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Southwestern China

Geographical region of China


Geographical region of China

FieldValue
population_total192979243
population_footnotes
{{cite weburlhttp://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202105/t20210510_1817185.htmltitle=Main Data of the Seventh National Population Censuspublisher=National Bureau of Statistics of Chinaurl-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511031334/http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202105/t20210510_1817185.htmlarchive-date=May 11, 2021}}
image_mapSouthwest China.svg
map_captionGovernment-defined region of Southwest China. Red: controlled by China; light red: disputed territory
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
area_total_km22365900
population_density_km282
settlement_typeRegion
seatChongqing
seat_typeLargest city
blank_nameGDP
blank_info2022
blank1_name- Total
blank1_info¥13.713 trillion
$2.039 trillion
blank2_name- Per Capita
blank2_info¥71,060
$10,565

$2.039 trillion $10,565 Southwestern China () is a region in the People's Republic of China. It consists of five provincial administrative regions, namely Chongqing, Sichuan, Guizhou, Yunnan, and Tibet.

Geography

Southwestern China is a rugged and mountainous region, transitioning between the Tibetan Plateau to the west and the Chinese coastal hills (东南丘陵) and plains to the east. Key geographic features in the region include the Hengduan Mountains in the west, the Sichuan Basin in the northeast, and the karstic Yungui Plateau in the east. The majority of the region is drained by the Yangtze River, which forms the Three Gorges in the northeast of the region.

The narrowest concept of Southwestern China consists of Sichuan, Chongqing, Yunnan, and Guizhou, while wider definitions often include Guangxi and western portions of Hunan. The official government definition of Southwestern China includes the core provinces of Sichuan, Chongqing, Yunnan, and Guizhou, in addition to the Tibet Autonomous Region.

History

Portions of Southwestern China, including the land that is modern day Yunnan, Guizhou, and Sichuan, were incorporated into China in 230BCE by Qin dynasty emperor Shi Huangdi. Independent states would continue to exert influence within the region, with notable examples being the Nanzhao Kingdom in the 8th and 9th centuriesCE and the Dali Kingdom in 10th and 11th centuriesCE. The region was largely pacified and incorporated into the Ming domain. In the 13th centuryCE, the Mongol led Yuan dynasty expanded its frontiers to include the Tibetan Plateau, which now defines China's current southwest frontier.

In the 18th century CE, control of the Tibetan Plateau area was important in the Great Game confrontations between the imperial powers of Russia, Britain, and China.

After the warlord governments of China's Republican era replaced the Manchu led Qing dynasty, government policy towards the southwest largely became one of inaction.

The Second Sino-Japanese War prompted the Nationalist government to focus increasingly on state-building tasks in the southwest. The city of Chongqing served as the capital of Chinese resistance to imperial Japanese expansion.

After their defeat in the Chinese Civil War, parts of the Nationalist army retreated south and crossed the border into Burma as the People's Liberation Army entered Yunnan. The United States supported these Nationalist forces because the United States hoped they would harass the People's Republic of China from the southwest, thereby diverting Chinese resources from the Korean War. The Burmese government protested and international pressure increased. Beginning in 1953, several rounds of withdrawals of the Nationalist forces and their families were carried out. In 1960, joint military action by China and Burma expelled the remaining Nationalist forces from Burma, although some went on to settle in the Burma-Thailand borderlands.

Western strategies to contain China in the 20th centuryCE included intervention in the Tibetan Plateau until almost the mid-1970s. Tibet became an increased area of concern in China's southwest after the Sino-Soviet split when Soviet soldiers on the border of Mongolia and China threatened to close the Gansu corridor, which would have left Tibet as the only reliable Chinese route to Xinjiang.

During the reform and opening up era, China began to look more seriously towards integrating its southwest regions. China's increased focus on trade-led development and its transition to a socialist market economy helped trigger a reorientation to the southwest as its lagging development became increasingly seen as an impediment to growth. China's southwest development initiatives reflect an awareness that economic engagement is the most cost-effective way to decrease political unrest and remedy underdevelopment along this frontier.

Demographics

The diverse areas of Southwestern China carry strong regional identities and have been historically considered more rural than the more developed eastern regions of China. Rapid development since the late 1970s has helped transform many parts of the region with modern advancements. In the early 21st century, Southwestern China contained 50% of the country's ethnic minority population which, in turn, formed 37% of the region's population. Han Chinese migration has been largely concentrated in the urban centres, while the rural areas are still predominantly made up of minority populations, including the Zhuang, Miao, Yi, and others.

Inhabitants of Southwestern China primarily speak a dialect of Mandarin Chinese known as Southwestern Mandarin. This variant uses the same written language as Mandarin but is only approximately 50% mutually intelligible with Standard Chinese. As of 2012, there were approximately 260 million speakers of Southwestern Mandarin.

Industry

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

Administrative divisions

GBISO No.ProvinceChinese NameCapitalPopulationDensityAreaAbbreviation/Symbol

Cities with urban area over one million in population

#CityUrban areaDistrict areaCity properProv.Census date
1**Chongqing**8,894,75712,084,38516,044,027CQ2010-11-01
2**Chengdu**6,316,9227,415,59014,047,625SC2010-11-01
3**Kunming**3,140,7773,272,5866,432,209YN2010-11-01
4**Guiyang**2,520,0613,034,7504,322,611GZ2010-11-01

; Notes

References

References

  1. "Home - Regional - Quarterly by Province". China NBS.
  2. "A Study of Southwest China".
  3. (2007). "China's Southwest". Lonely Planet.
  4. Singh, Swaran. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  5. Singh, Swaran. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  6. Han, Enze. (2024). "The Ripple Effect: China's Complex Presence in Southeast Asia". [[Oxford University Press]].
  7. Singh, Swaran. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  8. Singh, Swaran. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  9. Singh, Swaran. (2016). "The new great game : China and South and Central Asia in the era of reform". [[Stanford University Press]].
  10. Hirata, Koji. (2024). "Making Mao's Steelworks: Industrial Manchuria and the Transnational Origins of Chinese Socialism". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  11. [http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~chgis/work/design/chinastdb_1210.doc GB/T 2260 codes for the provinces of China]
  12. [[ISO 3166-2:CN]] ([[ISO]] [[3166-2]] codes for the provinces of China)
  13. 国务院人口普查办公室、国家统计局人口和社会科技统计司编. (2012). 中国统计出版社 [China Statistics Press]
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