Zhongba County
Zhongba County
仲巴县 • འབྲོང་པ་རྫོང་། Drongpa | |
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Coordinates: 29°46′12″N 84°01′53″E / 29.77000°N 84.03139°E | |
Country | China |
Autonomous Region | Tibet |
Prefecture-level city | Shigatse |
County seat | Labrang (Drongpa) |
Area | |
• Total | 43,602.92 km2 (16,835.18 sq mi) |
Population (2020)[1] | |
• Total | 26,897 |
• Density | 0.62/km2 (1.6/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Website | www |
Zhongba County | |||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 仲巴县 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 仲巴縣 | ||||||
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Tibetan name | |||||||
Tibetan | འབྲོང་པ་རྫོང་། | ||||||
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Drongpa County[2][3] or Zhongba County[4] (Tibetan: འབྲོང་པ་རྫོང; Chinese: 仲巴县) is a county of Shigatse Prefecture in China's Tibet Autonomous Region. Located in the western part of Central Tibet (sometimes referred to as "western Tibet"), it is the birthplace of the Tsangpo River (Brahmaputra).[5] Zhongba is said to mean "place of wild yaks" in Tibetan. The county seat is at Labrang, which is also called the "Drongpa Township".
Geography
[edit]Drongpa County is the largest county in the Shigatse Prefecture by geographical area.[6] It has a population of approximately 18,000 and covers 43,594 square kilometers. It is prone to earthquakes and suffered a large one, 6.8 on the Richter scale, on 30 August 2008. Although the temblor left a 10 km (6.2 mi) north-south crack at the epicenter located at 31° north and 83.6° east, and houses were damaged and roads blocked by falling rocks, there were no reported injuries.[7] The county is dotted with lakes such as Taro Tso, Nganglha Ringtso and Rinchen Shubtso.
Drongpa County shares the Tibet Autonomous Region's southern border with most of western Nepal's Karnali and Dhaulagiri Zones with a border crossing into Mustang District leading through the former Lo Kingdom to its historic capital Lo Manthang.
Administration divisions
[edit]Zhongba County is divided into 1 town and 12 townships.
Name | Chinese | Hanyu Pinyin | Tibetan | Wylie | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Town | ||||||
Baryang Town (Paryang) |
帕羊镇 | Pàyáng zhèn | བར་ཡངས་གྲོང་རྡལ། | bar yangs grong rdal | ||
Townships | ||||||
Labrang Township (Drongpa) |
拉让乡 | Lāràng xiāng | ལ་བྲང་ཤང་། | la brang shang | ||
Qonkor Township | 琼果乡 | Qióngguǒ xiāng | ཆོས་འཁོར་ཤང་། | chos 'khor shang | ||
Yagra Township | 亚热乡 | Yàrè xiāng | ཡག་ར་ཤང་། | yag ra shang | ||
Bodoi Township | 布多乡 | Bùduō xiāng | སྤོ་སྟོད་ཤང་། | spo stod shang | ||
Penchi Township | 偏吉乡 | Piānjí xiāng | ཕན་ཕྱི་ཤང་། | phen phyi shang | ||
Nagqu Township | 纳久乡 | Nàjiǔ xiāng | ནག་ཆུ་ཤང་། | nag chu shang | ||
Gêla Township | 吉拉乡 | Jílā xiāng | སྐེད་ལ་ཤང་། | sked la shang | ||
Horpa Township | 霍尔巴乡 | Huò'ěrbā xiāng | ཧོར་པ་ཤང་། | hor pa shang | ||
Lunggar Township | 隆嘎尔乡 | Lónggā'ěr xiāng | ལུང་དཀར་ཤང་། | lung dkar shang | ||
Gyêma Township | 吉玛乡 | Jímǎ xiāng | སྐྱེ་མ་ཤང་། | skye ma shang | ||
Rintor Township | 仁多乡 | Rénduō xiāng | རི་འཐོར་ཤང་། | ri 'thor shang | ||
Barma Township (Pama) |
帕江乡 | Pàjiāng xiāng | བར་མ་ཤང་། | bar ma shang |
Maps
[edit]-
Map showing "Matsang" and the southern portion bordering Nepal (AMS, 1954)
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Map showing "Matsang" and the southern portion bordering Nepal (DMA, 1985)
Transport
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "日喀则市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报" (in Chinese). Government of Xigazê. 2021-07-20.
- ^ Tibet 2002: A Year Book, Tibet Information Network, London, p. 145.
- ^ Dorje, Footprint Tibet (2004), p. 334.
- ^ Jianglin Li (2022). When the Iron Bird Flies: China's Secret War in Tibet. Stanford University Press. p. 245. ISBN 978-1-5036-2979-0.
- ^ Dorje, Footprint Tibet (2004), p. 256.
- ^ Croddy, E. (2022). China’s Provinces and Populations: A Chronological and Geographical Survey. Springer International Publishing. p. 698. ISBN 978-3-031-09165-0. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
- ^ "Strong earthquake in Tibet leaves no casualties, but big crack". Xinhua News Agency. 2008-08-30. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
Bibliography
[edit]- Dorje, Gyurme (2004), Footprint Tibet Handbook with Bhutan (3rd ed.), Bath: Footprint Handbooks, ISBN 1-903471-30-3 – via archive.org