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- Wade-Giles romanization:
- Chiang-su
- Conventional:
- Kiangsu
News •
Jiangsu is rich in energy resources. In addition to coal, there is great potential for exploiting offshore petroleum and natural gas reserves in the Yellow Sea. Among nonmetallic minerals, rock salt is the most important, and the salt mines at Huai’an are among the most productive in China. In addition, there are large-scale mining operations exploiting marble, quartz, rock crystal, and potter’s clay. Metallic minerals include iron, copper, lead, and zinc.
Jiangsu has abundant water resources, being one of China’s rare water-rich provinces. Surface runoff is enormous, and a tremendous quantity of water transits the province annually through its myriad rivers, streams, and canals. Jiangsu also has vast reserves of groundwater beneath the surface of the plain.
Despite possessing a vast network of rivers and streams, the province has only limited hydroelectric-generating capacity because of its generally low relief. Most power is generated by thermal plants, although the first of several planned nuclear-power stations along the Yellow Sea coast went into commercial operation in 2006.
Manufacturing
Jiangsu is one of China’s major industrial centres, and it ranks near the top annually in industrial output among the provinces. The pillar industries are those manufacturing machinery, electronics, petrochemicals, textiles, foodstuffs, and building materials with the processing industry as a priority. Since the drive began in the 1980s to reform and open up the country, the province has benefited from considerable foreign investment. There are important development zones in a number of cities, including Changzhou, Nanjing, Nantong, Suzhou, Wuxi, and Yixing.
Nanjing is the most important heavy industrial centre of Jiangsu proper. Major industrial plants produce trucks and parts for motor vehicles, chemical fertilizers, and detergent raw materials. The Nanjing industrial area also produces steel, petrochemicals, electronics, machine tools, cameras, textiles, cement, and sundry building materials. Wuxi, near Shanghai, has become a major industrial centre with good inland waterway connections to all parts of the province. Modern manufactures include machine tools, agricultural and transportation equipment, cotton textiles, silk reeling, and food processing. Good deposits of iron and coal have been found at Xuzhou and are used in a local ironworks and steelworks.
Jiangsu has become one of the country’s major exporters. Goods formerly shipped through Shanghai are now handled through the provincial ports of Nantong, Zhangjiagang, and Lianyungang. Two of these ports are among those designated as “open” cities and encouraged to foster foreign trade and investment: Nantong, with its extensive deepwater frontage on the Yangtze, has developed its own economic and technical investment zone; and Lianyungang, as the eastern terminus of the Longhai Railway, is a key export outlet for the central and northwestern provinces along the rail line.
Transportation
Jiangsu is the communications hub of the eastern China region. A convenient water, land, and air network of transportation has been developed with Nanjing as its centre. Among the assets of the province is the dense water transport network. With more than 14,000 miles (22,500 km) of inland waterways, Jiangsu carries more than one-fourth of its goods by water. By contrast, its railroads carry only a tiny fraction of the province’s freight shipments. The completion in 1968 of the Yangtze rail and highway bridge at Nanjing made the city a key north-south and east-west communications hub. The Grand Canal, which is periodically redredged, continues to play an important role in north-south transport.
A network of express highways has been constructed rapidly in the province since the 1990s. Routes run southeastward from Nanjing through Suzhou to Shanghai and from there south to Hangzhou in Zhejiang province, forming the main road artery of the Lake Tai region. The highway from Nanjing also stretches westward to Hefei, the capital city of Anhui province. In addition to a second Nanjing Yangtze bridge completed in 2001 connecting the express highway to Hefei in Anhui province, construction of a bridge spanning the Yangtze River linking highways between Jiangyin and Jingjiang was completed in 1999, facilitating a continuous express highway northward from Wuxi through western Jiangsu and into Shandong province.
The airports at Nanjing, Suzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, Nantong, and Lianyungang are all part of the domestic air network. Nanjing is the hub of the province’s international air traffic.
Government and society
Jiangsu is divided into 13 prefecture-level municipalities (dijishi). The province also contains county-level municipalities (xianjishi) and counties (xian). The provincial capital, Nanjing, is the military regional headquarters for eastern China.
Jiangsu has a rich educational tradition, and the province has been a source for large numbers of noted scholars and intellectuals since ancient times. During the ages of imperial examinations, many candidates from Suzhou won the title of zhuangyuan (“number one scholar”), the title conferred on the one who took first place in the highest imperial court examination. Even in contemporary times, some one-fifth of the members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering were born in Jiangsu. There are dozens of institutions of higher learning in the province, and some of them (e.g., Nanjing University [founded 1902]) are among China’s top arts and science universities. In addition, Jiangsu boasts hundreds of institutions of scientific research, and its scientific and technical workforce forms the basis of one of the country’s premier centres of technology and research. The proportion of the provincial population with a primary level of education or higher is much higher than the national average. Since 1949 health care expanded greatly, so that it was available to most people. However, after health care became commercialized in the 1990s, some people (especially lower-paid workers) found it more difficult to get adequate services.
Cultural life
The cities of the province fall into two categories based on the standpoint of historical development—the ancient cities and the modern cities. Those in the first group date from ancient or medieval times and include Nanjing, Suzhou, Yangzhou, Zhenjiang, and Xuzhou. Several of them are well known in East Asian history, are rich in cultural heritage, and have a long tradition that has found artistic expression in Chinese traditional architecture, painting, sculpture, flower gardens, stone bridges, and world-renowned handicraft industries, such as silk embroidery and carving of various materials. These cities often possess historical monuments, famous temples, and local shrines and pailou (arches) honouring their illustrious citizens. Many cities have a rich folklore.
Nanjing, especially, abounds in national monuments and famous historical relics. The most renowned are the simple tombs of several Ming-dynasty emperors, now part of a UNESCO World Heritage site (first designated in 2000); the Confucius Temple (Fuzi Miao), originally erected in the 11th century and rebuilt numerous times; and the magnificent Sun Yat-sen (Sun Zhongshan) Mausoleum, at the foot of Zijin Hill. The gastronomic specialty of this ancient capital is the renowned Nanjing salted duck, made from ducks raised in nearby ponds and lakes. Other products from the Nanjing area include handwoven silk (zhijing), particularly cloud brocades, which use every conceivable shade of colour to portray the clouds of sky at sunset. In addition to the Nanjing handiworks, many of the arts and crafts products produced in other Jiangsu cities are world-renowned, including embroidery from Suzhou, clay teapots from Yixing, laquerwork from Yangzhou, and clay figurines from Wuxi. In addition, Jiangsu is the birthplace of kunqu, an elegant and artistic Chinese dramatic form whose system of performance had a major influence on the development of jingxi (Peking opera).
Jiangsu—with its high concentration of hill and water landscapes, gardens, scenic historic sites, and cities of cultural interest—has become a major tourist mecca, and tourism has become increasingly important to the provincial economy. Although Nanjing is the province’s main cultural centre, Suzhou also boasts many historic sites and is home to scores of classic landscape gardens, a number of which collectively were designated a World Heritage site in 1997 (extended in 2000). Also attracting large numbers of tourists annually are the world-renowned natural scenery of Lake Tai, the Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum, the Ming Tombs and the Temple of Confucius at Nanjing, the Slender West Lake (Shou Xihu) area of Yangzhou, and the tomb at Xuzhou associated with the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) containing a collection of terra-cotta warriors.