Taiping Prefecture

Location of Taiping Prefecture in Anhui Province, 1820

Taiping Prefecture (Chinese: 太平; pinyin: Tàipíng Fu) was an administrative region of China during the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1911) dynasties that spanned roughly the areas of the modern day cities of Ma'anshan and Wuhu in Anhui Province.[citation needed] During the Ming dynasty the prefecture was classified as part of Southern Zhili and later came under the administration of Anhui Province during the Qing dynasty. Taiping Prefecture consisted of the three counties of Dangtu, Wuhu, and Fanchang. It was abolished in 1912 with the advent of the Republic of China.[citation needed]

References

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  • "Illustrations of Taiping Prefecture (1648): A Printed Album of Landscapes by the Seventeenth-Century Literati Artist, Xiao Yuncong". Digital Repository at the University of Maryland. 2006. hdl:1903/4170.
  • "Taiping Prefecture's Copperware Manufacturing Skills (太平府铜壶制作技艺)" (in Chinese). Archived from the original on September 3, 2011. Retrieved December 2, 2010.