Hebei
Hebei
was one of the earliest developed regions in China. It has taken
an important place in Chinese history.
After
Huang Di were Yao, Shun and Yu, the three most respected rulers
in ancient times. Yu the Great founded the Xia Dynasty (21st-16th
century B.C.) and divided China into nine states. Hebei is the
original area of Ji, the leading state of the nine states. The
shortened name of Hebei Province today is still called Ji.
During
the Eastern Zhou Dynasty and the Warring States period (475-221
B.C.), seven dukedoms were fighting for hegemony. Within the boundary
of present-day Hebei Province there was the state of Yan to the
north and the state of Zhao to the south. So Hebei has been known
as "Yanzhao"too.
Two
prefectures, Jizhou and Youzhou, were established in Hebei afterwards
.In the 600 to 700 years before A.D. 618 several kinds of administration
existed in Hebei. The name of Hebei was formally adopted during
the Tang Dynasty (618-907). Hebei in Chinese means "North of the
River" because the region is located to the north of the Yellow
River.
The
three dynasties of Yuan, Ming and Qing (1206-1911) all set their
national capital in Beijing. In the past 700 years Hebei had the
responsibility to protect the national capital. During the Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911), Hebei was named Zhili, which means "under
direct Administration of the Imperial Court". After the founding
of the Republic of China (1912-1949), the Kuomintang government
set up its capital in Nanjing. The name of Zhili was no more suitable
to its status and was changed to Hebei in 1928.
The
Hebei people's Government was established on August 1, 1949. Shijiazhuang,
the provincial capital, is 283 kilometers from Beijing.