Jiangnan Province
Jiangnan, formerly romanized as Kiangnan, was a historical province of the early Qing dynasty of China. Its capital was Jiangning (now Nanjing), from which it is sometimes known as Nanjing or Nanking Province. Established in 1645 during the Qing conquest of Ming, it administered the area of the earlier Ming province of Nanzhili, reaching from north of the Huai River—at the time the course of the Yellow River—to south of the Yangtze River in East China. Its territory was later divided into the separate provinces of Jiangsu and Anhui during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1736–1795), although the exact timing is disputed. (The earliest it could have happened was 1667.) Under the Republic and People's Republic of China, an area of Jiangsu also became the provincial-level municipality of Shanghai.
Jiangnan Province | |||||||||
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Nanking sive Kiangnan ("Nanjing or Jiangnan"), the 9th provincial map of the Chinese Empire in Martino Martini and Joan Blaeu's 1655 Novus Atlas Sinensis ("New Chinese Atlas"). | |||||||||
Jiangnan Province | |||||||||
Chinese | 江南省 | ||||||||
Literal meaning | Province South of the [Yangtze] River | ||||||||
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Nanjing Province | |||||||||
Chinese | 南京省 | ||||||||
Literal meaning | Province of the [Former] Southern Capital | ||||||||
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