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Changxing county hall number

Jingzhao: Also known as Jingzhao County and Jingzhao Yin, in fact, "Jingzhao" is not a county, but the title of the regional administrative region where the central government is located, and "Yin" is its satrap. In the first year of the early Western Han Dynasty (Ding Chou, BC 104), Jing was renamed as one of the three assistants and ruled Chang 'an (now Xi 'an, Shaanxi). In the Three Kingdoms and the first year of Cao (Gengzi, AD 220), Jingzhaoyin was changed to Jingzhao County, located in Chang 'an (now xi, Shaanxi Province), which was then located in the area north of Qinling Mountain in Shaanxi Province, east of Xi City and south of Weihe River to hua county. In the second year of Cao Wei and Huang Chu (Xin Chou, AD 22 1), he proclaimed himself Qin Gong and Jingzhao County Qin. In the third year of Cao Wei and Huang, it was renamed Jingzhao State. In the third year of Qinglong in Wei Mingdi (Mao Yi, AD 235), Emperor Xun was named King of Qin, and Jingzhao was changed to Qin. King Qi (ICY) changed to Jingzhao County in five years (Jiazi, AD 244), and now Xi 'an has five counties, except Zhouzhi and Huxian. In the Western Jin Dynasty, Jingzhao County was still located in Chang 'an, and its jurisdiction was smaller than that of the Three Kingdoms Wei Dynasty. From the Sixteen Kingdoms to the Northern and Southern Dynasties, Chang 'an (called Chang 'an in the later Qin Dynasty) was established successively in the former Zhao Dynasty, the former Qin Dynasty, the later Qin Dynasty, and the Northern Zhou Dynasty, and Jingzhao County (or Yin) was established. Sui and Tang Dynasties were Chang 'an, and a new city was built. During the Sui Dynasty, it was called Daxing City. Tang Gaozong Yonghui was renamed Chang 'an City in the fourth year (Guichou, AD 653). In the capital area around Chang 'an City, Yongzhou is the Jingzhao House, and Jingzhaoyin is set up. The above-mentioned Jing Zhao refers to the capital and its vicinity. Jing (county, prefecture) or Yongzhou were set up in Sui and Tang Dynasties, and more than 20 counties such as Chang 'an and Daxing (changed from Tang Dynasty to Wannian) were unified as county-level organizational systems. After the Tang Dynasty, Chang 'an was no longer the capital, and its development was affected to some extent, but it was still an important local metropolis. Jin and Yuan Dynasties set up Jingzhao Mansion (Road) in Shaanxi, which had nothing to do with the place where the capital was built. At that time, it was located in the area north of Qinling Mountains in Shaanxi, east of xi, south of Weihe River and west of Huayin. Beiyang government changed Shuntianfu to Jingzhao place and the magistrate to Jingzhaoyin, which was in line with the meaning of "Jingzhao" before the Jin Dynasty. When the government of the Republic of China was founded, the name of "Jingzhao" was abolished.

