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When is the Zhili Governor-General's Office (Prefecture) in Tianjin and when in Baoding?

In the eighth year of the reign of Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1669), the governor of Zhili was moved from Zhengding to Baoding, and Baoding became the capital of Zhili Province. In the second year of Yongzheng's reign (1724), the governor of Zhili was changed to the governor of Zhili. The governor's office was located in the northwest corner of Baoding City, which was the former site of the General Military Office of the Ming Dynasty. The place was narrow. At the beginning of the seventh year of Yongzheng's reign (1729), Qintian Supervisor Zhengmingtu and Household Department Director Guan Zhining followed Yongzheng's special order to select the site for the Governor-General's Office in Zhili. They selected the city's general (formerly Daning Dusi) to build the office. As the new site of the Governor's Office, after petitioning Yongzheng for approval, Prince Yi Yunxiang ordered Yang Kun, the acting governor of Zhili, to prepare for the construction, and construction started in April of that year. Tang Zhiyu, the seventh governor of Zhili, continued to supervise the construction after taking office in June. The construction was completed at the end of November of the same year and moved into the new building in the first month of the eighth year of Yongzheng (1730). By the end of the Qing Dynasty in the third year of Xuantong (1911), the Zhili governor stationed here had 59 people (including acting or nursing governors), totaling 66 terms (including two or three terms), which lasted for 182 years. The military and political hub of the province. Zhili Province once governed Shuntian (governed today's Beijing), Yongping (governed today's Lulong), Baoding, Zhengding, Hejian, Shunde (governed today's Xingtai), Guangping (governed today's Yongnian), Daming, Chengde, Xuanhua, Tianjin has 11 prefectures (including 18 prefectures and 104 counties), 3 prefectures (Zhangjiakou, Dushikou, Duolunuoer Hall) and 6 prefectures (including 17 counties) of Zunhua, Yi, Ji, Zhao, Shen and Ding in Zhili. The jurisdiction covers Hebei Province, Beijing City, Tianjin City, and some counties and banners in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Liaoning, Henan, and Shandong. In 1913, the provincial capital was moved to Tianjin. In September 1916, the former Zhili Governor-General's Office was renamed the Zhili Governor-General's Office. On March 26, 1918, it was changed to the Sichuan, Guangdong, Hunan and Jiangxi Economic and Strategic Mission. In August 1920, it was changed to the inspection mission of Lu and Henan. The Zhi-Wan War in 1920 and the first Zhi-Feng War in 1922 were also planned here. In October 1923, after Cao Kun was appointed president of the Beiyang warlord government, he served as the government office for the Zhizhi, Fengcheng and Shanxi warlords. At the beginning of 1933, it was changed to Baoding camp. In June 1935, the provincial capital returned to Baoding from Tianjin, and the Hebei Provincial Government is still stationed here. In 1939, the Japanese and puppet Hebei Provincial Government moved from Tianjin to Bao, and also used this as its headquarters. In August 1945, after Japan surrendered, the puppet Hebei Provincial Government was dissolved. In September of the same year, the Kuomintang Army's Eleventh Theater Command Headquarters was stationed here. On June 14, 1946, the Kuomintang Hebei Provincial Government moved from Peiping to Baoding and was stationed here (the Eleventh War Zone Commander's Headquarters was changed to the Baoding Appeasement Office and moved to Fuqian Street, today's city). In November 1947, after the Hebei Provincial Government moved to Peiping, the Kuomintang Army Baoding Garrison Headquarters moved here via West Street. In November 1948, after the liberation of Baoding, the Jizhong Administrative Office moved here. In August 1949, the Hebei Provincial People's Government was established, and this is the seat of the Hebei Provincial People's Government. Since then, the Baoding Commissioner's Office and the Baoding Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China have successively worked here. In 1990, the Baoding Municipal Party Committee moved out and it was turned into a museum. In 1988, it was designated as a national key cultural relic protection unit by the State Council.

The Governor-General's Office of Zhili 6 has been in Baoding. Later, in 1902, it was because of Yuan Shikai that it was nominally moved to Tianjin because it was convenient to negotiate with foreigners