Weihai
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Administration Type | Prefecture-level city |
City Seat | Huancui District ( ) |
Area | 5,436 km² |
Coastline | 985.9 km |
Population | 2,476,300 (2003) |
GDP - Total - Per Capita |
¥100.881 billion (2004) ¥33,762 (2004) |
Major Nationalities | Han - 99.41% |
County-level divisions | 4 |
Township-level divisions | 66 |
CPC Committee Secretary | Cui Yuechen (崔曰臣) |
Mayor | Song Yuanfang (宋远方) |
Area code | 631 |
Postal Code | 264200 (Huancui District) 264300-264500 (Other areas) |
License Plate Prefix | 鲁K |
City Flower | Sweet Osmanthus Osmanthus fragrans |
City Tree | Silk Tree Albizia julibrissin |
Weihai (Chinese: 威海; pinyin: Wēihǎi), known in the past as the Weihai Garrison (Chinese: 威海衛; pinyin: Wēihǎi Wèi), is a prefecture-level city in eastern Shandong province, People's Republic of China. The easternmost prefecture-level city in the province and a major seaport, Weihai borders Yantai to the west and looks out to the Yellow Sea to the east.
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[edit] Administrative divisions
The prefecture-level city of Weihai administers 4 county-level divisions, including 1 districts and 3 county-level cities.
- Huancui District (环翠区)
- Wendeng City (文登市)
- Rongcheng City (荣成市)
- Rushan City (乳山市)
These are further divided into 66 township-level divisions, including 52 towns and 14 subdistricts.
[edit] History
The port was once the base for the Beiyang Fleet of China during the Qing Dynasty. In 1895, the Japanese captured it from the landward side. It was evacuated in 1898.
After Russia leased Port Arthur from China on the opposite coast for 25 years in March, 1898, the United Kingdom obtained a lease which was to run for as long as the Russians stayed in Port Arthur. In 1905, when Japan took over the lease of Port Arthur, the British lease was made to run as long as the Japanese occupied Port Arthur. Thus the city was part of a territory (c.285 sq mi/740 km²) called "Weihaiwei", which was leased by the United Kingdom from 1898 until October 1, 1930. It was a summer station for the British Far East Fleet. The last British commissioner of Weihaiwei was Reginald Johnston. It was briefly a special administrative region after it was returned to the Republic of China, the successor to the Qing Dynasty. In 1945, Weihaiwei City was established to be renamed into Weihai City after the founding of the People's Republic of China.
In recent years, a proposal from the British Archives surfaced in regards to the territoriality of Weihai during the 1800s. The proposals, apparently advanced by Hong Kong governor Sir Frederick Lugard, stipulated that the British would revert Weihai to Chinese rule, and receive perpetual rule of the 1898 leased territories of Hong Kong in return. Some believe that if the proposal was acted upon, Hong Kong would still remain in British Administration, but Whitehall do not seem to have acted on the proposal.
The nickname British sailors gave to this port was "Way High".
[edit] Geography and climate
Weihai is surrounded by sea on three sides and the harbor is protected by Liugong Island. It is located on the north-eastern seashore of Shandong Province in China at 37°28′ northern latitude and 122°7′ east of Greenwich.
Weihai has a mild, seasonal climate moderated by the surrounding sea. August is the warmest month with a 24-hour average temperature of 24.3°C and January the coldest (24-hour average temperature of -1.5°C. Data the Global Historical Climatology Network, version 1).
[edit] Economy
At present, Weihai is a commercial port and major fishing center with some light industries. It is also a key production area for peanuts and fruit.
[edit] Education
A campus of Shandong University is located there.
[edit] Sister cities
Weihai is a sister-city of the following cities around the world.
- Cheltenham, United Kingdom (since May 21, 1987)
- Ube, Yamaguchi, Japan (May 18, 1992)
- Santa Barbara, United States (December 8, 1994)
- Sochi, Russia (October 18, 1996)
- Biella, Italy (October 22, 1996)
- Timaru, New Zealand (July 30, 1998)
- Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo (May 24, 2004)
[edit] See also
- Reginald Johnston, last British commissioner of colonial Weihai
[edit] External links
- Government website of Weihai (available in Chinese, English, Japanese and Korean)
Prefecture-level divisions of Shandong
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List of Shandong County-level divisions |