Xianyang County: Xianyang is a famous historical and cultural city at home and abroad. In the tenth year of King Hao of Zhou (Chen Bing, 305 BC), Qin Xiaogong Quliang (3865438 BC+0 ~ 338 BC) appointed Shang Yang to carry out political reform, built Miyagi at the corner of Jingwei River and moved its capital here. Xianyang is named because it is located in Shan Zhinan, Jiuyang, north of Weihe River, with clear mountains and rivers. After five generations of Qin Huiwen, Ai Wuwang, Zhao Xiang, Xiao Wen and Zhuang Xiang, Qin Shihuang unified the six countries in Chen Geng in the 26th year of Qin Shihuang (22 BC1year) and established the first centralized feudal empire in China history. Until the early Western Han Dynasty, it served as the capital of the Warring States Qin Dynasty and the Qin Dynasty for a century and a half. It is well-deserved to interpret Xianyang as the first empire of China. Later, after the Western Han Dynasty, the New Dynasty, the Western Jin Dynasty, the former Zhao Dynasty, the former Qin Dynasty, the later Qin Dynasty, the Western Wei Dynasty, the Northern Zhou Dynasty and the Sui and Tang Dynasties, Xianyang was regarded as both the capital and the land of Tibetan wilderness because of its proximity to the capital Chang 'an. After the Song and Ming Dynasties, Xianyang, as an important material distribution center in the northwest region and a communication channel between the Central Plains and the western frontier, remained quite prominent in its military strategic position. Nowadays, under the strategic framework of Xi- Xianyang economic and social development integration, a metropolitan area with important economic and strategic position is rising. As the back garden of Xi, Xianyang faces great opportunities and challenges in its construction and development. The establishment of Xianyang administrative divisions began in Xia Dynasty. During the Shang Dynasty, it developed to Thailand, Shu, Cheng, Dog and other countries. The Zhou Dynasty centered on Feng and Gao, and was surrounded by Ge and Qin. In the fifteenth year of Zhou Xian (Xin Wei, 350 BC), Qin Xiaogong moved the capital to Xianyang and established the county administrative system in Qin. After the reunification of the Qin Dynasty, Xianyang, the capital, was established, with a history of literature, and the whole Guanzhong area was elected by the people. At the end of Qin Dynasty, Xiang Yu was divided into three kingdoms, namely, Yong, Zhai and Sai, which were called "Sanqin". The urban area belongs to Yong in the west and Sai in the east. During the Western Han Dynasty, there were three counties in Guanzhong, namely Jing Zhaoyin, Zuo Fengyi and You Fufeng, which were collectively called "three auxiliary counties". This city belongs to Fufeng County and Fengyi County, and today's Changwu area belongs to Shang Jun County. During the Eastern Han Dynasty, he moved to Fufeng County to rule Li Huai (now Xingping, Shaanxi). During the Cao and Wei Dynasties, the three kingdoms belonged to Fufeng, Xinping (now Binxian County, Shaanxi Province) and Fengyi County, and the Western Jin Dynasty belonged to Fufeng (now Jingyang County, Shaanxi Province), Shiping (now Li Huai County), Xinping and Anding County, Yongzhou. The former Qin Dynasty established Xianyang County in Changling. During the Northern Dynasties, it belonged to Xianyang, Anding and Beidi counties in Yongzhou. The Tang Dynasty belonged to Jingzhao Prefecture and Yizhou. During the Five Dynasties, it belonged to Jingzhaofu, Yaozhou, Ganzhou and Yizhou. During the Song Dynasty, it belonged to Jingzhaofu, Yaozhou, Yizhou and Yizhou. During the Jin Dynasty, it belonged to Qingyuan House on Jingzhaofu, Ganzhou, Yaozhou and Jingzhaofu Road. In the Yuan Dynasty, it belonged to Fengyuan Road, Zhongshu Province, Shaanxi Province, and Yaozhou, Ganzhou and Yizhou directly under the province. Ming and Qing Dynasties belonged to Anzhou, Ganzhou and Taizhou. At the beginning of the Republic of China, it belonged to Guanzhong Road in Shaanxi Province, followed by the 10th, 2nd, 7th and 9th administrative supervision areas, and the northern part belonged to Guanzhong District in the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Border Region. At the beginning of the founding of New China, Xianyang belonged to Sanyuan, Xianxian and Xianyang District, and 1950 merged into Xianyang District. Xianyang District was abolished on 1953, 19 1 moved, and 1968 was changed to a district. 1983 10 revoked the area, established Xianyang city, and implemented the system of city governing county.

