It is 48.2 kilometers long from north to south and 32 kilometers wide from east to west, with a total area of 994 square kilometers.
On the alluvial plain in eastern Taiwan Province.
Qinghe County in the east, Guangzong County in the west, Linxi and Qiu County in the south and Nangong County in the north.
It has jurisdiction over 5 towns, 1 1 township and 522 administrative villages with a total population of 520,000.
(Wei County governs 5 towns 1 1 townships: Mianzhou Town, Liyuantun Town, Zhangtai Town, Houguan Town, Qiji Town, Fangjiaying Township, No.10 Camp Township, Zaoyuan Township, Guxian Township, Zhaohe Township, He Ying Township, Zhang Ying Township, Changtun Township, Changzhuang Township and so on.
Weizhou was founded in the seventh year of Tianhui in the Jin Dynasty (A.D. 1 129), and the beggar rulers tried to take it as a name.
At this time, Weizhou is not in today's wei county, but in Weizhou Village, Jingxing County, more than 300 miles northwest.
Today's Wei county was Mianshui county at that time, belonging to Mianzhou. In the second year of Emperor Dingzong in Yuan Dynasty (A.D. 1247), Mingshui County was a remote place in Weizhou, and in the second year of Emperor Xianzong (A.D. 1252), Weizhou was moved from Jingxing to Mianshui County, hence its name.
At the end of Yuan Dynasty, Mingshui County of this province entered Weizhou until April of the second year of Hongwu in Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1369), and Weizhou was reduced to a county, so it was named Weixian, which is the origin of today's county name.
The territory of Wei County belonged to Qi in the Spring and Autumn Period and Dongyang in the Jin Dynasty.
It belonged to Zhao in the Warring States period.
The Qin Dynasty belongs to Julu County.
In the second year of the Western Han Dynasty (AD 2), Guangzong State was sealed here, and the old city is twenty miles southeast of the county seat.
New stupidity is out of date.
In the 5th year of Yongyuan in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 93), Guangzong State was sealed again, and soon became Guangzong County, which belonged to Julu County (see "Records of the Unification of the Qing Dynasty").
Wei of the Three Kingdoms changed to Anping County.
At the beginning of Jin Dynasty, it belonged to Anping country. In the fifth year of Taikang (AD 284), it was renamed Changle State, and Guangzong County still belonged to it.
In the early Northern Wei Dynasty, Guangzong County belonged to Changle County. In the tenth year of Taihe (AD 486), Guangzong County in the north and Nangong County in the south were located in Jingzhen, about 50 miles north of Jinwei County. Wei county now is Guangzong county and Jingxian county. In the eleventh year, the second county was changed to Guangzong county, and the county ruled Jingxian county, which was soon abandoned.
The two counties belong to Changle County, and Xiaochangzhong (525-527 AD) was restored to Guangzong County, and the two counties still belong to it.
Guangzong was transferred to Changle County in the Northern Qi Dynasty, and the county name was changed to Wuqiang County in the seventh year of Tianbao (AD 556).
In the seventh year of Jiande in the Northern Zhou Dynasty (AD 578), Guangzong County and Wuqiang County belonged to Guangzong County, and the county ruled Wuqiang County.
In the third year of Emperor Kai of Sui Dynasty (AD 583), Guangzong and Wuqiang counties were changed. In the sixth year, Wuqiang county was renamed Jingcheng county. In sixteen years, Jincheng County was located in the northeast of this county. In the first year of Renshou (AD 60 1), Guangzong County was changed to Zongcheng County, and the capital was in the early year of Daye (AD 605).
In the fourth year of Tang Wude (AD 62 1 year), it was analyzed that Jingcheng County was located in Fucheng County. In the same year, Zongcheng County was established as Zongcheng County, which belongs to Zongcheng, Jincheng and Fucheng counties. In the ninth year, Fucheng County entered Jingcheng County, and Zongcheng and Jingcheng counties were placed under Zhou Bei. In the first year of Tianbao (AD 742), the state was changed to Qinghe County, and the two counties still belonged to it.
At the beginning of the Five Dynasties, the two counties still belonged to it. In the later Tang Dynasty, Guangzong County was changed to Zongcheng County, which belongs to Zhou Bei with Jingcheng County. Later, Zhou Zongcheng and Jingcheng County were changed to Daming House.
In the fourth year of Song Xining (A.D. 107 1), Zongcheng County moved to at least Guzhen (now Dongshaogu, Wei County) to avoid the river disaster, and in six years, it was admitted to Zongcheng County as Jingzhen through Chengcheng County Province, and Zongcheng County is still a famous government.
During the Jin Dynasty, the hometown of Jingcheng County in the north of Zongcheng County was in Mianshui County, which belonged to Mianzhou, so the old city was in Mianzhou, an ancient city 55 miles north of the county.
At the beginning of the Yuan Dynasty, Zongcheng County entered Mingshui County, so it was governed by Mingshui County of Jinwei County and still belonged to Mingzhou. In the second year of its capital (A.D. 1247), it was transferred from Mingshui County to Weizhou (at that time, Weizhou ruled Jingxing County), and Xianzong ruled for two years (A.D. 1247).
In the second year of Hongwu in Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1369), Weizhou was reduced to wei county, which belonged to Guangping Prefecture.
Because it was in the Qing Dynasty.
In the second year of the Republic of China (19 13), it was renamed Daming Road the following year, and the county still belongs to it. In the seventeenth year (1928), Weixian County started in Zhili, Hebei Province, and in the twenty-sixth year (1937), it belonged to the fourteenth inspection area of Hebei Province.
1937 After the outbreak of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, in August of the following year, Wei County was established as an anti-Japanese democracy, which was under the jurisdiction of the four special zones in southern Hebei.
Later, due to the need of the anti-Japanese struggle, there were Qingjiang, Hongyi and Qixian in the north, southeast and south of Wei County. Up to 194 1 10, all four counties belong to the 13th district of southern Hebei in the Shanxi-Hebei-Shandong-Henan border region. Later, the newly established three counties were revoked and merged into Wei County.
1945 After War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression's victory, Wei County was attached to the four special zones in southern Hebei.
September 1948 Four special areas in southern Hebei Province belonging to the people of North China.
It was not until August 1949 and 1 that Wei County was placed in Xingtai, Hebei Province.
19491kloc-0/,Wei county still belongs to Xingtai area of Hebei province after the establishment of People's Republic of China (PRC).
April 28th 1958 Xingtai District was revoked and Wei County was transferred to Handan District. 1On February 20th, 958, Wei County was abolished and merged into Nangong County (which also belonged to Handan District at that time).
196 1 July 9, 2008, restoration analysis of Wei county in Nangong county.
It was also the Xingtai area that was relocated that year.
Xingtai area was renamed Xingtai area on 1970, and Wei county is still under the jurisdiction of Xingtai area.
1In July, 1993, Xingtai area merged with Xingtai City and was renamed as the jurisdiction of Xingtai City.