Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Where does Shuntianfu in Hebei refer to today?

Where does Shuntianfu in Hebei refer to today?

Although Zhili includes Shuntianfu administratively, Shuntianfu and Zhili are not the same thing. Don't confuse them. Shuntianfu is now Beijing, but its area is larger than that of Beijing now, and its power is also greater than that of Zhili Governor and other magistrates (directly entering the palace, accepting cases with the punishments department, Shuntianfu Magistrate's position is equivalent to Beijing Mayor and Party Secretary, and now he is a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee). The organizational system of Shuntianfu was earlier than that of Hebei. During the Ming Dynasty, it was formed on the basis of Dadu Road in the Yuan Dynasty, and then the administrative divisions changed greatly. It was not until the eighth year of Qianlong (1743) that it was fixed, and * * * led five States and nineteen counties. Namely Tongzhou (now all over Tongzhou District of Beijing), Jizhou (now Jizhou District of Tianjin), Zhuozhou (Zhuozhou of Baoding), Bazhou (Bazhou of Langfang), Changping (now Changping District of Beijing), Wuxing (now Daxing District, Dongcheng District and Chaoyang District of Beijing), Wanping (now Fengtai District, Xicheng District and Shijingshan District of Beijing) and Liangxiang. Baoding (not today's Baoding, that is, the seat of Zhili Governor's Office, but a small county in the east of Bazhou), Dacheng, Wen 'an, Wuqing, Xianghe, Baodi, Ninghe, Sanhe, Pinggu, Shunyi, Miyun and Huairou are also known as the twenty-four counties of Shuntianfu.