Qilong Township

Coordinates: 31°46′27″N 121°27′23″E / 31.7741°N 121.4563°E / 31.7741; 121.4563
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Qilong
启隆乡
Qilong is located in Jiangsu
Qilong
Qilong
Location in Jiangsu
Qilong is located in Shanghai
Qilong
Qilong
Qilong (Shanghai)
Coordinates (Qilong government): 31°46′27″N 121°27′23″E / 31.7741°N 121.4563°E / 31.7741; 121.4563
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceJiangsu
Prefecture-level cityNantong
County-level cityQidong
Area
 • Total36.8 km2 (14.2 sq mi)
Population
 (2010)
 • Total3,436
 • Density93/km2 (240/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard Time)
Qilong Township
Traditional Chinese啟隆
Simplified Chinese启隆
Qidong Stock Farm
Traditional Chinese啟東農業良種繁育
Simplified Chinese启东农业良种繁育

Qilong is a township of Qidong in eastern Jiangsu province. The land it occupies was formerly Yonglongsha, a separate island in the Yangtze River delta, but reclamation projects and natural deposition of sediment have joined it to Chongming Island, where it now forms a pene-enclave within Shanghai's Chongming County.[1] Its population was 3436 at the time of the 2010 Chinese census. Qilong's name—literally "opening prosperity"—is a compound of contracted forms of its county and its former island.

History[edit]

Yonglongsha, a shoal in the channel of the Yangtze north of Chongming Island, reappeared most recently in 1937.[2] By 1968, workers from Jiangsu had stabilized the land enough that the conflicting claims of the counties of Haimen and Qidong were mediated by their prefecture of Nantong, which divided the island between them. Qidong's area was organized as a farmstead. Continuing reclamation projects and natural deposition of sediment joined it to Chongming Island in 1972. Another area of Qilong derives from its later absorption of Xinglongsha (Chinese: ; pinyin: Xīnglóngshā), another shoal.[3]

Prior to Yonglongsha's absorption by Chongming, it offered ferry service to Haimen's Lingdian Harbor (; Língdiāngǎng) and Qidong's Sanhe Harbor (; Sānhégǎng).[2] Qilong was elevated to a township in 1992 and is now connected to Chongming's road network but this also was only connected to Jiangsu by ferry service prior to the 2011 opening of the Chongqi Bridge between Chenjia and Qidong. In 2008, its urban plan included 6.66 hectares (16.5 acres) for the construction of five agricultural parks: a rare flower park, a ginkgo park, a pear orchard, an orangery, and a nursery forest.[citation needed]

The area achieved minor notability in 2014 when satellite imagery revealed that a local farm had shaped one of its fields into a taijitu (yin-yang symbol).[4]

Economy[edit]

As with many areas of Chongming Island, Qilong farms hairy crab. In addition, they grow edamame for export to Japan and South Korea and malting barley for domestic production. From 2003, Qilong has seen dairy farms established and expanded for Shanghai-area milk companies.[citation needed] The Shanghai-based Yaoji Playing Card Company also has plans to construct a 1 km2 (0.39 sq mi) Thai-themed amusement park in the territory.[5]

Government[edit]

The township of Qilong forms part of the county-level city of Qidong, itself part of the prefecture-level city of Nantong in Jiangsu province. Qilong is divided between the communities of Yonglong (永隆社区, Yǒnglóng Shèqū) and Xinglong (兴隆社区, Xīnglóng Shèqū).[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gao Yuan (8 December 2004). "Rénmín Rìbào, The People's Daily". People's Daily. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b Office of Shanghai Chronicles. 岛、沙 (in Chinese (China)). Shanghai Municipal Government. Archived from the original on January 6, 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ 农业新闻 (in Chinese (China)), Qidong Agricultural Information Network, 24 May 2004
  4. ^ Zhou Zhaohui (12 November 2014), Jschina, Nanjing: Jiangsu Zhongjiang Network Media.
  5. ^ Huang Yenming (16 October 2014). 姚记扑克高层来启考察 (in Chinese (China)). Qidong Development and Reform Commission. Retrieved 31 January 2015.
  6. ^ 2013年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码, Beijing: National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China, 31 August 2013. (in Chinese)

External links[edit]