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Yangpu District

Yangpu
杨浦区
District
Wujiaochang(五角场)
Wujiaochang(五角场)
Location within Shanghai
Location within Shanghai
Government
 • District Governor Xinming Jin (CCP)
Area
 • Total 60.61 km2 (23.40 sq mi)
Population (2010)
 • Total 1,313,222
 • Density 22,000/km2 (56,000/sq mi)
Time zone China Standard Time (UTC+8)
Website www.shyp.gov.cn
Chinese names
Yangpu District
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Literal meaning Poplar Bank District
Yangshupu
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Postal Yangtzepoo
Yangtszepoo
Literal meaning Poplar Tree Bank

Yangpu District is one of the 19 districts of the Municipality of Shanghai in the China. It is located in northeastern part of downtown Shanghai, bordering the Huangpu River on the east and south, Hongkou District on the west, and Baoshan District in the north. The southern part of Yangpu District is 4 km (2.5 mi) away from the Bund, a major tourist attraction. It is predominantly composed of residential communities, with a total area of 60.61 km2 (23.40 sq mi) and a population of 1.313 million as of 2010. The whole district is divided administratively into 11 resident subdistricts and 1 town.

The name Yangshupu, formerly romanized as Yangtzepoo or Yangtszepoo, is Chinese for "poplar bank" and refers to the creek (t , s , p Yángshùpǔ Hé) running through the area beside present-day Lanzhou Rd (formerly Lay Road) from the Qiu in the north to the Huangpu in the south. The Shanghai Municipal Government contracted the name to Yangpu in 1949.

As with most of modern Shanghai, the territory of Yangpu has been formed by sediments deposited by the Yangtze River over many centuries. It was probably in the shallows of the East China Sea as late as the Tang Dynasty. During the Northern Song, the Wuyu River (吴淤江) entered the sea somewhere around modern Wujiaochang (五角场). Daoist and Buddhist temples are known to have been established in the vicinity around this time. In 1404, the Huangpu River shifted to its present course, entering the Yangtze River around Wusong. Toward the end of the Ming Dynasty, villages along the river flourished, engaging in agriculture, banking, textiles and water-borne trade.


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