Jonê County
Jonê County
卓尼县 · ཅོ་ནེ་རྫོང་། Zhuoni, Cone, Chone, Choni | |
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Coordinates: 34°35′N 103°30′E / 34.583°N 103.500°E | |
Country | China |
Province | Gansu |
Autonomous prefecture | Gannan |
County seat | Liulin |
Area | |
• Total | 5,419.68 km2 (2,092.55 sq mi) |
Population (2020)[1] | |
• Total | 95,387 |
• Density | 18/km2 (46/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Postal code | 747600 |
Website | www |
Jonê County | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 卓尼县 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 卓尼縣 | ||||||
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Tibetan name | |||||||
Tibetan | ཅོ་ནེ་རྫོང་། | ||||||
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Jonê County (also Cone, Chone, Choni; Tibetan: ཅོ་ནེ་རྫོང་།, Wylie: co-ne rdzong, ZYPY: Jonê Zong; local pronunciation: /tɕɔLnɛ/[4]; Chinese: 卓尼县; pinyin: Zhuōní Xiàn) is a county in the Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu Province, China. Its postal code is 747600. Its area is 4,954 km2 (1,913 sq mi), and its population is over 100,000 people. It is administered from Liulin.[2]
Description
[edit]The county covers both banks of the middle section of the Lu-chu. The country town and adjacent Jonê Monastery are on the north bank. The side valleys on the southern side used to be branches of the ancient kingdom of Jonê.[2]
Historical Tibetan Jonê Kingdom
[edit]Among Tibetan at Amdo, Jonê exist the Jonê Kingdom (Tibetan: ཅོ་ནེ་དཔོན་པོ, Wylie: co-ne-dpon-po,[3] Chinese: 卓尼土司; pinyin: Zhuóní Tǔsī), ruled by the Tibetan Ga clan or Mandarin Chinese Yang (杨) clan, was a Tusi chiefdom kingdom called Zhouni Kingdom, Choni Kingdom, or Jonê Kingdom ruled by the Gatsang (dga' tshang) family at Tibet. In 1404, whereupon they informed the Ming Emperor Yongle of this fact and were recognized as local rulers, and were given a seal of authority and the surname Yang (杨). The Yangs ruled Jonê from 1404 until 1949.[4][5]
List of Kings of Jonê
[edit]There are list kings of Jonê Kingdom:[6][7][8]
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཤིས་བསྡུས།
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བཙན་པོ།
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བཀྲ་ཤིས།
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་དགའ་སྐྱེད།
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་དབང་ཕྱུག named 杨洪; Yáng Hóng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཡང་དྲིན། named 杨臻; Yáng Zhēn
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཡང་ཚེ་མེས། named 杨葵明; Yáng Kuímíng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཡང་གོ་ལུང་། named 杨国龙; Yáng Guólóng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཚེ་དབང་དོན་གྲུབ། named 杨朝梁; Yáng Cháoliáng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བློ་བཟང་དོན་གྲུབ། named 杨威; Yáng Wēi
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་མང་སྲོལ་མགོན་པོ། named 杨汝松; Yáng Rǔsōng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་ནོར་བུ། named 杨冲霄; Yáng Chōngxiāo
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བསོད་ནམས་ཆོས་འཕེལ། named 杨昭; Yáng Zhāo
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བསྟན་སྲུང་ཚེ་རིང་། named 杨声; Yáng Shēng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བསྟན་འཛིན་རིན་ཆེན་ཆོས་སྐྱབས། named 杨宗业; Yáng Zōngyè
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཆོས་སྐྱབས་འགྱུར་མེད་རྡོ་རྗེ། named 杨宗基; Yáng Zōngjī
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་རིན་ཆེན་བསྟན་འཛིན་འཕྲིན་ལས་རྡོ་རྗེ། named 杨元; Yáng Yuán
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཚེ་དབང་བསོད་ནམས་རྡོ་རྗེ། named 杨作霖; Yáng Zuòlín
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་བློ་བཟང་བསྟན་འཛིན་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་རྡོ་རྗེ། named 杨积庆; Yáng Jīqìng
- ཅོ་ནེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་པད་མ་དབང་ཕྱུག named 杨复兴; Yáng Fùxīng
History
[edit]- "There are traditions of Tibetan soldiers left behind [after the late 10th century] at several border outposts, such as Jonê, where they established viable settlements, and of the remaining Tibetan conscript troops, called the Wun Mo, carving out considerable territory for themselves until they were perhaps absorbed into that amalgam of people of Tibetan stock, which came to form the Hsi Hsia Kingdom (982—1224)."[9]
Jonê was part of a separate kingdom formed, according to legend, after its invasion by warriors who migrated across the mountains from Sichuan conquering the local tribes in 1404. The contemporary descendants of the Jonê royal line claim that their line is Tibetan, and that their ancestors migrated from central Tibet through Sichuan.
