Tacheng
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Uighur name | |
|---|---|
| kona yezik̡ (Perso-Arabic script): | چۆچەك شەھىرى |
| yengi yezik̡ (Latin alphabet): | Qɵqək Xəh̡ri |
| Cyrillic alphabet: | Чөчәк шәһири |
| official PRC transcription: | Qoqek |
| Chinese name | |
| simplified characters: | 塔城市 |
| Pinyin: | Tǎchéng Shì |
Tacheng (Kazakh: شاۋەشەك / Шәуешек / Şәweşek) is a county-level city (1994 est. pop. 56,400) and the capital of Tacheng Prefecture, in northern Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang, China.
The city was sometimes called Tarbaghatay or Tarbagatai (Mongolian: 'having marmots') and was once known in European languages as Chuguchak (based on its name in Turkic languages).
It is located in the Dzungarian basin, some 10 km from the Kazakhstan border. Long a major center for trade with Central Asia, it is an agricultural hub. Its industries include food processing, textiles, and utilities.
The city suffered much destruction in 1865, during the fighting between the Qing forces and the Dungan and Uyghur rebels.
[edit] Border crossing
The Bakhtu border crossing into Kazakhstan is located 17km from Tacheng. The checkpoint on the Kazakh side of the border is also known as Bakhty and is located 60km from Makanchi in East Kazakhstan Province.
[edit] References
- Khālidī, Qurbanʻali, Allen J. Frank, and Mirkasym Abdulakhatovich Usmanov. An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912. Brill's Inner Asian library, v. 12. Leiden: Brill, 2004.
- Light, Nathan. "Qazaqs in the People's Republic of China: The Local Processes of History". Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana Center on Global Change and World Peace, Occasional Paper No. 22, June 1994. ISBN 1-881157-24-5.
- Light, Nathan. "Kazakhs of the Tarbaghatai: Ethno-History Through a Novel". The Turkish Studies Association Bulletin, 17/2 (1993): 91-102.
- Saguchi Toru. "Kazak Pastoralists on the Tarbaghatai Frontier under the Ch'ing." In: Proceedings of the International Conference on China Border Area Studies. Lin En-hsien [Lin Enxian], ed. Taipei: National Chengchi University, 1985, pp. 953-996.
- Wiens, Herold J. "Change in the Ethnography and Land Use of the Ili Valley and Region, Chinese Turkestan". Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 59, No. 4. (Dec., 1969), pp. 753-775.
[edit] External links
- Map of the City of Tacheng (Chinese)
- Webpage on the Bakktu border crossing in Xinjiang's Land Ports and Border Trade website
Coordinates: 46°45′N 82°59′E / 46.75°N 82.983°E
|
|||||||||||||
| This Xinjiang location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |

