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Nanzhili | |||||||||
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Wangshi GardeninSuzhou, a Ming-era garden first constructed when Jiangsu was administered as Nanzhili
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Nanzhili | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 南直隸 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 南直隶 | ||||||||
Literal meaning | Southern Directly Ruled [Province] Southern Directly Administered [Area] | ||||||||
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Nanjing Province | |||||||||
Chinese | 南京省 | ||||||||
Literal meaning | Province of the Southern Capital | ||||||||
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Nanzhili, formerly romanizedasNan-chih-li and also known as SouthorSouthern ZhiliorChih-li, was a historical province of the Ming Empire. Its capital was Nanjing, from which it is also sometimes known as NanjingorNanking Province. Nanzhili combined areas of the Yuan provincesofHenan Jiangbei and Jiangzhe and took its name—Chinese for "Southern Directly Administered Area"—from Nanjing's status as the Ming's national capital under the Hongwu Emperor and as the secondary capital after the Yongle Emperor's move to Beijing, which oversaw Beizhili or the Northern Directly Administered Area. During the early Qing Dynasty,[when?] Nanzhili was renamed Jiangnan and then divided into the separate provincesofJiangsu and Anhui. Under the Republic and People's Republic of China, an area of Jiangsu also became the provincial-level municipalityofShanghai.
Defunct Chinese provinces and provincial regions
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Yuan dynasty |
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Ming dynasty |
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ROC (1912–1949) |
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PRC |
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