Jiangnan in a narrow sense generally refers to southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, but the specific scope is not very clear. This concept probably began in the late Tang Dynasty and took shape in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The most definite core area in Jiangnan only includes several cities around Taihu Lake: Suzhou, Hangzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing (the six traditional houses in Jiangnan), Nanjing, Zhenjiang and Changshu. Shanghai, because of its cultural similarity and historical origin with southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, is basically included in the modern concept of "Little Jiangnan". Yangzhou, located in the north of the Yangtze River, is similar to Jiangnan in economy and culture, so it is more Jiangnan than Jiangnan, and it is second only to Suzhou and Hangzhou in the city elections where major websites represent Jiangnan, which shows that everyone agrees with Yangzhou! At the same time, in Wuhu and other places in southern Anhui, due to cultural reasons, Jiangnan is also highly recognized! Shaoxing and other places in the Qiantang River basin are full of talents and beautiful women, which exudes strong Jiangnan tenderness and basically belongs to Jiangnan in a narrow sense! In short, the narrow sense of Jiangnan is the southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang regions with Suzhou and Hangzhou as the center and similar economy and culture!
Question 2: What areas does Jiangnan include? Jiangnan, which is usually referred to now, takes Nanjing to Suzhou as the core, including parts of Anhui, Jiangxi and Zhejiang south of the Yangtze River, namely, southern Jiangsu, northern Zhejiang, southern Anhui and northern Jiangxi; In a narrow sense, Jiangnan refers to the Yangtze River Delta region with southern Jiangsu as the center.
Question 3: Which provinces and cities are included in the Jiangnan area? Economically and culturally, Jiangnan refers to Suzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Zhenjiang, Nantong, Yangzhou, Shanghai and the north of Qiantang River in Jiangsu.
Geographically, Jiangnan refers to Jiangnan, but economically and culturally, Jiangnan is a specific title, which refers to a place with developed economy and excellent culture since ancient times and must be a water town geographically. Jiangnan is a water town because its culture is Wu culture and Huaiyang culture bred from water culture. Jiangnan must be a place rich in sugarcane since ancient times. In a word, is water a place like Anhui, Jiangxi, Hunan and Zhejiang, a water town south of Qiantang River? Is there a flavor of water town like southern Jiangsu, a developed economy like southern Jiangsu, and an ancient and rich sugarcane like southern Jiangsu? Is there a Wu culture in a water town like southern Jiangsu? No, these places are just geographical Jiangnan (south of the Yangtze River), while economic and cultural Jiangnan specifically refers to Yangzhou in Jiangsu, Sunan (Suzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Zhenjiang and Nanjing), Shanghai, Jiaxing and Huzhou (including Hangzhou north of Qianjiang), Wenzhou and Ningbo in Shaoxing, and all over the country, all of which are mountainous areas, not Wudi or Shui Yuan, so they are not Jiangnan in a specific title, and there are also.
Write a flow chart to clarify the geographical location of Jiangnan.
Jiangnan has a specific title:
Center: Suzhou, Wuxi and Changzhou in southern Jiangsu, Taihu Golden Triangle.
Keywords ancestor of Wu culture, plain culture of water town, China economic center in 2000,
China has the most developed economy and culture since ancient times, and the word Jiangnan was first used to describe southern Jiangsu.
Sub-center 1: Nanjing and Zhenjiang in southern Jiangsu.
The water town culture, the capital of the imperial city, has both Huaiyang culture and Wu culture.
2. Yangzhou in central Jiangsu (including Huai 'an, Taizhou and Nantong)
Huaiyang culture in the water plain is the only economically developed place in history that can compete with southern Jiangsu.
3. Jiaxing, Huzhou, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, north of Qianjiang,
Wu culture in the water town is the pioneer of Wu culture in southern Jiangsu (to put it bluntly, it is a colony in southern Jiangsu)
Tributary: Huizhou, Anhui, was ok in Ming and Qing Dynasties, but now its economy is not as good as that of Jiangsu or northern Zhejiang, so few people mentioned it as Jiangnan in modern times.
Shaoxing, Ningbo, Wenzhou and Taizhou are all over the country, and they are all mountainous areas, not water towns. The cultural differences between them are too great. Although it is Jiangnan, although it is beautiful, it is not named Jiangnan by literati economists.
