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Brief Introduction To Guandong Province
Location: Facing the south China sea in
the southernmost of China's continent, Guangdong Province constitutes the region
through which South China's trade is primarily channeled. It is the province
with the longest coastline in China. It has an area of 177,600 square
kilometers. It is bordered by the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region to the west,
and by the provinces of Hunan and Jiangxi to the north, and Fujian Province to
the northeast, and by Hainan Province and the South China Sea to the south. Hong
Kong and Macao are on the coast of Guangdong.
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Shenzhen |
History: Guangdong was originally occupied
by non-Han ethnic groups, and was first incorporated into the Chinese Empire in
222 BC, when Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of the Qin dynasty, conquered the
area along the Xijiang River and Beijiang River valleys down to the Zhujiang
River Delta. In 111 BC Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty extended rule as far as to
Hainan Island. During the five centuries of the Sui, Tang, and Northern Song
dynasties from AD 581 to 1126, the
military and agricultural settlement of Guangdong, coupled with increasing
overseas trade through Guangzhou port, led to an increase in migration into
Guangdong, and to the rise of Guangzhou as a metropolis with a population of
hundreds of thousands. Two major southward thrust of the Han Chinese took place,
one in 1126, when Jurchens captured the Song capital, the other in 1279, when
Mongols subdued Song dynasty. These migrations marked the beginning of the rapid
cultural development of Guangdong. The population grew so fast that by the late
17 century, Guangdong had already become an area from which emigration took
place. Migrants from Guangdong moved first to Guangxi, Sichuan and Taiwan and
then in mid-19th century began to pour into Southeast Asia and North
America.
Climate: Guangdong features
tropical and sub-tropical climates. The average July temperature is little
different from temperature on the lower reaches of the Yangtze River and on the
Yellow River, but the average January temperature is considerably higher,
ranging from 13¢Xto 16¢XC. The whole province almost lies within the area where
two crops of rice can be grown a year.
Population:
Ethnic composition and distribution: Guangdong is largely dominated
by the Han people, with only a very small proportion of other ethnic
minorities. The Yaos are concentrated principally near Guangdong's northwestern
border in areas. The Shes live in the northeast.
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 Guangzhou
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Industry: Light industry has always been of significance in the
province. Apart from handicrafts, light industry -- especially food
processing and the manufacture of textiles -- accounts considerablly the
provincial industry. Sugar refining is centred in Guangzhou, Dongguan, Shunde,
Jiangmen and Shantou, while silk filature (the reeling of silk from cocoons) and
weaving are well developed in Guangzhou, Foshan and
Shunde.
Heavy industry include metal processing, the
manufacture of machinery, shipbuilding and ship repairing, the production of
hydroelectricity and mining.
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