Chongming Island
Template:Chinese Chongming (Template:Lang-zh), formerly romanized as Chungming, is an alluvial island at the mouth of the Yangtze River in East China covering Template:Convert as of 2010. Together with the islands Changxing and Hengsha, it forms Chongming District, the northernmost area of the provincial-level municipality of Shanghai. At the time of the 2010 Chinese census, its population was Template:Nowrap.
A Template:Convert stretch of the north shore of the island is not part of Chongming District of Shanghai but are instead two pene-exclaves of Jiangsu, formed by the connection of Chongming to the formerly-separate island of Yonglongsha.
Etymology
The island is named for Chongming, an early settlement on the island of Xisha that was named for its placement on relatively high and clear ground.<ref name=eos/>Template:Refn
History
Present-day Chongming first developed as two separate shoals—Xisha and Dongsha—during the Wude Era (AD 618–626) of the Tang dynasty. These were initially about Template:Convert apart and located south of the larger island of Dongbuzhou (t Template:Lang, s Template:Lang, p Dōngbùzhōu), which came to form part of the peninsula of Qidong in Jiangsu. Xisha was also known as Gujunsha. By the first year of Shenlong (705), a town was established on Xisha which was known as "Chongming".<ref name=eos/> The number, size, and shapes of the islands fluctuated repeatedly over time and with the floods of the Yangtze:<ref name=eoscmi/> In the 3rd year of Tiansheng (1025), a new island arose a little to the northwest of Dongsha which became known as Yaoliusha from the surnames of its early settlers. In the first year of Jiangzhong Jingguo (1101), Sansha rose for the third time, stabilizing 50 Chinese miles northwest of Yaoliusha. During the 12th- and 13th-century Yuan dynasty, Yingqiansha, Matuosha, Zhangpusha, and around six other islands also formed. The early settlers of these islands were mostly fishermen and salt collectors,<ref name=kingcotton/> with their principal saltern at Tianci.
In the 14th year of Zhiyuan (1277) under Kublai Khan of the Yuan, Template:Nowrap was organized within Yangzhou.<ref name=eos/> Owing to the shifting sands of the islands, however, the county seat needed to be repeatedly moved.<ref name=eoscmi>"Chongming Island" in the Encyclopedia of Shanghai, p. 52. Template:Webarchive</ref> During the late Yuan and early Ming, the sparsely-inhabited shoals of the area began to fill with migrants from Pudong and other areas of Songjiang Prefecture. These immigrants introduced cotton cultivation, which spread widely prior to China's opening to international trade in the later Qing. There was small-scale textile production in the area, but most of the cotton was exported for use in Songjiang, Hangzhou, and other more developed areas of Jiangnan.<ref name=kingcotton>Walker, Kathy Le Mons. "The View from the Periphery: Tongzhou and the Northern Delta" in Chinese Modernity and the Peasant Path: Semicolonialism in the Northern Yangzi Delta, pp. 52 ff. Stanford University Press (Stanford), 1999.</ref> In the 2nd year of Hongwu (1396) under the Ming, the prefecture was downgraded to a county<ref name=eos/> but, shortly afterwards, a major subsidence—sinking the entirety of Dongsha and most of Xisha—provoked a mass emigration back to the mainland.<ref name=kingcotton/> Around the same time, however, Sansha expanded towards the north while Yaoliusha simultaneously eroded in the south while building up in the north, "migrating" it towards Sansha.
Chongming County was later placed in Suzhou and then Taicang Prefectures.<ref name=eos/> Over the course of the Ming, numerous shoals arose in succession: Ma'ansha, Chen'ensha, Gaomingsha, Xiaoyinsha, Changsha, Yuanjiasha, Xiangsha, Gaotousha, and around 20 others. Over the two hundred years from the beginning of Jiajing (1522) under the Ming to the end of Kangxi (1722) under the Qing, these shoals frequently flooded or collapsed back into the river. Yaoliusha and Sansha eroded away; Xisha, Chenensha, Fanliansha, and others sank. In the west, Pingyangsha arose, then sank, then finally merged with nearby Yuanjiasha, Wujiasha, Xiangsha, and Nansha. Around the end of the Ming dynasty in 1644, these islands were merged all the way to Gaotousha in the west, forming a single mass 200 Chinese miles east to west by 40 north to south. Their unification with remaining nearby islands by 1681 effectively created present-day Chongming, although it remained much smaller at the time.<ref name=eoscmi/> Between the Shunzhi and Kangxi Eras (1644–1722), Rilongsha, Yongansha, Ping'ansha, Dongsansha, and around 25 others arose without sinking.