What about Hunan and Jiangxi? What's even more ridiculous is. It doesn't matter if you say that geography is in Jiangnan, but it's really far-fetched Is this a plain? Is it Wu Culture? Has the economy developed since ancient times? You're welcome to say that it has nothing to do with Jiangnan, and it's even louder than Sunan all day. Sunan people can only say one word: idiot.
Question 4: Jiangnan in a broad sense, where does the real Jiangnan area refer to?
It refers to the whole area south of the Yangtze River in the middle and lower reaches, namely southern Jiangsu, Zhejiang, southern Anhui, southwestern Jiangxi, southern Hunan and southern Hubei. Some areas in Fujian are sometimes called Jiangnan. The broad definition of Jiangnan begins with Gusi (Jiangnan Road) and is often described in literary works. For example, Du Fu's Random Encounter Li Guinian was written in Changsha. The Jiangnan referred to in the weather forecast is roughly the Jiangnan zone in a broad sense. Three famous buildings in the south of the Yangtze River (Yellow Crane Tower in Wuhan, Yueyang Tower in Yueyang and Wangtengting Pavilion in Nanchang) are all located in the south of the Yangtze River.
Jiangnan in a narrow sense generally refers to southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, but the specific scope is not very clear. This concept probably began in the late Tang Dynasty and took shape in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The most definite core area in Jiangnan only includes several cities around Taihu Lake: Suzhou, Hangzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing (the six traditional houses in Jiangnan), Nanjing, Zhenjiang and Changshu. Shanghai, because of its cultural similarity and historical origin with southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, is basically included in the modern concept of "Little Jiangnan". Yangzhou, located in the north of the Yangtze River, is similar to Jiangnan in economy and culture, so it is more Jiangnan than Jiangnan, and it is second only to Suzhou and Hangzhou in the city elections where major websites represent Jiangnan, which shows that everyone agrees with Yangzhou! At the same time, in Wuhu and other places in southern Anhui, due to cultural reasons, Jiangnan is also highly recognized! Shaoxing and other places in the Qiantang River basin are full of talents and beautiful women, which exudes strong Jiangnan tenderness and basically belongs to Jiangnan in a narrow sense! In short, the narrow sense of Jiangnan is the southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang regions with Suzhou and Hangzhou as the center and similar economy and culture!
Question 5: Which provinces belong to the south of the Yangtze River? Zhejiang: It is named after Zhejiang (also called Qiantang River). Tang belongs to the eastern part of Jiangnan, with one observer in eastern Zhejiang and one observer in western Zhejiang. Two Zhejiang roads were located in the Song Dynasty, and the Southern Song Dynasty was divided into two East Zhejiang roads and two West Zhejiang roads, which were called East Zhejiang Road and West Zhejiang Road for short. Yuan set up the right road of East Zhejiang Sea Road and West Zhejiang Road; Ming set up Zhejiang province, which was the beginning of Zhejiang's name, and later changed to Zhejiang Ministry of Foreign Affairs; The name of Zhejiang Province has not changed since the Qing Dynasty.
Anhui: Named after Anqing and Huizhou. Jiangnan West Road and Huainan Road under the Tang Dynasty; Songjia Jiangnan East Road and Huainan West Road; Yuan belongs to Jiangdong Jiankang Road and Huaixihe North Road; In the Ming dynasty, governments at all levels and Zhili Prefecture were directly under the central government, which was called Zhili, and later changed to Nanzhili; In the Qing Dynasty, the reform of Jiangnan province and the establishment of Anhui province were the beginning of Anhui's name. Or during the Republic of China; At the beginning of the founding of the People's Republic of China, North Anhui Administrative Office and South Anhui Administrative Office were established respectively, and then merged to restore Anhui Province. The name of the province has not changed so far.
Jiangsu: Named after Jiangning and Suzhou. Jiangnan East Road and Huainan Road under the Tang Dynasty; Songjia Jiangnan East Road, Zhejiang West Road and Huainan East Road; Yuan belongs to Jiangdong Jiankang Road, Jiangnan Zhexi Road and Huaidongjiang North Road; In the Ming dynasty, governments at all levels and Zhili Prefecture were directly under the central government, which was called Zhili, and later changed to Nanzhili; In the Qing Dynasty, jiangnan province was restructured, and then Jiangsu Province was established separately, which was the beginning of the name of Jiangsu. Or during the Republic of China; At the beginning of the founding of the People's Republic of China, Subei Administrative Office and Sunan Administrative Office were established respectively, and then merged to restore Jiangsu Province. The name of the province has not changed so far.
