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Simple Map of China

Discontinued Names, Taiwan Detail

It is a pet peeve of mine that most textbooks use geographical terms that are not found on the maps they provide. This site contains very simple outline maps of China and Taiwan with the official names of Chinese provinces and of Taiwan counties.

If you would like to print out a reference copy of either map, click on it to get a page with the map alone.

The map on this page covers most of China. The abbreviations used are official and represent province, "autonomous region," and municipality names. In a very small number of cases, the official spellings are not simply toneless Pinyin, so real Pinyin is given separately with the Chinese characters. "Obsolete Postal" spellings are those used for roughly a century before Pinyin was fully universalized. They continue to be used in Taiwan and by a few elderly authors elsewhere. A separate table at the end lists names of provinces that have been absorbed into other units.

It may seem an inconvenience to have the map itself labeled with the abbreviations rather than the full names, but it allows the map to do double-service as a learning device. After you have become initially familiar with these names, you can use the map to test yourself on their locations, which turns out to be a very effective way to connect the arbitrary names with specific areas.

Click on the map to toggle major rivers on and off. Click here for a larger copy of the map.

map
Abbr.Official
Spelling
ChineseObsolete Postal Spelling
Northwestern China
GS Gansu Gānsù 甘肃 Kansu
NX Ningxia Níngxià 宁夏 Ninghsia
QH Qinghai Qīnghăi 青海 Kokonor
SN Shaanxi Shănxī 陕西 Shensi
XJ Xinjiang Xīnjiāng 新疆 Sinkiang
Northeastern China
HL Heilongjiang* Hēilóngjiāng 黑龙江 Heilungkiang
JL Jilin Jílín 吉林 Chilin, Kirin
LN Liaoning Liáoníng 辽宁 Liaoning
  *-HL is off of this map to the northeast.
 
Abbr.Official
Spelling
ChineseObsolete Postal Spelling
Northern China
BJ Beijing Bĕijīng 北京 Peking, Pekin, Peiping
HEB Hebei Hébĕi 河北 Hopei, Hopeh
HEN Henan Hénán 河南 Honan
NM Nei Mengol Nèi Mĕnggŭ
内蒙古
Inner Mongolia
SD Shandong Shāndōng 山东 Shantung
SX Shanxi Shānxī 山西 Shansi
Central China
AH Anhui Ānhuī 安徽 Anhui
HB Hubei Húbĕi 湖北 Hupei, Hupeh
HN Hunan Húnán 湖南 Hunan
JX Jiangxi Jiāngxī 江西 Kiangsi
Abbr. Official
Spelling
ChineseObsolete Postal Spelling
Southern China
FJ Fujian Fújiàn 福建 Fukien
GD Guangdong Guăngdōng
广东
Kuangtung
HA Hainan Hăinán 海南 Hainan
TW Taiwan Táiwān 台湾 Taiwan
Eastern China
JS Jiangsu Jiāngsū 江苏 Kiangsu
ZJ Zhejiang Zhèjiāng 浙江 Chekiang
Southwestern China
GX Guangxi Guăngxī 广西 Kwangsi
GZ Guizhou Guìzhōu 贵州 Kweichow
SC Sichuan Sìchuān 四川 Szechwan
XZ Xizang Xīzàng 西藏 Tibet
YN Yunnan Yúnnán 产南 Yunnan

 

The following special municipalities were too small to fit on this map:

AM Àomén 澳门, formerly Macao, located in the middle of the south coast of GD
CQ Chōngqìng 重庆, formerly part of SC.
SH Shànghăi 上海, located on the JS-ZJ boundary at the outlet of the Yangzi river
TJ Tiānjīn 天津 (once spelled Tientsin), located east of BJ
XG Xiānggăng 香港, usually spelled Hong Kong, located in the middle of the south coast of GD

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Discontinued Province Names

The following province names are no longer in use. The territories that they covered have now been assimilated into other units. Most of these changes occurred after 1949, however, and are not recognized by the government in Taiwan, where most maps and other sources continue to use the earlier boundaries and names. This table may be of help if you read a source that refers to a province that cannot be found in the list above.

During the Communist period (period 23), JL was enlarged to include parts of adjacent provinces; LN was enlarged to include parts of adjacent provinces; HAI was created in 1987 from part of GD.

 

Chinese Obsolete Postal Spelling Location
Āndōng
安東
Antung Split between LN and JL
Cháhā'ĕr
察哈爾
Chahar Assimilated into NM
Héjiāng
合江
Hokiang Assimilated into HL
Liáobĕi
遼北
Liaopei, Liaopeh Split between NM and JL
Mĕnggŭ
蒙古
Mongolia "Outer Mongolia" (Wài Mĕnggŭ 外蒙古蒙) refers to the region that gained independence in 1921 as the Mongolian People's Republic. "Inner Mongolia" (Nèi Mĕnggŭ 內蒙古) is NM. Chinese governments until 1949 claimed that all of Mongolia was part of China. (This is still the official position of the ROC, period 22.)
Nènjiāng
嫩江
Nunkiang Assimilated into HL
Rèhé
熱河
Jehol Partly assimilated into NM
Sōngjiāng
松江
Sungkiang Split between JL and HL
Suīyuăn
綏遠
Suiyuan Assimilated into NM
Xīng'ān
興安
Shing'an Assimilated into NM
Xīkāng
西康
Hsikang Split between XZ and SC
Zhílì
直隸
Chihli "To be under immediate jurisdiction," the Qīng (period 21) name of HEB.

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