Qingdao introduction
Qingdao, a prefecture-level city under the jurisdiction of Shandong Province, is also called Island City and Jiaoao, a sub-provincial city, a city with separate plans and a mega-city, an important coastal central city approved by the State Council, a coastal resort city and an international port city.
By the end of 2022 10, Qingdao had seven districts and three county-level cities with a total area of 1 1293 square kilometers. By the end of 2022, the resident population of Qingdao was 1 0,034.210,000, and the urbanization rate was 77.32%.
Qingdao is located in the east of China, southeast of Shandong Peninsula, and east of the Yellow Sea. Its climate belongs to temperate monsoon climate and has obvious maritime characteristics.
It is the economic center of Shandong Province, an important pioneer area for the development of modern marine industry in China, an international shipping hub in Northeast Asia, and a bridgehead and pioneer area for economic and trade cooperation between China, Japan and South Korea.
The Belt and Road Initiative is the main node city of the New Eurasian Continental Bridge Economic Corridor and the strategic fulcrum of maritime cooperation.
Qingdao is a national historical and cultural city and the birthplace of Taoism in China. Jiaozhou Bay has been an important port in the north since the Tang and Song Dynasties. Qing Guangxu seventeen years, stationed in Jiaoao. 1897, Germany leased ports and railways, which prospered because of "one port, one road".
In the 19th year of the Republic of China (1930), it was renamed Qingdao, named after the small island in the sea and the ancient fishing village "Qingdao Village".
Qingdao is the host city of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and the 13 Paralympic Games. It is also the sailing capital of China, the beer capital of the world and the "movie capital" of the United Nations. The first batch of coastal open cities, national civilized cities and China brand capital.