Changsha County: Also known as Changsha Prefecture. About15 ~ 200,000 years ago, there were human activities in Changsha. After15 ~ 200,000 years of development, Changsha entered the Neolithic Age. About 5000 BC, Changsha ancestors began to settle down, formed villages and entered matriarchal society; Around 3000 BC, Changsha entered the Qujialing cultural stage in the Neolithic Age. About 2500 BC, Changsha entered the stage of Longshan culture in the Neolithic Age. At this time, agriculture is still primitive, and fishing and hunting are still an important means for people to make a living. The original pottery industry and stone processing technology further developed, resulting in the original textile and jade processing technology. Legend has it that Yan Di, the ancestor of human beings, and Huang Didu have been to Changsha. Sima Qian said in the Historical Records of the Five Emperors that the Yellow Emperor once "crossed the mountain road, reached the middle of the river in the south, climbed the bear and merged with Hunan", and later sealed the land of Changsha to his son Shao. Miro, a scholar in the Song Dynasty, recorded in History of the Road that Shao Hao's family "started in Yunyang and was buried in Changsha". The legendary Shao Hao family was a clan leader in ancient Changsha and the first person to develop Changsha. Changsha, the land of three ancient Miao in Xia Dynasty; By the Shang and Zhou Dynasties, the kingdom of Sanmiao had disappeared, but the descendants of Sanmiao still lived and multiplied in this land. At this time, Changsha belonged to "YueYang" (Man Jing) and was called "Land of Yueyang" in history. As an ancient Yue people (a branch of the ancient Changsha Yue people), a distinctive Yue culture was created and formed at this time, and hard pottery printed with geometric patterns was its most representative feature. During the Shang and Zhou Dynasties, the Central Plains dynasty in the north fought frequently with Man Jing and YueYang in the south. Although they failed to establish direct rule here, the "land of Yueyang" once became the "southern service" of Shang and Zhou Dynasties, forcing Man Jing to submit. According to the ancient book Yi Zhou Shu Wang Hui, at the beginning of the Zhou Dynasty, Luoyi was successfully built, and governors from all sides came to congratulate him. There is a kind of "Changsha turtle" in the tribute, which is the earliest record of the name "Changsha" in historical records. During the Shang and Zhou Dynasties, the Central Plains culture was introduced, and Changsha entered the Bronze Age. The ancient Yue people in Changsha still live in thatched semi-cellar houses and live a clan life. They mainly use stone tools in production and rely on slash and burn. In the middle of Shang Dynasty, bronze casting technology was introduced into the Central Plains, and bronze tools-bronze axes were used and manufactured. By the late Western Zhou Dynasty, copper hoes (tools for loosening soil) and copper plugs (tools for raking soil and digging) appeared. In addition, bronze containers and musical instruments with exquisite shapes and patterns were made. A large number of Shang and Zhou bronzes unearthed in Changsha, most of which have high technological level and distinctive Yue style; In the twenty-seventh year of the Republic of China (Wuyin, A.D. 1938), a scholar in Ningxiang, the famous Four Sheep Fang Zun, was a treasure among the bronzes of Shang and Zhou Dynasties. Since 1959, more than a dozen bronze mirrors unearthed in Ningxiang and Changsha counties generally weigh 70-80 kilograms, and the largest one is 22 1.5 kilograms, which is the largest bronze mirror of Shang Dynasty found in China so far. After the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, Changsha entered the Spring and Autumn Period, which was also a turbulent period in the history of China. At the end of the Spring and Autumn Period, Chu (Jingchu) forces entered Changsha. At the beginning of the Warring States, the state of Yue destroyed Wu, and the confrontation between Chu and Yue began. Changsha became a fortress on the southeast border of Chu. In the mid-Warring States period, the State of Chu carried out political reforms, and its national strength was strong. It launched a large-scale military operation in the southern region, and Hunan was incorporated into the territory of Chu. Changsha became the military center of southern