Fujian: named after Fuzhou and Jianzhou. Tang belongs to Jiangnan East Road, followed by Fujian Observer, which is the beginning of Fujian's name; Songzhi Fujian Road; Yuan set up Fujian Haiyuan Road; Fujian Province was established in Ming Dynasty and later changed to Fujian Ministry of Foreign Affairs; The name of Fujian Province has not changed since the Qing Dynasty.
Jiangxi: It is named after the western part of Jiangnan. Tang belongs to Jiangnan west road, followed by Jiangxi observer, which is the beginning of Jiangxi's name; Songjia Jiangnan West Road, referred to as Jiangxi Road; Yuan set up Jiangxi Province and Hudong Road in Jiangxi Province; Jiangxi Province was established in Ming Dynasty, and later changed to Jiangxi Ministry of Foreign Affairs; The name of Jiangxi Province has not changed since the Qing Dynasty.
Hunan: It is named because it is located in the south of Dongting Lake. Tang belongs to Jiangnan West Road and Guizhou Middle Road, with Hunan observers behind it, which is the beginning of Hunan's name; Song called Hunan Road; Yuansheling North Hunan Road; Ming belongs to Huguang Province, later changed to Huguang Bureau; Hunan province is classified as Huguang province, and the name of the province has not changed so far.
Hubei: It is named because it is located in the north of Dongting Lake. Tang belongs to Jiangnan East Road, Huainan Road and Shannan East Road; Songjing Hubei Road, Hubei Road for short, is the beginning of Hubei's name; Yuan set up Jiangnan Hubei Road; Ming belongs to Huguang Province, later changed to Huguang Bureau; Hubei province is located in Huguang province, and the name of the province has not changed.
Question 6: What places did ancient Jiangnan include?
1. Jiangnan means Jiangnan. "Jiang" means great river in Chinese, that is, the Yangtze River. Therefore, geographically speaking, "Jiangnan" generally refers to "south of the Yangtze River".
During the Spring and Autumn Period, Warring States Period, Qin and Han Dynasties, it generally refers to southern Hubei, including Hunan and Jiangxi.
Modern refers to southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang. In addition, there were ten Zhenguan roads in the Tang Dynasty, including Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Fujian, Hunan, the southeast of Danyang, Jiangsu, and Jiangnan, Anhui.
Jiangnan mentioned in the poem refers to the area beautified by literati. Mainly centered on Suzhou and Hangzhou, the Taihu Lake basin in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River is Jiangnan.
The cultural definition of Jiangnan is not limited to the north and south of the Yangtze River, but refers to a kind of water culture centered on Taihu Lake culture in Suzhou, Wuxi and Changzhou, including Yangzhou culture, Huizhou culture and Jinling culture.
Speaking of Jiangnan, people will naturally think of Suzhou, Xichang, Hangjiahu and Shaoxing in Mingzhou. In ancient times, it was called the six great houses in the south of the Yangtze River (Suzhou, Changzhou, Chuzhou, Hangzhou, Songjiang and Jiaxing). Four Jiangnan provinces in Qing Dynasty: Jiangxi, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Anhui.
In addition:
Bai Juyi's Memory of Jiangnan clearly states that Jiangnan is in Suzhou and Hangzhou, which is exactly what many people think of as Jiangnan.
But this is not the case. Professor Yang Qinye, a scholar who studies geography, believes that from the perspective of physical geography, Jiangnan refers to the hilly area south of the Yangtze River. North of Nanling, south of Dongting Lake and Poyang Lake, and west of Taihu Lake are areas where hills and basins alternate. His northern boundary of Jiangnan is not only the Yangtze River, but also the three famous lakes in Jiangnan-Dongting Lake, Poyang Lake, Taihu Lake and its surrounding areas.
Meteorologist Lin believes that south of Huaihe River, north of Nanling Mountain, east of Yichang, Hubei Province, the sea is in the south of the Yangtze River.
Scholars who study dialects believe that the south of the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River belongs to the six major dialect areas in southern China and can all be regarded as the south of the Yangtze River. Among them, Wu dialect area (Jiangsu and Zhejiang area) is just Jiangnan in a narrow sense.
The poem "Farewell" by Du Mu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, said: "Down and out in the south of the Yangtze River, you carry wine, and your waist is folded lightly. I feel the dream of Yangzhou for ten years and get the name of brothel. " Jiangnan here clearly refers to Yangzhou, but Yangzhou is north of the Yangtze River.