Under the Republic, it was organized first under the Nantong and then Songjiang Special Administration District. During the Second World War, Chongming was administered first by a separate pacification team, then as part of Shanghai's Great Way Government,<ref>Brook, Timothy. "The Great Way Government of Shanghai" in In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: Shanghai Under Japanese Occupation, p. 159. Cambridge University Press (Cambridge), 2004.</ref> and finally as a county of the Wang Jingwei regime, a Japanese puppet state in Nanjing. Nine years after the establishment of the People's Republic of China, it was placed under the municipality of Shanghai in December 1958.<ref name=eos/> During the Down to the Countryside Movement, many of the sent-down youth from Shanghai travelled no further than Chongming.<ref>Bramall, Chris. Industrialization of Rural China, p. 148. Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2007. Template:ISBN.</ref> Reclamation, particularly large-scale work on the island's northern and eastern tidal flats in the 1960s and '90s, doubled the size of the island between 1950 and 2010.<ref name=eoscmi/> It began to absorb the separate island of Yonglongsha—creating an enclave of Jiangsu on the northern shore of the island—in 1972.<ref name=shtong>Office of Shanghai Chronicles. Template:Lang ["Dǎo, Shā", "Islands and Shoals"]. Shanghai Municipal Government (Shanghai), 2015. Accessed 12 Jan 2015. Template:In lang</ref>
Dongtan was a proposed ecocity which was planned to open along with the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai but stalled following the 2006 ouster of the Communist Party Chief Chen Liangyu.<ref>Montlake, Simon. "In China, Overambition Reins in Eco-City Plans" in The Christian Science Monitor. 23 Dec 2008. Accessed 10 Jan 2015.</ref><ref>Fox, Jesse. "Dongtan, China's Flagship Ecocity Project, R.I.P." Treehugger, 5 Jan 2009. Accessed 10 Jan 2015.</ref>
Geography
Chongming is about Template:Convert running east and west and generally between Template:Convert north to south, covering Template:Convert.<ref name="eoscmi"/> The island has an average elevation of Template:Convert above sea level, with the northwest and central areas somewhat higher than the southwest and eastern ones.<ref name=eoscmi/>
Location
Chongming is located in the Yangtze River, dividing the river into northern and southern channels immediately prior to its entrance into the East China Sea. The island forms the northernmost part of the municipality of Shanghai, separated by the Yangtze from Baoshan and Pudong New Area, which face each other across the mouth of the Huangpu. In Jiangsu, most of Haimen and Qidong are separated from Chongming by the northern channel of the Yangtze; Taicang County, meanwhile, lies across the southern channel next to Shanghai's Baoshan District.<ref name=eos/>
Chongming is about two hours' distance from central Shanghai.<ref>Waldmeir, Patti. "China migration: Children of a revolution." Financial Times. December 27, 2015. Retrieved on December 29, 2015. "Her nine-year-old son, Zhou Nijun, was born in her rural village on Chongming Island, two hours from Shanghai."</ref> Template:Anchor
Enclaves
{{#invoke:Hatnote|hatnote}} Owing to the continuous expansion of the island, there are two pene-exclaves of Jiangsu present on the north shore of Chongming Island. The island of Yonglongsha appeared in the north channel of the Yangtze most recently in 1937 and was stabilized and expanded by workers from Nantong in Jiangsu during the late 1960s. Administration of the island was divided between Nantong's cities of Haimen and Qidong. Farms and then townships were established in both areas. Qidong's community of Qilong was connected in 1972<ref name="shtong"/> and Haimen's Haiyong township joined separately in 1975. Haiyong is now around Template:Convert<ref name=haigov>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> while Qilong now stretches along Template:Convert of the north shore of the island. As it is usually only about Template:Convert wide, however, its area is only around Template:Convert.
Environment
Efforts to improve water quality in local areas<ref>Jian Y.. 2015. Work starts on cleaner water for city suburbs. Shanghai Daily. Retrieved on July 25, 2017</ref> successfully resulted in notable recoveries.<ref>Jian Y.. 2017. Songjiang water so much cleaner. Shanghai Daily. Retrieved on July 25, 2017</ref> Furthermore, stable numbers of endangered finless porpoises, have been discovered along the island where two subspecies may occur.<ref>Meiping Y.. 2017. Scientists find rare finless porpoise pod. The Shanghai Daily. Retrieved on July 25, 2017</ref>
Landmarks
Under its poetic name of Yingzhou, various locales around the island were treated as its "8 views" during the Ming and Qing dynasties.<ref name=jack>Li, Jack. "Chongming Island" Template:Webarchive. China Travel Depot, 17 August 2011. Accessed 18 Jan 2015.</ref>
Today, Dongping National Forest Park is located in the central part of the island. Dongping Forest Farm was established in 1959, opened to the public in 1989, and became a nationally protected area in 1993. It is Shanghai's largest forest park, with artificially-planted trees covering Template:Convert. The island is also home to the Dongtan Nature Reserve and the Chongxi Wetland Park,<ref name=eoscmi/> as well as the Chongming National Geological Park.<ref name=eos/>
Tourism
The county runs two 4A-class attractions and four 3A-class attractions. The tourism<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of the island focuses on three zones - East Chongming, Central Chongming and West Chongming. East Chongming features Dongtan Wetland Park and agritainment options in Yingdong Village and Nanjiang Village. Central Chongming features Dongping National Forest Park, agritainment options at Qianwei Village, Gaojia Zhuangyuan and Ruihua Orchard, Genbao Football Base, Chongming Xuegong (Chongming Museum), Jinaoshan Park, Shou'an Temple and Sanmin Cultural Village. West Chongming offers Mingzhu Lake Park, Xiling Resort, Xisha Wetland and agritainment at Lugang Village.
