The Matrix of Cession: Territorial Fission of Youxi 'Mother County' and the Reconfiguration of Central Fujian

Imagine a county whose territory was carved up repeatedly over centuries, leaving it with less than one-third of its original size. That is Youxi. In the 29th year of Kaiyuan of the Tang Dynasty (741 AD), it entered history with a vast territory of 3,424.64 square kilometers. Five hundred years later, this land had been split into three pieces, giving birth to two new counties: Yongan and Datian. I opened the Youxi County Gazetteer, and between its yellowed pages lay the story of a “mother county” torn apart. ...

June 1, 2026 · 5 min · 1063 words · ChinaRoots 团队

From Chaos to Precision: The Fragmentation and Reorganization of Central Fujian's Frontier in the Ming Dynasty

Did you know that some counties in Fujian were literally “pieced together” from scraps of their neighbors? Not just one. In the mountains of central Fujian during the Ming Dynasty, at least three counties were carved out—cut from the flesh of a “mother county,” stitched together at the borders, and stamped with a new name. The deepest cut went into Youxi County. Established in 741 AD during the Tang Dynasty, Youxi covered over 3,400 square kilometers in the early Ming—more than twice the size of modern-day Xiamen. But in 1452 and 1535, the imperial court took a knife to it: first slicing off four districts (Du) to create Yongan, then carving out another twelve to create Datian. ...

May 31, 2026 · 5 min · 939 words · ChinaRoots 团队

Mountain City in Flux: 500 Years of Yongan's Administrative Evolution and Wartime Capital Legacy

Geographical Connections Yongan City (Yongan County), Yan River, Fuliu (Sha County), 26th to 29th Du (Youxi), Gongchuan, Datian County, Yanping Prefecture, Sanming City, Site of Provincial Capital Relocation, 13 Townships, 1 Town, 2 Sub-district Offices, 151 Village Committees. II. Ming Dynasty Genesis: From Borderland to the Birth of “Yongan” The creation of Yongan was a classic administrative experiment in “governance through security.” According to the Yongan City Gazetteer and the Yongan County Continued Gazetteer, the mid-Ming Dynasty saw large-scale uprisings led by Deng Maoqi, which created a power vacuum in the remote mountainous regions of central Fujian. ...

May 29, 2026 · 5 min · 941 words · ChinaRoots 团队