In the process of forming the concept of Jiangnan, administrative divisions played an important role. The demarcation of Jiangnan Road in Tang Dynasty and the subsequent division of Jiangnan Road only left Jiangnan West Road and Jiangnan East Road, which is very important for the formation of Jiangnan concept. In history, such as the Eastern Han Dynasty and the Southern and Northern Dynasties, there is an administrative region-Yangzhou Prefecture, which is now Nanjing, in the area that straddles the north and south of the Yangtze River in Jiangsu. At that time, this area was called Yangzhou, and many areas north of the Yangtze River were under the jurisdiction of Yangzhou. It is not surprising that it is called Jiangnan together with Jiangnan.
When we superimpose various concepts of Jiangnan on the same map in turn, then the uncontroversial Jiangnan is actually Taihu Lake and West Lake Basin.
Jiangnan avenue
12 various landscapes that best reflect the spirit of Jiangnan;
1, Wupengchuan-the flowing life of water town
2. Hairy crabs-delicious food fed by Yangcheng Lake.
3. The best in Jiangnan silk.
4. Longquan Sword-a cold-blooded gentleman cast by Tie Ying.
5. Blue printed cotton cloth-the charm of the country
6. Oil-paper umbrella-disappearing exquisiteness
7, yellow mud snail-this taste should only be available in Jiangnan.
8. Longjing tea-a cup of green tea has mountains and rivers.
9. Dry moldy vegetables-hometown dishes baked in the sun.
10, Yangzhou Bathhouse-Jiangnan Nachi "Forget Worry Soup"
1 1, Zisha pot-Zisha Niyun Gankun
12, Shaoxing wine-the essence of Jianhu water
2. Jiangnan, pen name. Male, from Hefei, Anhui. Founder of Kyushu Empire, head of Fantasy 1+ 1. After 70, I now live in Beijing, unmarried ... Graduated from School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Master of Analytical Chemistry, University of Washington, USA. At present, I am an author and a media manager. His works are mainly aerial historical novels and fantasy novel, and occasionally he dabbles in youth themes. He has successively published Teenagers Here, Death on the Thousand and One Nights, Mistakes in Kyushu 1, Mistakes in Kyushu 2, Mistakes in Kyushu 3 and Ming Di? Industry fire ","the boy here ".
Jiangnan (Han Yuefu (1))
Lotus can be picked in Jiangnan.
Lotus leaf, ②,
Fish are frolicking among the lotus leaves.
Fish play lotus leaf east,
Fish play with lotus leaves,
Fish play lotus leaf south,
Fish play lotus leaf north.
[Notes]
This is a folk song of Yuefu ... >>
Question 7: Where does Jiangnan mean? The so-called Jiangnan generally refers to "south of the Yangtze River". During the Spring and Autumn Period, Warring States Period, Qin and Han Dynasties, it generally referred to southern Hubei, including Hunan and Jiangxi, and in modern times it specifically referred to southern Jiangsu and Zhejiang. In addition, there were ten Zhenguan roads in the Tang Dynasty, including Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Fujian, Hunan, the southeast of Zhenjiang, Jiangsu, and Jiangnan, Anhui.
So it is correct to exclude Yangzhou. Yangzhou is indeed in Jiangbei. Moreover, Yangzhou has not been given a particularly good name. They are all places where fireworks and Liuxiang sell gold, not to mention the salt merchants' resident. Except for the recommendation of Zhu Ziqing in modern times, few people think that Yangzhou belongs to Jiangnan.
Jiangnan refers to the area beautified by literati. Mainly centered on Suzhou and Hangzhou, the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River are Jiangnan.
