Ürümqi

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Chinese:乌鲁木齐市
Wūlǔmùqí Shì
Uyghur:ئۈرۈمچى شەھەرى
Ürümchi Sheheri
Abbreviation(s): 乌市 (pinyin: Wū Shì)
Image:Ürümqi location.png
Origin of name "Beautiful Pasture" in Dzungar Mongol
Administration type Prefecture-level city
Seat of Government Tianshan District
County-level divisions 8
CPC Ürümqi Committee Secretary Yang Gang
Mayor Shokrat Zakir
Area 10,989 km²
Population (2005)
 - Density
2,681,834
174.53/km²
GDP ([[{{{GDPYear}}}]])
 - per capita
CNY {{{GDP}}}
CNY {{{GDPperCapita}}}
Area code 991
Postal code 830000
Licence plate prefix 新A
ISO 3166-2 CN-65-01
Official website:
http://www.urumqi.gov.cn (Simplified Chinese)

Urumchi or Ürümqi (English IPA: [uːˈruːmtʃi]; Uyghur: ئۈرۈمچی‎, Ürümchi, {{{3}}}; simplified Chinese: 乌鲁木齐; traditional Chinese: 烏魯木齊; pinyin: Wūlǔmùqí), with a population of about 2.6 million, is the capital of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China, in the northwest of the country. It is also farther away from sea than any other large city in the world.

Contents

[edit] History of the city

Image:Urumqi panorama.jpg
A panoramic view of Ürümqi's city center taken from Red Mountain (Hong Shan).

Two thousand years ago Ürümqi was an important town on the northern route of the Silk Road, a vast network of trade routes that also facilitated cultural exchanges throughout Eurasia. During the 22nd year of Emperor Zhenguan's reign in the Tang Dynasty, 648 A.D., the Tang government set up the town of Luntai in the ancient town seat of Urabo, 10 kilometers from the southern suburb of present-day Ürümqi. The Ancient Luntai Town was a seat of local government, and collected taxes from the caravans along the northern route of the Silk Road. During the Qing Dynasty (1763 A.D.) Emperor Qianlong named the expanded town of Luntai "Dihua" (pinyin: Díhuà; Manchu: Wen de dahabure fu), meaning "to enlighten." In 1884, Emperor Guang Xu established Xinjiang as a Province, with Di Hua as its capital. Following the founding of the People's Republic of China, on February 1, 1954, the city was renamed Ürümqi, meaning " beautiful pasture" in the Mongolian language of the Junggar tribe.

Ürümqi has one county and seven districts (Ürümqi county, Tianshan District, Sharyibark District, Toutunhe District, Shuimogou District, Xinshi District, Dongshan District, and Nanshan Mine District) under its jurisdiction.

[edit] Geography

Located in a green oasis between the lofty ice-capped Bogda Peak, the vast Salt Lake in the east, the rolling pine-covered Southern hill and the alternating fields and sand dunes of Zunggar Basin in the northwest, Ürümqi has an average elevation of 800 meters. The largest city in the western half of China, Ürümqi has won a place in the Guinness Book of Records as the most remote city from any sea in the world at a distance of about 1,400 miles (2500 km) from the nearest coastline (Ürümqi being the city closest to the Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility). The city has an area of 10,989 km².

[edit] Climate

In Ürümqi a continental steppe climate with hot and dry summers prevails with average temperatures in July at 24°C (75°F) as well as damp and cold winters with average temperatures in January at -16°C (3°F). The annual average temperature amounts to 5.4°C (41.7°F), and the yearly precipitation is about 273 mm.

[edit] Demographics

According to the 2000 census, Ürümqi has 2,081,834 inhabitants with a population density of 174.53 inhabitants/km². Of these, 75.3% are Han Chinese, 12.8% are Uyghurs, 8.0% are Hui and 2.3% are Kazakhs.

[edit] Administrative divisions

Image:Location of Ürümqi Prefecture within Xinjiang (China).png
Location of Ürümqi Prefecture within Xinjiang

Ürümqi currently comprises 8 administrative sub-divisions, county-level units, of these, 7 are districts and 1 is a county.

The areas of the city are divided into 7 districts and 1 county:

[edit] Economy

Ürümqi is a major industrial center within Xinjiang. Ürümqi, together with Karamay and Bayin'gholin account for 64.5% of the total industrial output of Xinjiang. Ürümqi is also the largest consumer center in the region, recording ¥19.1 billion retail sales of consumer goods in 2004, accounting for 33.9% of the region's total retail value. The GDP per capita was ¥22,820 (ca. US$2,850) in 2004 [1]. Ürümqi has been a central developmental target for the "Develop the West" project that the Central Government is pursuing.

[edit] Media

The Xinjiang Networking Transmission Limited operates the Urumqi People Broadcasting Station and the Xinjiang People Broadcasting Station, broadcasting in the Mandarin, Uyghur, Kazakh, Mongolian, Russian and the Kyrgyz languages.

[edit] Transportation

Air: Ürümqi is served by the Ürümqi Diwopu International Airport.

Rail:

Road: Ürümqi is located along the China National Highway 312 and China National Highway 314.

[edit] See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Urumqi

Coordinates: 43°48′N, 87°35′Ear:أورومتشي cs:Urumči da:Ürümqi de:Ürümqi et:Ürümqi es:Ürümqi eo:Urumqi fa:اورومچی fr:Ürümqi ko:우루무치 id:Urumqi it:Ürümqi kk:Үрімжі lv:Urumči lt:Urumčis nl:Ürümqi ja:ウルムチ no:Urumqi pl:Urumczi pt:Ürümqi ro:Ürümqi ru:Урумчи sr:Урумчи fi:Ürümqi sv:Ürümqi th:อุรุมชี tr:Urumçi zh:乌鲁木齐市

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