Qingtian County
Qingtian County 青田县 | |
---|---|
County | |
Chinese transcription(s) | |
• Chinese | 青田 |
• Pinyin | Qīngtián |
Hecheng (seat of Qingtian), from the north-west, in 2011 | |
Nickname(s): Little Europe (小欧洲) | |
Coordinates: 28°8′3″N 120°17′27″E / 28.13417°N 120.29083°E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Province | Zhejiang |
Prefecture-level city | Lishui |
Area | |
• County | 2,493 km2 (963 sq mi) |
Population (2010) | |
• County | 361,062 |
• Urban | 75,152 |
Time zone | China Standard (UTC+8) |
Postal code | 323900 |
Area code(s) | 0578 |
Website | Qingtian County |
Qingtian (Chinese: 青田; pinyin: Qīngtián; literally: "azure field"), is a county in southeastern Zhejiang Province, on the middle-lower reaches of the Ou River which flows 388 kilometers (241 mi) before finally reaching the city of Wenzhou and emptying into the East China Sea. Ouju, a form of Chinese Opera of the city of Wenzhou always derivers its name from Ou River. The county is known from AD 711 and was named for its rich rice paddy fields. Population 361,062, area 2,493 km2 (963 sq mi). Subtropical monsoon climate: annual average temperature 18.3 degrees, annual rainfall 1,747 mm (68.8 in). Hilly territory with many ravines. The county went under the administration of Lishui in 1963 as ruled by the central government. Its capital is Hecheng, also known as Qingtian City.
Before 1963 when Qingtian county was ruled by the central government to go under the administration of Lishui, Qingtian county had been for the entire of its history a county of Wenzhou city from 323 AD to 1963 AD for a total of 1640 years.[1] Qingitan county was still a county of Wenzhou in the year of 1949 when the Communist Party took the rule until 13 years later. The people of Qingtian speak Wenzhounese and Qingtianese, which is also a Wu language.
The airport of Qingtian is Wenzhou Longwan International Airport.[2]
See also
Coordinates: 28°07′23″N 120°16′59″E / 28.123°N 120.283°E