Chu, including the political and military centers of northern Hunan, central Hunan and southern Hunan, and Chu set up a city in Changsha. Chu people entered Changsha, and after hundreds of years of war, the ancient Yue people disappeared, and the ancient Yue culture in Changsha was replaced by Chu culture. The Chu people invaded the south, bringing the tools and experience of production in the Central Plains and Jianghan area, and making Changsha enter the Iron Age. Changsha ended the primitive state of 1000 years since Shang and Zhou Dynasties, and directly entered the feudal society. When Chu arrived in Chu Huaiwang, the country became weaker and weaker, and the vassal states, especially Qin, launched many wars against Chu. In the twenty-fifth year of Qin Shihuang (Jimo, 222 BC), Wang Jian, a general of the State of Qin, led an army south and defeated the remnants of the Chu army south of the Yangtze River. The land in the south of the Yangtze River with Changsha as the political and military center was conquered by the State of Qin, and the State of Chu perished. Changsha (Hunan) has been a military center of Chu and Han dynasties for more than 800 years, just in Linxiang (now Changsha, Hunan). At that time, it was located in the eastern and southern parts of Hunan Province, Quanzhou City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Lian County, Yangshan County, Yingde and parts of Jiangxi Province. Changsha is one of the 36 counties in Qin Dynasty. Since the Qin Dynasty, Changsha has been incorporated into the unified political map of China, and it was clearly recorded as an administrative region for the first time in history. During the Qin Dynasty, Changsha County covered most of Hunan, southern Hubei, northwestern Jiangxi, Lianxian County in Guangdong and Quanzhou in Guangxi, covering an area almost equivalent to Hunan Province, with Linxiang County as its administrative office. The Qin Dynasty perished and the Han Dynasty was established. After Emperor Gaozu Liu Bang proclaimed himself emperor, in the fifth year of Emperor Gaozu (Jihai, 202 BC), Wu Rui, the founding hero of the Western Han Dynasty, was named King of Changsha, and Changsha County of the former Qin Dynasty was the capital, which also marked the emergence of the first vassal state in Hunan history, and Changsha became the capital of the kingdom. King Changsha is the supreme ruler (the highest official) of Changsha, and the throne is hereditary. However, because the Eastern Han Dynasty changed the system of the vassal state, that is, in the sixth year of the Yuan Dynasty in Hanzhong (Ding You, BC 144), he actually became a phantom king. Changsha has existed for more than 200 years from the fifth year of Emperor Gaozu (Jihai, 202 BC) to the second year of Emperor Gaozu (Ding Mao, 7 AD). Changsha is divided into two periods: Changsha of Wu and Changsha of Liu. As the capital of Hanwang, the ancient city of Changsha is located in the center of Changsha. It is the residence of Changsha kings and the political and military center of Changsha. According to the ancient book Water Mirror Zhu, Linxiang City (that is, the ancient Changsha City, known as Linxiang Old City in history) was named after Wang Jianzhu in Changsha. In the seventh year after the Han Dynasty (,BC 157), Wu Changsha was abolished. Wu's Changsha state was a glorious period in the history of ancient Changsha, and a loyal vassal state in the Western Han Dynasty, which maintained national unity politically. Liu Bang, Zang Fei, Han Xin and Ying Bu were all eliminated, but Wu Changsha was loyal to the court from beginning to end, that is, Ying Bu (son-in-law of Changsha King) rebelled, and Changsha King (son of Wu Rui) also put family first. Wu's country of Changsha was self-proclaimed until the first year of Yuan Dynasty before Han Dynasty (Yiyou, BC 156). The fifth Sun Wu died, because he had no children, which lasted for 46 years. The official system of the kingdom is the same as that of the Western Han Dynasty, with a prime minister (Zhu Guo was originally named by Emperor Gaozu) appointed directly by the court and named to assist the king. In fact, he was sent to master the real power of his country to control this place. In the 6th year after the Western Han Dynasty (Guiwei, BC 158), Emperor Jing, the son of Emperor Wen of Han Dynasty, succeeded to the throne, and the country of Changsha was restored, which was called "Liu's country