Economy
Chengqiao's Template:Convert Chongming Industrial Zone was established in March 1994 and promoted to municipal status in February 1996. It lies west of the town center and north of Nanmen Port.<ref name=dog>"Shanghai Chongming Industrial Zone". Shanghai Municipal Government, 2015.</ref>
Chongming is also a center of Shanghai's shipbuilding and maritime equipment industries, whose main base is on nearby Changxing.<ref name=eos>"Chongming County" in the Encyclopedia of Shanghai, pp. 50 ff. Template:Webarchive Shanghai Scientific & Technical Publishers (Shanghai), 2010. Hosted by the Municipality of Shanghai.</ref>
Culture
Chongming boasts one of Shanghai's three Confucian temples, along with Shou'an and Hanshan Temples, Mount Jin'ao, and the tomb of Tang Yicen.<ref name=eos/>
Annual festivals on Chongming include the Shanghai Chongming Forest Travel Festival,<ref>Jiang Xinhua. "Chongming Festival Helps Tourists Get Back to Nature" in the Shanghai Daily. 28 Sept 2013. Accessed 10 Jan 2015.</ref> Chongming Hairy Crab Festival, the Mingzhu Lake Cup Fishing Competition, the Qianwei Autumn Ecological and Cultural Festival, the Shanghai Fishermen Fun Festival, and the Chongming Cook Stove Painting Festival.<ref name=eos/> The Yu Sheng Cup,<ref name=yusheng>Kaushik "Cricket Fighting Contests in China". Amusing Planet, 9 Nov 2011. Accessed 11 Jan 2015.</ref> a national cricket fighting tournament,<ref name=eos/> is held annually outside the Xilai Ranch in Lühua during the National Day holiday in early October, with a purse of Template:Nowrap.<ref name=yusheng/>
The Tour of Chongming Island is an annual elite international women's cycling race consisting of a one-day race and a stage race.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Government
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Administratively, the Shanghai side of Chongming Island is divided among 15 towns and 1 township of Chongming County. The township of Xincun Template:Nowrap occupies the northernmost corner of the island. From northwest to southeast, the towns are Xinhai Template:Nowrap Lühua Template:Nowrap Sanxing Template:Nowrap Miaozhen Template:Nowrap Dongping Template:Nowrap Gangxi Template:Nowrap Jianshe Template:Nowrap Chengqiao Template:Nowrap Xinhe Template:Nowrap Shuxin Template:Nowrap Gangyan Template:Nowrap Buzhen Template:Nowrap Xianghua Template:Nowrap Zhongxing Template:Nowrap and Chenjia Template:Nowrap<ref name=eos/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Jiangsu side of the island is divided into Haiyong Township and Qilong Township.
Infrastructure
Whereas the island was previously only connected to the mainland by ferry service, the Shanghai Yangtze Bridge and Tunnel now connects Chenjia in southeastern Chongming with Shanghai via Changxing and the Chongqi Bridge connects Chenjia to Qidong in southeastern Jiangsu. The Chonghai Bridge under construction will link Xinhai at the west end of the island with Haimen District in Nantong, Jiangsu, while the proposed S7 (Huchong) Expressway would connect Chengqiao directly with Baoshan across the Yangtze.<ref name=eos/>
The new bridges form part of the G40 (Hushan) Expressway connecting Shanghai and Xi'an. Chongming is also spanned by another 38 highways. The two major highways of the island run along its length, Beiyan Highway to the north and Chenhai Highway to the south. There are 41 bus lines in Chongming County, accessing over 98% of its 227 communities.<ref name=eos/>
18 ferries still connect the island. Chengqiao's Nanmen Port offers service to Shidongkou and Baoyang Rd in Baoshan and to Liuhegang in southern Jiangsu; Xinhai's Niupeng Harbor to Qinglonggang in Haimen;<ref name=dog/> and other ports offer connections with Wusong and the two other islands of the county, Changxing and Hengsha.<ref name=eos/>
Shanghai Metro Line 22 will connect the island with the rest of Shanghai in 2026.