County-level city
People's Republic of China county-level subdivision From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A county-level city (Chinese: 县级市) is a county-level administrative division of the People's Republic of China. County-level cities have judicial but no legislative rights over their own local law and are usually governed by prefecture-level divisions, but a few are governed directly by province-level divisions.
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County-level city 县级市 Xiànjíshì | |
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Category | Third level administrative division of a unitary state |
Location | People's Republic of China |
Found in | Prefectures, Provinces |
Number | 411 (408 controlled, 3 claimed) (as of 3 April 2023) |
Populations | 15,124 (Tsona) – 2,054,703 (Puning) |
Areas | 89 km2 (34 sq mi) (Linxia) – 119,165 km2 (46,010 sq mi) (Golmud) |
Government |
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Subdivisions |
County-level city | |||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 县级市 | ||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 縣級市 | ||||||||
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Tibetan name | |||||||||
Tibetan | རྫོང་རིམ་པ་གྲོང་ཁྱེར། | ||||||||
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Mongolian name | |||||||||
Mongolian script | ᠬᠣᠰᠢᠭᠤᠨ ᠤ ᠡᠩ ᠲᠡᠢ ᠬᠣᠲᠠ | ||||||||
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Uyghur name | |||||||||
Uyghur | ناھىيىسى دەرىجىلىك شەھەر | ||||||||
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A county-level city is a "city" (市; shì) and "county" (县; xiàn) that have been merged into one unified jurisdiction. As such, it is simultaneously a city, which is a municipal entity, and a county, which is an administrative division of a prefecture. Most county-level cities were created in the 1980s and 1990s by replacing denser populated counties.
County-level cities are not "cities" in the strictest sense of the word, since they usually contain rural areas many times the size of their urban, built-up area. This is because the counties that county-level cities have replaced are themselves large administrative units containing towns, villages and farmland. To distinguish a "county-level city" from its actual urban area (the traditional meaning of the word "city"), the term "市区" (shìqū) or "urban area", is used.
Comparable territorial divisions in other countries
While the idea of a "city" being a unit consisting of several "towns" is not a common one in English-speaking world, a somewhat similar naming convention is used for local government areas in some parts of Australia. For example, in New South Wales such a unit may often be called a "city" (rather than a traditional "shire"), and consist of "towns". E.g. City of Blue Mountains is made of a number of towns (Katoomba, Springwood, etc.).
List
Summarize
Perspective

As of 3 April 2023, there are 408 county-level cities in total:
Sub-prefectural cities
A sub-prefectural city is a county-level city with powers approaching those of prefecture-level cities. Examples include, Xiantao (Hubei), Qianjiang (Hubei), Tianmen (Hubei) and Jiyuan (Henan).
See also
References
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