Local date | 23 January 1556Julian calendar[1] 2 February 1556 in Gregorian calendar The 12th day of the 12th month of the 34th year of the Jiajing era in Chinese calendar | in
---|---|
Local time | Early morning |
Magnitude | 7.0–7.5 Mw,[2] 8.0 Mw [3] |
Depth | Unknown |
Epicenter | 34°30′01″N 109°18′00″E / 34.50028°N 109.30000°E |
Areas affected | Ming dynasty |
Max. intensity | MMI XI (Extreme) |
Casualties |
The 1556 Shaanxi earthquake (Postal romanization: Shensi), known in Chinese colloquially by its regnal year as the Jiajing Great Earthquake "嘉靖大地震" (Jiājìng Dàdìzhèn) or officially by its epicenter as the Hua County Earthquake "华县地震" (Huàxiàn Dìzhèn), occurred in the early morning of 2 February 1556 in Huaxian, Shaanxi during the Ming dynasty.
Most of the residents there lived in yaodongs—artificial caves in loess cliffs—which collapsed and buried alive those sleeping inside. Modern estimates put the direct deaths from the earthquake at over 100,000, while over 700,000 migrated away or died from famine and plagues, which summed up to a total loss of 830,000 people in Imperial records.[4][5][6][7] It was the deadliest recorded earthquake in history, and in turn one of the deadliest natural disasters in Chinese history.
Feng20
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).1556年我国陕西的华县8级大地震,共死亡约83万人,但实际上其中70多万人死于其后的瘟疫和饥荒。
1556年陕西发生大地震,当时死亡10万人,而第2年发生大瘟疫,却死亡70多万人 [100,000 died in 1556, while a plague struck the subsequent year and led to a further death of 700,000-odd.]
实则直接死于地震的只有十数万人,其余70余万人均死于瘟疫和饥荒 [Actually, direct deaths from earthquake amount to 100,000-odd, the remaining 700,000-odd died from plagues and famine]