.89 million mu (≈126,000 ha) sown in 2012—the second-highest in Xinjiang after Shache County in Kashgar Prefecture. Its cultivated area exceeds that of Ürümqi, Bayingolin, Kizilsu, Turpan, and Hami combined. Annually, Qitai produces over 800 million kilograms of grain—accounting for one-third of Changji Prefecture's output and one-sixth of Xinjiang's total—and is designated as a national-level major grain-producing county.

Qitai is also known as the "Hometown of Chinese Snacks"—its guoyourou (fried pork) noodles are popular across Xinjiang, and Qitai yellow noodles are sold in every major city in the region. The county is likewise renowned as a "Liquor Hometown": Gucheng Liquor, produced locally, has earned national recognition as a "China Time-honored Brand" and a "Historical and Cultural Famous Liquor," winning gold at the 2nd International Wine Culture Festival. It also serves as the "master" distillery for Xinjiang Ilite Liquor Co.

The county is also nationally famous for its dinosaur fossils and petrified wood. In 2019, the largest-known Asian specimen of Mamenchisaurus—the "Qitai Yellow River Giant"—was excavated there. In 2020, the "Qitai Dino Park" opened to the public. Tourist attractions like scenic Jiangbulak, the Tianshan Strange Slope (a Guinness World Record site), and the Han-era Shule Ancient City draw large seasonal crowds—during peak season, traffic jams occur on the Ürümqi–Qitai Expressway.

Qitai is also rich in mineral resources, including coal, granite, iron, gold, silver, copper, mirabilite, graphite, limestone, bentonite, and perlite among more than 20 types. In particular, the coal reserves in Qitai—part of the Jundong coalfield—are estimated at 280.8 billion tonnes, making it the county with the largest coal reserves in China, surpassing Shenmu (50 bill.), Fugu (20 bill.) in Shaanxi and Ordos (169.6 bill.) in Inner Mongolia. The county's granite reserves are also substantial, estimated at 3 billion m3

Subdivisions

Qitai County is made up of 9 towns, 3 townships, and 3 ethnic townships.

NameSimplified ChineseHanyu PinyinUyghur (UEY)Uyghur Latin (ULY)Administrative division codeNotes
**Towns**
Qitai Town奇台镇zhگۇچۇڭ بازىرىug652325100
Laoqitai Town老奇台镇zhلوچىتەي بازىرى
(كونا گۇچۇڭ بازىرى)ug
(ug)652325101
Banjiegou Town半截沟镇zhبەنجەگۇ بازىرىug652325102
Jebki Town吉布库镇zhجېبكى بازىرىug652325103
Dongwan Town东湾镇zhدۇڭۋەن بازىرىug652325104
Xidi Town西地镇zhشىدى بازىرىug652325105
Biliuhe Town碧流河镇zhبىلۇخې بازىرىug652325106
Sangezhuangzi Town三个庄子镇zhسەنگىجاڭزا بازىرىug652325107
Xibeiwan Town西北湾镇zhشىبېيۋەن بازىرىug652325108
**Townships**
Kariz Township坎尔孜乡zhكارىز يېزىسىug652325202
Gucheng Township古城乡zhگۇچۇڭ يېزىسىug652325204
Qihu Township七户乡zhچىخۇ يېزىسىug652325204
**Ethnic townships**
Wumachang Kazakh Ethnic Township五马场乡
(五马场哈萨克族乡)zh
(zh)ۋۇماچاڭ قازاق يېزىسىug652325203(Kazakh)
ۋماچاڭ قازاق اۋىلى
Qorin Kazakh Ethnic Township乔仁乡
(乔仁哈萨克族乡)zh
(zh)چورىن قازاق يېزىسىug652325205(Kazakh)
ٴشورىن قازاق اۋىلى
Daquan Tatar Ethnic Township塔塔尔乡
(大泉塔塔尔族乡)zh
(zh)داچۈەن تاتار يېزىسىug652325208(Tatar)
Дацюань-Татар милли волосте

Transportation

In 2009, the Ürümqi–Dzungaria Railway was constructed through the Jiangjun Gobi desert in the northern part of the county. It terminates at a coal mine in Jiangjunmiao. In 2024, the Qitai Jiangbulake Airport opened.