The Yongle Emperor (May 2, 1360 – August 12, 1424) named one of these invading warriors hereditary chief (tusi) called Zhouni Tusi (卓尼土司), bestowing the family name of "Yang" ("杨") and an imperial seal upon his line. The Jonê king (co-ne rgyal-po) established a palace on the north bank of the Tao River. The family holding the Yang seal continued to rule over 48 Tibetan clans in Jonê as an autonomous kingdom from the early 15th century for 23 generations, until 1928, when it was placed under the control of the Lanzhou government.[10] In the late Qing Dynasty and Republican Period, many nomadic regions had considerable de facto independence,[11] despite the claims and perspective of the Chinese rulers.[4]
Among the six monasteries in the county, all of them Tibetan Geluk establishments, is the great Jonê Monastery.[2]
The American botanist Joseph Rock spent almost 2 years in Jonê ("Choni", in his spelling) in 1925–26. He resided in the compound of the local chief (the 19th-generation tusi Yang Jiqing (杨积庆)[12][13]), making it the base for his exploration of southern Gansu and eastern Qinghai. His account of the culture of this "almost unknown Tibetan principality", as he described it, illustrated with color photographs, was published in the National Geographic.[14][15][16]
As of 2012, Jonê was apparently closed to foreign visitors.[14]
Administrative divisions
[edit]Jonê County is divided to 11 towns, 3 townships and 1 ethnic township.[17]
Name | Simplified Chinese | Hanyu Pinyin | Tibetan | Wylie | Administrative division code | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Towns | ||||||
Liulin Town (Jangcai) |
柳林镇 | Liǔlín Zhèn | ལྕང་ཚལ་གྲོང་རྡལ། | lcang tshal grong rdal | 623022100 | |
Maru Town (Mu'er) |
木耳镇 | Mù'ěr Zhèn | མ་རུ་གྲོང་རྡལ། | ma ru grong rdal | 623022101 | |
Chagkoglung Town (Chakunglung, Zhagulu) |
扎古录镇 | Zhāgǔlù Zhèn | བྲག་ཁོག་ལུང་གྲོང་རྡལ། | brag khog lung grong rdal | 623022102 | |
Karqên Town (Ka'erqin) |
喀尔钦镇 | Kā'ěrqīn Zhèn | མཁར་ཆེན་གྲོང་རྡལ། | mkhar chen grong rdal | 623022103 | |
Zangbawa Town | 藏巴哇镇 | Zàngbāwā Zhèn | གཙང་པ་བ་གྲོང་རྡལ། | gtsang pa ba grong rdal | 623022104 | |
Nalung Town (Nalang) |
纳浪镇 | Nàlàng Zhèn | གནའ་ལུང་གྲོང་རྡལ། | gna' lung grong rdal | 623022105 | |
Taoyan Town (Lawoxi) |
洮砚镇 | Táoyàn Zhèn | གླ་བོ་གཤིས་གྲོང་རྡལ། | gla bo gshis grong rdal | 623022106 | |
Asigtang Town (Azitang) |
阿子滩镇 | Āzǐtān Zhèn | ཨ་གཟིགས་ཐང་གྲོང་རྡལ། | a gzigs thang grong rdal | 623022107 | |
Xincang Town (Shencang, Shenzang) |
申藏镇 | Shēncáng Zhèn | གཤིན་ཚང་གྲོང་རྡལ། | gshin tshang grong rdal | 623022108 | |
Wamar Town (Wanmao) |
