Modern Insights from the Rise of Xinghua Prefecture's 'Little Shanghai': Deep Tracing Based on Digital Local Chronicles
Core Data Table: Key Indicators of Xinghua Prefecture’s Economy & Infrastructure Year Key Event/Indicator Core Data Source Citation 1083 Completion of Mulan Pei Irrigated 200,000 mu of fertile land Architecture Annals Song Dyn. Imperial Exam Success Produced 1,166 Jinshi scholars Publishing Annals 1562 Commercial Center Shift From Huangshi to Hanjiang Commerce Annals 1925 Hanjiang Bean Cake Trade Annual import of ~1.2 million pieces Commerce Annals 1938 Sanjiangkou Port Trade Only open port in Fujian; 100,000 tons cargo Commerce Annals 1989 Putian Industrial Output 2.169 billion RMB (89x increase since 1949) Commerce Annals Geographic Connections: Key Nodes of Xinghua’s Commercial Map Mulan River: The economic lifeline crossing the territory. Sanjiangkou Port: A vital maritime gateway during the Republican era. Hanjiang Gongkou: The historical financial and trade core with dense merchant houses. Fengting Taiping Port: A land-sea hub connecting Zhangzhou, Quanzhou, and the capital. Meizhou Bay: A modern deep-water port and frontline for Taiwan trade. Fuzhou Xiahang Road: The historical gathering place of the “Xinghua Merchant Gang.” Background: Commercial Folds Between Mountains and Sea Xinghua Prefecture (modern Putian and Xianyou) has long been a theater for the struggle between humanity and nature under the harsh “eight mountains, one water, and one field” geography. As digital humanities experts, cross-referencing archives from the Fujian Provincial Annals—specifically the Commerce, Water Conservancy, and Foreign Affairs sections—reveals that Xinghua’s rise was not a geographic fluke. Instead, it was a grand experiment driven by world-class engineering foundations and outward-looking maritime trade. ...