Question 8: Where exactly does Jiangnan mean in China? Jiangnan in economy and culture refers to Nantong, Changzhou, Wuxi, Jiangzhou, Yangzhou and Shanghai, and Jiangnan in geography refers to the north of Qiantang River, but Jiangnan in economy and culture is a specific title, which refers to a place with developed economy and excellent culture since ancient times and must be a water town in geography. Jiangnan is a water town because its culture is Wu culture and Huaiyang culture bred by water culture. Jiangnan must be a place rich in sugarcane since ancient times. In a word, is water a place like Anhui, Jiangxi, Hunan and Zhejiang, a water town south of Qiantang River? Is there a water town flavor like K South, a developed economy like K South, and an ancient and rich sugarcane like K South? Is there a Wu culture water town like K South? No, these places are just geographical Jiangnan (south of the Yangtze River), while economic and cultural Jiangnan specifically refers to Yangzhou, K South (K State, Wuxi, Changzhou, Zhenjiang, Nanjing), Shanghai, Jiaxing, Huzhou (including Hangzhou, north of Qianjiang), and Wenzhou, Shaoxing, Ningbo and Wenzhou all over the country, all of which are mountainous areas, not Wudi and Shui Yuan, so they are not one. Write a flow chart to clarify the geographical location of Jiangnan. Jiangnan and specific title: Center: KK South K Xichang, Taihu Golden Triangle. The originator of Wu culture, the plain culture of water town, the economic center of China in 2000, and the most developed place in China since ancient times. Jiangnan was the earliest word to describe K South. Sub-center 1: Nanjing, Zhenjiang, south of Jiang kk. The water town culture, the capital of the imperial city, has both Huaiyang culture and Wu culture. 2. The Huaiyang culture in Yangzhou (including Huai 'an, Taizhou and Nantong) in 2.KK Valley is the only economically developed area in history that can be compared with Jiangnan. 3. Hangzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing, Zhejiang, north of Qianjiang, the water town of Wu culture, is a tributary of the land of Wu culture in K South (to put it bluntly, it is the colony of K South). Huizhou, Anhui Province in the Ming and Qing Dynasties was ok, but now its economy is not as good as that of Jiangk or northern Zhejiang, so few people mention it as modern Jiangnan. Shaoxing, Ningbo, Wenzhou and Taizhou are all over the country, and they are all mountainous areas, not water towns. Although Jiangnan is beautiful, it is not named Jiangnan by scholars and economists. What about Hunan and Jiangxi? What's even more ridiculous is. It doesn't matter if you say that geography is in Jiangnan, but it's really far-fetched Is this a plain? Is it Wu Culture? Has the economy developed since ancient times? You're welcome, it has nothing to do with Jiangnan, even louder than K-Nan, who can only say one word: idiot. Jiangnan refers to Jiangnan and Zhejiang, a land of plenty.
Question 9: Where does Jiangnan in a broad sense include?
It refers to the whole area south of the Yangtze River in the middle and lower reaches, namely southern Jiangsu, Zhejiang, southern Anhui, southwestern Jiangxi, southern Hunan and southern Hubei. Some areas in Fujian are sometimes called Jiangnan. The broad definition of Jiangnan begins with Gusi (Jiangnan Road) and is often described in literary works. For example, Du Fu's Random Encounter Li Guinian was written in Changsha. The Jiangnan referred to in the weather forecast is roughly the Jiangnan zone in a broad sense. Three famous buildings in the south of the Yangtze River (Yellow Crane Tower in Wuhan, Yueyang Tower in Yueyang and Wangtengting Pavilion in Nanchang) are all located in the south of the Yangtze River.
Jiangnan in a narrow sense generally refers to southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, but the specific scope is not very clear. This concept probably began in the late Tang Dynasty and took shape in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The most definite core area in Jiangnan only includes several cities around Taihu Lake: Suzhou, Hangzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing (the six traditional houses in Jiangnan), Nanjing, Zhenjiang and Changshu. Shanghai, because of its cultural similarity and historical origin with southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, is basically included in the modern concept of "Little Jiangnan". Yangzhou, located in the north of the Yangtze River, is similar to Jiangnan in economy and culture, so it is more Jiangnan than Jiangnan, and it is second only to Suzhou and Hangzhou in the city elections where major websites represent Jiangnan, which shows that everyone agrees with Yangzhou! At the same time, in Wuhu and other places in southern Anhui, due to cultural reasons, Jiangnan is also highly recognized! Shaoxing and other places in the Qiantang River basin are full of talents and beautiful women, which exudes strong Jiangnan tenderness and basically belongs to Jiangnan in a narrow sense! In short, the narrow sense of Jiangnan is the southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang regions with Suzhou and Hangzhou as the center and similar economy and culture!
Question 10: What areas does Jiangnan include? Jiangnan, which is usually referred to now, takes Nanjing to Suzhou as the core, including parts of Anhui, Jiangxi and Zhejiang south of the Yangtze River, namely, southern Jiangsu, northern Zhejiang, southern Anhui and northern Jiangxi; In a narrow sense, Jiangnan refers to the Yangtze River Delta region with southern Jiangsu as the center.