完冒镇 | Wánmào Zhèn | ཝ་དམར་གྲོང་རྡལ། | wa dmar grong rdal | 623022109 | |
Nyinba Town (Niba) |
尼巴镇 | Níbā Zhèn | ཉིན་པ་གྲོང་རྡལ། | nyin pa grong rdal | 623022110 | |
Townships | ||||||
Dokog Township (Daogao) |
刀告乡 | Dāogào Xiāng | མདོ་ཁོག་ཤང་། | mdo khog shang | 623022202 | |
Kyagê Township (Qiagai) |
恰盖乡 | Qiàgài Xiāng | ཁྱ་དགེ་ཤང་། | khya dge shang | 623022207 | |
Kangtog Township (Kangduo) |
康多乡 | Kāngduō Xiāng | ཁང་ཐོག་ཤང་། | khang thog shang | 623022208 | |
Ethnic township | ||||||
Xowa Tu Ethnic Township (Shaowa) |
杓哇土族乡 | Biāowā Tǔzú Xiāng | ཤོ་བ་ཧོར་རིགས་ཤང་། | sho ba hor-rigs shang | 623022209 |
Climate
[edit]Climate data for Jonê, elevation 2,592 m (8,504 ft), (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1981–2010) | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 19.1 (66.4) |
22.2 (72.0) |
26.5 (79.7) |
32.1 (89.8) |
29.2 (84.6) |
29.7 (85.5) |
33.5 (92.3) |
31.0 (87.8) |
29.0 (84.2) |
23.6 (74.5) |
20.1 (68.2) |
16.5 (61.7) |
33.5 (92.3) |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 3.7 (38.7) |
6.3 (43.3) |
10.4 (50.7) |
15.0 (59.0) |
17.9 (64.2) |
20.7 (69.3) |
22.8 (73.0) |
22.5 (72.5) |
18.4 (65.1) |
13.6 (56.5) |
9.7 (49.5) |
5.4 (41.7) |
13.9 (57.0) |
Daily mean °C (°F) | −6.1 (21.0) |
−2.5 (27.5) |
2.0 (35.6) |
6.8 (44.2) |
10.4 (50.7) |
13.6 (56.5) |
15.9 (60.6) |
15.3 (59.5) |
11.7 (53.1) |
6.4 (43.5) |
0.5 (32.9) |
−4.7 (23.5) |
5.8 (42.4) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | −13 (9) |
−9.0 (15.8) |
−4.0 (24.8) |
0.5 (32.9) |
4.5 (40.1) |
8.0 (46.4) |
10.6 (51.1) |
10.2 (50.4) |
7.3 (45.1) |
1.9 (35.4) |
−5.3 (22.5) |
−11.5 (11.3) |
0.0 (32.1) |
Record low °C (°F) | −23.3 (−9.9) |
−20.4 (−4.7) |
−18.3 (−0.9) |
−8.6 (16.5) |
−6.1 (21.0) |
0.7 (33.3) |
2.2 (36.0) |
1.6 (34.9) |
−3.7 (25.3) |
−8.8 (16.2) |
−16.2 (2.8) |
−21.8 (−7.2) |
−23.3 (−9.9) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 4.9 (0.19) |
6.1 (0.24) |
17.7 (0.70) |
40.1 (1.58) |
82.1 (3.23) |
77.0 (3.03) |
101.8 (4.01) |
86.2 (3.39) |
73.3 (2.89) |
46.7 (1.84) |
7.0 (0.28) |
2.1 (0.08) |
545 (21.46) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) | 5.9 | 7.0 | 10.3 | 11.8 | 16.1 | 16.5 | 15.6 | 14.7 | 15.3 | 13.4 | 5.0 | 3.3 | 134.9 |
Average snowy days | 10.3 | 10.8 | 13.1 | 7.6 | 1.8 | 0.1 | 0 | 0 | 0.2 | 4.6 | 7.5 | 6.6 | 62.6 |
Average relative humidity (%) | 53 | 54 | 58 | 60 | 64 | 69 | 72 | 73 | 75 | 72 | 62 | 54 | 64 |
Mean monthly sunshine hours | 200.7 | 183.8 | 202.7 | 210.9 | 213.6 | 199.9 | 216.9 | 208.0 | 158.7 | 167.5 | 192.6 | 205.9 | 2,361.2 |
Percent possible sunshine | 64 | 59 | 54 | 53 | 49 | 46 | 50 | 51 | 43 | 49 | 63 | 68 | 54 |
