Ya’an
China
Ya'an
Ya’an, Wade-Giles romanization Ya-an, city, west-central Sichuan sheng (province), southwestern China. It is situated in the mountainous western fringe of the Sichuan Basin on the Qingyi River, about 80 miles (130 km) southwest of Chengdu, the provincial capital. The city is a communications centre near the crossing of two main routes—one running west to Kangding and to the Tibet Autonomous Region and another running north-south from Chengdu to the southwest. Averaging more than 200 days of precipitation per year, Ya’an has earned the nickname “The Raining Town.”
It was established as the seat of a county under the Qin (221–206 bce) and Han (206 bce–220 ce) dynasties and later was abandoned to the Mongols. Retaken by the Chinese in the late 5th century, it became in 604 the seat of Ya prefecture, whence it derived its modern name. It was, however, little more than a frontier garrison protecting the western approaches to Sichuan from Tibet. Known as Yazhou, or Ya’an prefecture, throughout Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1911/12) times, it became the county of Ya’an in 1912. In 1939 it was placed in the new province of Xikang. Under communist rule it replaced Kangding in 1951 as capital of Xikang, but, when the latter province was abolished in 1955, it again became part of Sichuan. Ya’an was only moderately damaged during a severe earthquake that struck Sichuan in May 2008, although more than two dozen people were killed in the area and some 1,350 injured.
The city is a traditional market for the tea grown in quantity in the surrounding agricultural area; this tea is cured and prepared in the city. Ya’an is also a market for trade in medicinal herbs and animal products. From nearby Daofu, iron ore of high quality is shipped to the industrial city of Chongqing. Ya’an has small-scale iron manufacture, using local anthracite for fuel. The city also has tanneries, mica and asbestos plants, and small engineering works producing farm tools and repairing and maintaining automobiles and machinery. The plentiful water resources of the Qingyi and (farther west) Dadu rivers have been harnessed by hydroelectric power stations constructed in the area, thus further promoting the local economy.
The area west of Ya’an (and under its administration) in the Qionglai Mountains contains several of the giant panda sanctuaries that collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2006. Sichuan Agricultural University was founded in Chengdu in 1906 and moved to Ya’an in 1956. Pop. (2002 est.) 133,263.
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