Hang Prefecture

Hang Prefecture
Traditional Chinese
Hanyu PinyinHáng Zhōu
Simplified Chinese
Hanyu PinyinYúháng Jùn
Simplified Chinese西
Literal meaningWestern Prefecture
Hanyu PinyinXī Fǔ
Traditional Chinese
Hanyu PinyinQiántáng Fǔ

Population
 • 740s or 750s585,963[1]
 • 980~0.9 million[2][3]
 • 1085~1 million[2][4]
 • 1102~1 million[2][5]
History
 • Preceded byQiantang Commandery (錢唐郡)
 • Created
 • Abolished1129 (Song dynasty)
 • Succeeded byLin'an Prefecture
 • HQQiantang (錢唐 or 錢塘)
Contained within
 • Circuit (Tang dynasty)
 • KingdomWuyue (907–978)
 • Circuit (Song dynasty)Liangzhe Circuit

Hangzhou or Hang Prefecture (589–1129) was a zhou (prefecture) in imperial China located in modern northern Zhejiang, China, around modern Hangzhou.[6] The prefecture was called Yuhang Commandery from 607 to 621 and from 742 to 758.[7] Hang Prefecture was the capital of the Wuyue kingdom (907–978), inside which it was known as Xi Prefecture (Western Prefecture), and during its last years of the kingdom, as Qiantang Prefecture.

Hang Prefecture sat at the head of the Hangzhou Bay, which opens to the East China Sea. It was also the southern terminus of the Grand Canal and the eastern terminus of the Qiantang River. During the Northern Song (960–1127) it was the capital of Liangzhe Circuit. In 1129 it became Lin'an Prefecture, which would become the capital of the Southern Song (1127–1279) in 1138.

  1. ^ Xin Tang Shu, ch. 41.
  2. ^ a b c This estimate is based on the assumption that household figures is more reliable than population figures from Song dynasty censuses. For conflicting views on Song dynasty census figures, see Pritchard, Earl H. (1963). "Thoughts on the Historical Development of the Population of China". The Journal of Asian Studies. 23 (1): 3–20. doi:10.2307/2050630. JSTOR 2050630. and Li Baozhu (李宝柱) (1982). 宋代人口统计问题研究 [A Study on the Song Dynasty Census Problem]. Journal of Peking University (Philosophy and Social Sciences) (in Chinese). 19 (4): 67–77. Archived from the original on 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  3. ^ Taiping Huanyu Ji, ch. 93.
  4. ^ Yuanfeng Jiuyu Zhi, ch. 5.
  5. ^ Song Shi, ch. 88.
  6. ^ Shi, p. 1499–500.
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference yuhang was invoked but never defined (see the help page).