Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Which city does Taihu Lake belong to?

Which city does Taihu Lake belong to?

In administrative division, it belongs to Jiangsu Province and Suzhou City. Taihu Lake spans Jiangsu Province and Zhejiang Province and flows through Wuxi, Suzhou and Changzhou in Jiangsu Province, as well as Huzhou and Jiaxing in Zhejiang Province. Huzhou is named after Taihu Lake, with Changzhou in the northwest and five cities around Taihu Lake, also known as the economic belt around Taihu Lake.

Suzhou, formerly known as Suzhou and Pingjiang, is a prefecture-level city in Jiangsu Province, one of the important central cities in the Yangtze River Delta of China, a national high-tech industrial base and a scenic tourist city approved by the State Council.

Suzhou is located in the south of Jiangsu Province, bordering Shanghai in the east, Zhejiang in the south, Taihu Lake in the west and the Yangtze River in the north. Suzhou is low and flat, with plains accounting for 55% of the total area.

Suzhou belongs to the Yangtze River Delta Plain and Taihu Lake Plain, and four secondary natural areas, namely Yangtze River Plain, Suzhou-Wuxi-Changzhou Plain, Taihu Lake and lakeside hills, and Yangcheng Lake-Xiamen Lowland.

Suzhou has a subtropical monsoon maritime climate with four distinct seasons, mild climate and abundant rainfall. Suzhou ancient city criss-crosses, and the most famous lakes are Taihu Lake and Caohu Lake in the west corner. There are Dongdian Lake and Hucheng Lake; There is North Kuncheng Lake; There are Chengyang Hucheng Lake, Jinji Lake and Dushu Lake; The Yangtze River and the Beijing-Hangzhou Canal pass through the north of the city.

Suzhou has a dense river network and is surrounded by a famous high-yield rice planting area in China, where agriculture is developed. Known as "water town", "granary in the world" and "land of abundance".