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This article is part of the series: |
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Municipalities Provinces Autonomous regions Special administrative regions |
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Sub-provincial level
Sub-provincial cities Sub-provincial autonomous prefectures Sub-provincial city districts |
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Prefectures Prefecture-level cities Autonomous prefectures Leagues |
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Sub-prefecture-level
Sub-prefectural cities |
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Counties Autonomous counties County-level cities City districts Banners Autonomous banners Forestry areas Special districts |
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Townships Ethnic townships Towns Subdistricts Sumus Ethnic sumus District public offices (abolishing) |
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Village Committees Neighborhood Committees |
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History of the political divisions of China |
A sub-provincial divisions (simplified Chinese: 副省级行政区; traditional Chinese: 副省級行政區; pinyin: fùshĕngjí chéngshì) (or deputy-provincial divisions) in the People's Republic of China, is like a prefecture-level city that is governed by a province, but is administered independently in regard to economy and law.
Sub-provincial divisions, similar to prefectural-level divisions, an administrative unit comprising, typically, a main central urban area, and its much larger surrounding rural area containing many smaller cities, towns and villages.
The mayor or chairman of a sub-provincial division is equal in status to a vice-governor of a province. Its status is below that of municipalities, which are independent and equivalent to provinces, but above other, regular prefecture-level divisions, which are completely ruled by their provinces. However, they are marked as same as other provincial capitals (or prefecture-level city if not provincial capital) in almost all maps.
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The original 16 cities were renamed as sub-provincial cities on 25 February 1994 by the Central Organization Committee out of prefecture-level cities. They are mostly the capitals of the provinces in which they are located.
Currently, there are 15 sub-provincial cities:[1]
Chongqing was formerly a sub-provincial city of Sichuan until 1997, when it was made a municipality by splitting it out of Sichuan altogether. Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps also has the powers of a sub-provincial city.
Guangzhou, Harbin and Chengdu are the largest sub-provincial cities; each has a population exceeding that of the independent municipality of Tianjin while, both Harbin and Chengdu have a bigger area then Tianjin.
Additionally, the head of Pudong New Area of Shanghai and Binhai New Area of Tianjin, which is a county-level district, is given sub-provincial powers.
| Division name | Hanzi (S) | Hanyu Pinyin | Municipality | Symbol | Region | Population (2010 Census) | Date of designation | Subdivision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Binhai New Area | 滨海新区 | Bīnhǎi Xīn Qū | Tianjin | 滨 | North | 2,482,065 | 2009 | 19 Subdistricts & 7 towns (11 special township-level zones) |
| Pudong New Area | 浦东新区 | Pǔdōng Xīn Qū | Shanghai | 浦 | East | 5,044,430 | 1992 | 13 Subdistricts & 25 towns (6 special township-level zones) |
| Division name | Hanzi (S) | Hanyu Pinyin | Province | Symbol | Region | Population (2010 Census) | Date of designation | Subdivision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture | 伊犁哈萨克自治州 | Yīlí Hāsàkè Zìzhìzhōu | Xinjiang | 伊犁 | Northwest | 4,305,119 | 1979 | (2 prefectures) 5 county cities, 17 counties & 2 autonomous counties |
The National Standing Committee of Sub-provincial Municipal People's Congresses' Chairmen Joint Conference (全国副省级城市人大常委会主任联席会议) are attended by the chairpersons and vice-chairpersons of all sub-provincial cities. It was proposed by the Guangzhou Municipal People's Congress in 1985. The conferences:
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