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What prefecture-level cities are there in Guangxi?

As of 2016, Guangxi has 14 prefecture-level cities under its jurisdiction, namely: Nanning City, Chongzuo City, Liuzhou City, Laibin City, Guilin City, Wuzhou City, Hezhou City, Yulin City, and Guigang City. , Baise City, Qinzhou City, Hechi City, Beihai City, Fangchenggang City.

Guangxi's gardens have their own characteristics. The parks and botanical gardens in Nanning are characterized by south subtropical scenery. The parks in Liuzhou and Guilin are mostly in mid-subtropical style. They adapt to local conditions and make use of local natural landscapes (such as karst landscapes). , water landscape, etc.) and ancient buildings constitute unique garden art. Such as Liuzhou Longtan Park.

There are many scenic spots in Guangxi’s parks, such as Lotus Falls, Sword Testing Stone, Wangfu Stone, Mushroom Stone, Immortal Bed, Lover’s Tree, Seal Fruit Picking, Artificial Lawn, and some national key protected objects known as living fossils. There are rare plants such as the tree fern, the king of flowers, the golden camellia, the long-roaming thousand-year-old tortoise, the jubilant five-clawed golden dragon and the lively and playful monkeys. The main peak, Lianhua Mountain, is the highest peak in southeastern Guangxi.

On the 1,595-kilometer coastline of Guangxi, there are Beihai Silver Beach, Weizhou Island, Xieyang Island, Guantouling National Forest Park, Waisha Island, Ocean Window, Beihai Underwater World, Jiangshan Peninsula in Fangchenggang, Beijing Island, Paradise Beach, Strange Rock Beach, Volcanic Island, Zhushan Beilun River Estuary Transnational Ecological Tourism Scenic Area, Sanniang Bay in Qinzhou, etc.

Extended information

On December 11, 1949, the Chinese People's Liberation Army captured all of Guangxi and established Guangxi Province. The provincial capital is Nanning.

From 1951 to 1955, Qinzhou and Lianzhou (now Qinzhou, Fangchenggang, and Beihai) were transferred from Guangdong to Guangxi.

On December 10, 1952, the Western Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region was established in the three prefectures of Yongning, Yishan and Baise;

From 1955 to 1965, Qinzhou and Lianzhou were divided again Enter Guangdong.

In March 1956, the Guixi Tong Autonomous Region was renamed the Guixi Tong Autonomous Prefecture. In October, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China proposed the initiative to establish the Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region. In December, in view of the preparations for the establishment of the Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region, the State Council meeting made a decision to cancel the Guangxi Tong Autonomous Prefecture.

In June 1957, the State Council made a decision on the establishment of the Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region, and passed a corresponding resolution at the fourth session of the First National People's Congress held in July of the same year.

On March 5, 1958, Guangxi Province was renamed "Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region", and the provincial-level "Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region" was established.

In 1965, Qinzhou and Lianzhou were once again included in Guangxi. On October 12 of the same year, with the approval of the State Council, "Guangxi Tong Autonomous Region" was renamed "Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region".

Since 1978, the anniversary of the establishment of the autonomous region has been designated as December 11, coinciding with the day when the Chinese People's Liberation Army captured all of Guangxi, the Youjiang Soviet Union, and the Seventh Red Army was established.

Guangxi, referred to as "Gui". Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region (Zhuang: Gvangjsih Bouxcuegh Swcigih), the capital is Nanning City. It is named after the ancient place name "Guangxin". Guangxin is the dividing line between Guangxi and Guangxi, and the west of Guangxin is called Guangxi.

Guangxi is located in southern China, between 20°54′-26°24′ north latitude and 104°26′-112°04 east longitude. It borders the Beibu Gulf to the south, faces Southeast Asia, and borders Vietnam to the southwest. The mainland coastline is about 1,595 kilometers long and it is one of the three major hometowns of overseas Chinese in the country.

Baidu Encyclopedia—Guangxi