Ming Prefecture | |
---|---|
Simplified Chinese | 明州 |
Hanyu Pinyin | Míng Zhōu |
| |
Traditional Chinese | 餘姚郡 |
Hanyu Pinyin | Yúyáo Jùn |
Population | |
• 739 | 207,032[1] |
• 1100s | [2] |
History | |
• Preceded by | Yin Prefecture (鄞州) |
• Created |
|
• Abolished | 1194 (Song dynasty) |
• Succeeded by | Qingyuan Prefecture |
• HQ |
|
Contained within | |
• Circuit (Tang dynasty) |
|
• Kingdom | Wuyue (907–978) |
• Circuit (Song dynasty) |
|
Mingzhou or Ming Prefecture (738–1194) was a zhou (prefecture) in imperial China located in modern northeastern Zhejiang, China, around modern Ningbo.[3] The prefecture was called Yuyao Commandery from 742 to 758.[4]
Located on the coast of the East China Sea and the southern bank of Hangzhou Bay (which connects it to Hang Prefecture and the Grand Canal), Ming Prefecture was one of the most important international ports during the Tang (618–907), Wuyue (907–978) and Song (960–1279) dynasties. Cargo ships to and from Japan, Silla (57 BC – 935 AD), Goryeo (918–1392), and Liao (907–1125) frequented this prefecture. Ming Prefecture also administered Zhoushan, an island archipelago off the Zhejiang coast, including Zhoushan Island.