The radio telescope project

Main article: Qitai Radio Telescope

In 2012, the officials of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Xinjiang government presided over the groundbreaking at the site of the Xinjiang Qitai Astronomical and Science Education Base. The facility, in Qitai County's Banjiegou Town (半截沟镇), will be the home of the proposed Qitai Radio Telescope.{{cite journal |archive-date=2013-12-25 |access-date=2013-12-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131225101808/http://qttconf.csp.escience.cn/dct/attach/Y2xiOmNsYjpwZGY6MzMxNDk= |url-status=dead

Footnotes

References

  • Lattimore, Owen (1929). The Desert Road to Turkestan. Owen Lattimore. Boston, Little, Brown, and Company. Reprinted with new introduction, 1972, AMS Press, New York, N.Y.

References

  1. [http://www.citypopulation.de/en/china/xinjiang/admin/ Xinjiang: Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties]
  2. "奇台县历史沿革". 行政区划网.
  3. Hulsewé, Anthony F. P.. (1949). ""Zhang Qian and the Origins of the Silk Road"". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society.
  4. Wiltshire, Edward. (2010). "The Making of America". Rowman & Littlefield.
  5. Watson, William. (1987). ""Jushi under Early Han Rule"". Early China.
  6. Barfield, Thomas. (1989). ""The Expansion of Tang Power in Central Asia"". Asia Major.
  7. Zhang, Xi. (2015). "A History of Xinjiang". Xinjiang University Press.
  8. Millward, James A.. (1980). ""The Northern Frontier in Tang China"". Journal of Asian History.
  9. Lattimore (1929), pp. 52, 250.
  10. Lattimore (1929), p. 250.
  11. (1956). "New administrative changes in Qitai". Changji Daily.
  12. (2001). "中国行政区划通史·新疆卷". 中国社会出版社.
  13. 马志远. (1998). "奇台县建制沿革与行政调整述略". 新疆地方史志.
  14. "昌吉州地方志(1950-1980)". 昌吉回族自治州人民政府.
  15. 李昌海. (2013). "新疆汉语方言的形成及演变". 语言研究.
  16. (2015-08-12). "赵国柱:用奇台话讲新疆人的故事". 新疆日报.
  17. Hu, Weizhen. (2001). "美国对华 "一个中国"政策之演变: 从尼克森到柯林顿".
  18. link. [[China Meteorological Administration]]
  19. link. 中国气象局公共气象服务中心
  20. (2024-07-10). ""Major wheat production area in China's Xinjiang greets harvest"". Xinhua.
  21. China Agricultural Statistics. (2023-12-20). "Qitai County's Grain Output in National Context". China Agri Data.
  22. Qitai Distillery. (2015-09-01). "Qitai Gucheng Liquor wins national and international awards". Changji Daily.
  23. Xinjiang Daily. (2016-08-12). ""Gucheng Liquor takes gold at International Wine Culture Festival"". Xinjiang Daily.
  24. Economy Journal Xinjiang. (2018-05-20). "Qitai distillery partners with Ilite". Economy Journal Xinjiang.
  25. Paleontology News China. (2019-06-15). ""Asia's largest Mamenchisaurus skeleton discovered in Qitai"". Paleontology News China.
  26. Xinjiang Science Daily. (2020-09-10). "Qitai Dino Park opens to public". Xinjiang Science Daily.
  27. Changji Traffic Bureau. (2022-08-05). "Tourism boom clogs U-Q Expressway". Changji Traffic Bureau.
  28. Xinjiang Tourism Bureau. (2023-07-22). "Visitor surge at Jiangbulak Scenic Area". Xinjiang Tourism Bureau.
  29. China Daily. (2023-01-28). "Xinjiang coalfield reserves second-largest in China". China Daily.
  30. Xinhua. (2011-12-23). ""Asia's largest coal reserve discovered in China's Xinjiang"". Xinhua.
  31. (Chinese) [http://news.163.com/09/1106/11/5NECVBGI000120GR.html "新疆精伊霍、乌精二线、奎北、乌准4条铁路新线开通运营"] (Four new railways enter into service in Xinjiang: the Jinghe-Yining Line, the Ürümqi-Jinghe second track, the Kuitun-Beitun Line, and the Ürümqi–Dzungaria Line) 2009-11-06
  32. "Groundbreaking Ceremony of Qitai Base".
  33. "QTT Specification". QTT International Advisory Workshop.
  34. Na, Wang. (May 2013). "QiTai Radio Telescope". The Second China-U.S. Workshop on Radio Astronomy Science and Technology.
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