Source: China Meteorological Administration[18][19] |
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ "甘南州第七次全国人口普查公报" (in Chinese). Government of Gannan Prefecture. 2021-05-27. Archived from the original on 2021-10-08. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
- ^ a b c Dorje (2009), p. 812.
- ^ 陈观胜 [Chen Guansheng]; 安才旦 [An Caidan] (2004). 《汉英藏对照常见藏语人名地名词典》 [Dictionary of Common Tibetan Personal and Place Names]. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press. p. 376. ISBN 7-119-03497-9.
- ^ a b Tibetan Historical Polities: [1] Archived 2017-02-05 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 19 Aug 2017
- ^ Tibetan, Jone in China: [2], retrieved 19 Aug 2017
- ^ Buddhist Digital Resource Center: [3], retrieved 19 Aug 2017
- ^ http://www.zhuoni.gov.cn/info/1149/4595.htm, retrieved 21 July 2022
- ^ http://places.kmaps.virginia.edu/features/24353/descriptions/81, retrieved 21 July 2022
- ^ Snellgrove & Richardson (1995), p. 111.
- ^ Cabot (2003, pp. 157-158.
- ^ Ekvall (1939).
- ^ "www.tibetcul.com". www.tibetcul.com. Retrieved 21 July 2022.[title missing]
- ^ https://www.sohu.com/a/428503229_120068472, retrieved 21 July 2022 ("Following the footsteps of the Austrian explorer of 80 years' ago in Jonê and Tewo; entering the mysterious Shambala world recorded by the botanist Rock"), 2012-12-17
- ^ a b Michael Woodhead, In the footsteps of Joseph Rock. Chapter 10, "Seeking the Mountains of Mystery: Travels to Choni and Amnye Machen[permanent dead link ]".
- ^ Joseph Rock, "Life among the Lamas of Choni: Describing the Mystery Plays and Butter Festival in the Monastery of an Almost Unknown Tibetan Principality in Kansu Province, China". National Geographic, (1928): 569-619
- ^ "A Righteous and Enlightened Chief". charmingbeijing.com. 9 November 2016. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
- ^ "2022年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码:卓尼县" (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of China.
- ^ 中国气象数据网 – WeatherBk Data (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
- ^ 中国气象数据网 (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
References
[edit]- Cabot, Mabel H. (2003). Vanished Kingdoms: A Woman Explorer in Tibet, China & Mongolia, 1921-1925, pp. 148–157. Aperture Publishers in association with the Peabody Museum, Harvard. ISBN 978-1-931788-18-2.
- Dorje, Gyurme (2009). Footprint Tibet Handbook. Footprint Publications, Bath, England. ISBN 978-1-906098-32-2.
- Ekvall, Robert B. (1939). "Cultural Relations on the Kansu-Tibetan Border", University of Chicago.
- China County & City Population 1999 FAQ