of Changsha" in history. Two years before the Han Dynasty (Xu Bing, BC 155), Liu Fa, the illegitimate son of Emperor Jing of Han Dynasty, was made King of Changsha. Liu Fazhi's country of Changsha coincided with the time when the influence of the vassal state was greatly reduced in the Western Han Dynasty. From the second year of Han Dynasty to the fifth year of Hanzhong Yuan Dynasty (BC 155-BC 145), with the change of the management system of the vassal state, the jurisdiction of Changsha State at this time was greatly reduced, and Guiyang County and Lingling County were separated, leaving only Linxiang, Charlotte, Yiyang, Liandao and Xia Juan. At this point, the vassal king of Changsha also cut off his actual power, and he was not allowed to interfere in the government affairs of the vassal countries under his jurisdiction, becoming a nominal king. From the top to the prime minister (the highest chief executive in charge of government affairs, formerly known as "minister Xiang") to the county magistrate, he was appointed and removed by the court. "Liu's Changsha State" was passed down from the beginning to the end, lasting 164 years, and was abolished with the demise of the Western Han Dynasty. In the first year of the Han and Sui Dynasties (Chen Wu, AD 8), Wang Mang usurped the throne to establish a "new dynasty" for the emperor, and Changsha was changed to "Tuman County" and the capital Linxiang was changed to "Mu Fu County". Wang Mang's regime was quickly overwhelmed by the peasant uprising in the late Western Han Dynasty. In the third year of Emperor Han Chengdi (Yiyou, AD 25), Liu Xiu, a descendant of Liu Fa, a former royal family of Changsha, proclaimed himself emperor, and established the Han Dynasty, which was known as the Eastern Han Dynasty because it made Luoyang its capital. Because there are peasant uprising teams and various armed regimes all over the country, Liu Xiu launched a war to unify the whole country. In the second year of Jianwu in the Eastern Han Dynasty (Xu Bing, AD 26), Liu Xiuyao appointed Liu Xing, the son of Liu Shun, the last Changsha king in the Western Han Dynasty, as the king of Changsha, rebuilt the country of Changsha and controlled the situation south of Dongting. In the ninth year of Jianwu (ugly, AD 29), Jiangxia Taishou Deng, Wuling Taishou, Changsha Fu, Guiyang Taishou, Lingling Taishou, Cangwu Taishou Du Mu, Jiaotoe Taishou Xiguang and so on. , contributed to the expedition, was named as the marquis. At this point, Hunan, including Changsha, officially belonged to the Eastern Han Dynasty, which played an important role in Liu Xiu's war to unify the world. In the 16th year of Jianwu in the Eastern Han Dynasty (Gengzi, AD 40), Liu Xiu unified China. As early as the 13th year of Jianwu in the Han Dynasty (Ding You, AD 37), Changsha was renamed Linxianghou by Liu Xiu and changed to Changsha County. During the Western Jin Dynasty of the Three Kingdoms, Changsha was under the jurisdiction of Changsha County and belonged to the ancient Jingzhou. In the late Western Jin Dynasty and the Southern and Northern Dynasties, Changsha was under the jurisdiction of Changsha County and Xiangzhou Prefecture. At the beginning of Sui Dynasty, Changsha was the governor of Tanzhou. Later, the state was changed to county, and Changsha was under the jurisdiction of Changsha County. Tanzhou Academy was established in the Tang Dynasty, which was once subordinate to Jiangnan Road and Jiangnan West Road. Changsha kiln flourished in Tang and Five Dynasties and became the birthplace of underglaze color. During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, Changsha was the capital of Chu, and Chu was the only country established with Changsha as its capital. In the early years of Sui Dynasty, Changsha County was deposed. During the years of Sui Daye (605 ~ 6 18) and Tang Tianbao and Zhide, Tanzhou was changed to Changsha County, and it was governed by Linxiang (now Changsha, Hunan). During the Song Dynasty, Changsha was ruled by Tanzhou. The establishment of Yuelu Academy in the Northern Song Dynasty pushed Changsha's cultural education to its peak. In the 11th year of Zhiyuan (Ding Chou in the 10th year of Xianchun in Southern Song Dynasty, AD 1274), it was changed to Tanzhou Road and Huguang was the provincial administrative office. In the eighteenth year of the Yuan Dynasty (Xinsi, AD 128 1), it was still Tanzhou Road, Xuanwei House, Hunan Road, which was under the jurisdiction of Huguang Province. In the second year of Emperor Wenzong's reign in Tian Li, it was renamed Tianlin Road because of "the auspicious son of heaven" and changed to Tanzhou Government at the end of Yuan Dynasty. In the early Ming Dynasty, it was changed to Changsha Prefecture, which was under the administration of Huguang. In the third year of Emperor Kangxi of Qing Dynasty, Hunan Province was established, and Changsha was under the jurisdiction of Changsha Government and Hunan Province. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Changsha was known as the four rice markets and the four tea markets, and it was one of the most important rice markets in China. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom attacked Changsha, and Zeng Guofan became the "first person in Hunan". Ceng Guoquan, Zuo, Hu Linyi and other important figures in the history of China emerged in Changsha, which wiped out the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom and launched the Westernization Movement to recover Xinjiang, which had a far-reaching impact on China in the late Qing Dynasty. In the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China, Changsha became an important place for political and revolutionary activities. Chen Baozhen and Tan Sitong of the Reform Movement of 1898 founded the School of Current Affairs in Changsha. Later, the Self-Guard Uprising, Huaxinghui, Chen Tianhua, Yao Hongye's public sacrifice, Liu Ping Village Uprising, and the rice-grabbing agitation were all very influential activities. Huang Xing carried out a series of anti-Qing activities in the late Qing Dynasty, which made great contributions to the establishment of the Republic of China. In 22 years of the Republic of China, Changsha was divided into "Changsha City", which was a municipality directly under the Central Government of Hunan Province, and Changsha has been the capital of Hunan since then. Changsha was one of the revolutionary centers of China politics during the Republic of China. In the third year of Qing Dynasty (Xinhai, A.D.191), on October 22nd, 65438/kloc-0, the rebels led by Jiao Dafeng and Chen recaptured Changsha. In the fourth year of the Republic of China (Mao Yi, A.D. 19 15), Cai E, who had studied in the current affairs school, launched the movement to defend the country. In the eighth year of the Republic of China (19 19), Changsha sent a large number of May 4th youth to France to work and study, and Changsha was also one of the places where the * * * production team was established. He Shuheng, Ren, Cai Hesen, Xiang Jingyu and other early China leaders all studied or engaged in political activities in Changsha. In the 16th year of the Republic of China (Ding Mao, AD 1927), Mao Zedong launched the Autumn Harvest Uprising and tried to attack Changsha. After his failure, he turned to the realistic policy of "countryside surrounding cities". Twenty-six years of the Republic of China (Ding Chou, A.D. 1937) was the heyday of Changsha's development. Its economy and property were prosperous, and it became the rear area of the Anti-Japanese War in the early days. In the 27th year of the Republic of China (Wuyin, AD 1938)1October 12, the "Wenxi Fire" detonated by secret order in Jiang Zhongzheng became the most tragic event in Changsha's history, and almost all kinds of historical and cultural relics in the city were lost. From 28 to 33 years (A.D. 1939 ~ 1944), Changsha was the main battlefield of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression. China and Japan fought four large-scale battles centering on Changsha, and China won the first three battles. 1On August 5, 949, Changsha officially established the regime of the * * * production party, and Changsha began to rebuild and develop after the founding of the People's Republic of China. As one of the main founders of People's Republic of China (PRC), Changsha is the place where Mao Zedong studied and engaged in revolutionary activities in his early days, and is considered as a revolutionary memorial. In the early 1980s, the gap between Changsha's economy and coastal cities gradually widened. In the late 1990s, Changsha began to enter a period of rapid development and became one of the important cities in the central and western regions. Jingzhao Hall: Building a hall is expected.

Xianyang Hall: Building a promising hall.

Changsha Hall: Also known as Yangyue Hall.