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Qüxü County

Coordinates: 29°21′11″N 90°44′38″E / 29.353°N 90.744°E / 29.353; 90.744
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Qüxü
曲水县ཆུ་ཤུར་རྫོང་།
Chushur, Chushul, Qushui
Yarlung Tsangpo ferry near Qüxü 1939
Yarlung Tsangpo ferry near Qüxü 1939
Location of Qüxü County (red) within Lhasa City (yellow) and the Tibet Autonomous Region
Location of Qüxü County (red) within Lhasa City (yellow) and the Tibet Autonomous Region
Qüxü is located in Tibet
Qüxü
Qüxü
Location in Tibet Autonomous Region
Qüxü is located in China
Qüxü
Qüxü
Qüxü (China)
Coordinates (Qüxü government): 29°21′11″N 90°44′38″E / 29.353°N 90.744°E / 29.353; 90.744
CountryChina
RegionTibet
Prefecture-level cityLhasa
County seatQüxü
Area
 • Total
1,624 km2 (627 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[1]
 • Total
41,851
 • Density26/km2 (67/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Websitewww.qushuixian.gov.cn
Qüxü County
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese曲水县
Traditional Chinese曲水縣
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQūshuǐ Xiàn
Tibetan name
Tibetanཆུ་ཤུར་རྫོང་།
Transcriptions
Wyliechu shur rdzong
Tibetan PinyinQüxü Zong
Sketch map

Qüxü County is a county in the Lhasa southwest of the main center of Chengguan, Tibet, China. It is mountainous in the northwest, flatter near the Lhasa River, which runs through the east of the county, and the Yarlung Tsangpo—forming the southern border. The population as of 2000 was 29,690, mostly engaged in agriculture or animal husbandry. The county is home to the Nyethang Drolma Lhakhang Temple.

Geography

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In the Tibetan language, the name means "water ditch."[2] Qüxü County has a total area of 1,680 square kilometres (650 sq mi), with an average elevation of 3,650 metres (11,980 ft).[3] The county is in the Yarlung Tsangpo valley, and is mostly relatively flat, but rises to the Nyainqêntanglha Mountains in the north. The Lhasa River runs south through the eastern part of the county to its confluence with the Yarlung Tsangpo River, which forms the southern boundary of the county. The lowest elevation is 3,500 meters, and the highest summit elevation is 5894 meters.[2]

Qüxü County has a temperate semi-arid plateau monsoon climate zone with 3,000 hours of annual sunshine hours on average and 150 days a year without frost. Annual precipitation is 441.9 millimeters (17.40 in). Natural disasters such as flash floods, landslides, drought, sandstorms, pests and diseases are common.[2] Mineral resources found in the area include mainly corundum, limestone, granite, peat and so on. Wild animals include Himalayan blue sheep, pheasants, deer, leopard and brown bear. Medicinal plants include Chinese caterpillar fungus, Fritillaria and Codonopsis.[4]

Administrative divisions

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Qüxü County includes 2 towns and 4 townships:[5]

Name Tibetan Wylie Chinese Pinyin
Towns
Qüxü Town ཆུ་ཤུར་ཆོས་འཁོར། chu shur grong rdal 曲水镇 Qūshuǐ Zhèn
Dagar Town རྟ་དཀར་ཆོས་འཁོར། rta dkar grong rdal 达嘎镇 Dágā Zhèn
Townships
Caina Township ཚལ་སྣ་ཤང་། tshal sne shang 才纳乡 Cáinà Xiāng
Nam Township གནམ་ཤང་། gnam shang 南木乡 Nánmù Xiāng
Nyêtang Township མཉེས་ཐང་ཤང་། mnyes thang shang 聂当乡 Nièdāng Xiāng
Carbanang Township མཚར་པ་ནང་ཤང་། tsha rags shang 茶巴拉乡 Chábālā Xiāng

Demographics

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The fifth census in 2000 recorded a population of 29,690 as follows—Qüxü Town 7,406, Nyêtang Township 4,103, Carbanang Township 3,831, Caina Township 4,400, Nam Township 2,909 and Dagar Township 7,041. The total labor force was 15,640 of whom 7,948 were male and 7,692 female.[2] The county seat has been growing fast, and had 5,000 people by 2002.[3] The Fourth Jamgon Kongtrul was born in the county in 1995.

Infrastructure

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As of 2002 , there was one County Middle School, and 18 primary schools. 98% of the population receive radio coverage and 94% has television access.[3] There are fourteen small hydropower stations in Qüxü County with a total installed capacity of 1780 kilowatts, creating an annual four million kW·h of electricity.[3] China National Highway 318 runs through the county from Lhasa towards the west. Bridges span the Lhasa River and the Yarlung Tsangpo River.[4] The county is also home to a prison.

Economy

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Qüxü County is semi-agricultural and crops grown are mainly highland barley, winter wheat, spring wheat, peas and rapeseed. Apples and walnuts are also produced. Animal husbandry is also strong, with the main animals farmed including yak, cattle, goats, sheep, horses, donkeys, pigs, and chickens.[4] As of 2002, the per capita net income of farmers and herdsmen was 1,960 yuan.[3] The county has been rapidly developing organic farming of snow peach, tobacco, tulips, chrysanthemum and saffron. Farm products have been sold in other parts of China under the "Lhasa Pure" brand. They include barley, barley wine, barley tea, yak milk, Tibetan Chicken, Rhodiola, Cordyceps, Maca and glacier water.[6]

In Junba village (俊巴渔村) about 70% of the households manufacture small leather items in traditional styles for sale to domestic and foreign tourists.[7] Other women in the county are engaged in hand-weaving, preserving traditional styles, although as of 2015 working conditions were poor.[8] Construction of a 2,100 square metres (23,000 sq ft) industrial park in Qüxü for small and medium enterprises began in September 2014, with completion expected in June 2015.[9] Other enterprises include a factory for farm tools, and a grain and oil processing plant.[4]

The Nyethang Drolma Lhakhang Temple is located in Qüxü County. The temple is said to have been founded in 1055 by Dromtön, a pupil of Atiśa. It is small, but has a unique architecture and many interesting statues. There are relics dating back to the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). It is operated by monks of the Gelug sect.[10]

References

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  1. ^ "关于发布拉萨市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报" (in Chinese). Government of Lhasa. 2021-06-10.
  2. ^ a b c d Lhasa Qushui Introduction, CGN.
  3. ^ a b c d e Booming Lhasa Qushui, CCTV.
  4. ^ a b c d Lhasa Qushui Introduction, Lhasa Tourism.
  5. ^ 2022年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码 (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China.
  6. ^ Li 2014.
  7. ^ Liu 2014.
  8. ^ Miao 2015.
  9. ^ Qushui SME incubator industrial park ... 2014.
  10. ^ Qushui & Duilongdeqing County.

Sources

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