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How many districts and counties are there in Liaoyang?

Liaoyang City has Liaoyang County 1 county, Baita District, Wensheng District, Hongwei District, Gongchangling District and taizihe district, and dengta city 1 city.

Liaoyang, located in the northeast of China and the middle of Liaoning Province, is the sub-central city of Shenyang Economic Zone. China, a modern industrial city with petrochemical industry as the main body and one of the central cities in south-central Liaoning approved by the State Council, is an emerging modern petrochemical textile industrial base, an excellent tourist city in China, a national historical and cultural city and one of the earliest cities in Northeast China.

Ethnicity

As far back as the Neolithic Age, there were traces of human activities in Xiaotun and Anping along the Taizi River in Liaoyang. At the end of Yin Dynasty and the beginning of Zhou Dynasty (BC 1 1 century), 5000 adherents of Yin came to Liaodong, which is the earliest known record that Zhongyuan people moved to the present Liaohe River basin. Later, Zhou named Liaodong as the post-country of Ji's surname, which was called Ji's Korea in history.

At the end of the Warring States period, Yan established Liaodong County east of Liaohe River, and the Han people in the Central Plains either stationed troops or engaged in commercial farming and began to migrate to Liaodong. At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, a war broke out in the Central Plains. Now many Han Chinese in Hebei, Shandong, Henan and other places have taken refuge in Liaodong and Xiangping, and the population has greatly increased.

At the beginning of the fifth century (404), Koguryo occupied Liaodong, and a large number of Koguryo people moved to Liaoyang, which has a multi-ethnic population. During Liao and Jin Dynasties, Liaoyang was one of the capital cities, which was ruled for 300 years, creating conditions for a large number of Khitans and jurchen to move to Liaoyang. In the Yuan Dynasty, a large number of Mongolians also became an important part of Liaoyang residents.

At the end of the Ming Dynasty, Nuzhen aristocrat Nurhachi led an army to capture Liaoyang, and the soldiers and civilians stationed in Liaoyang fled in large numbers. The Qing court adopted the method of stationing troops and recruiting people to settle down, and immigrated to Liaoyang in large numbers from the Nuzhen nationality (renamed Manchuria in 1635) and Shandong, Shanxi, Henan and other places, which laid the foundation for the ecological reproduction of Liaoyang population for nearly 370 years from the early Qing Dynasty to the present.

Liaoyang Municipal People's Government-Administrative Division