Dagzê, Lhasa

Dagzê
达孜区སྟག་རྩེ་ཆུས།
A view from Ganden Monastery
A view from Ganden Monastery
Location of Dagzê District (red) within Lhasa City (yellow) and the Tibet A.R.
Location of Dagzê District (red) within Lhasa City (yellow) and the Tibet A.R.
Dagzê is located in Tibet
Dagzê
Dagzê
Location in Tibet Autonomous Region
Dagzê is located in China
Dagzê
Dagzê
Dagzê (China)
Coordinates: 29°40′21″N 91°21′10″E / 29.672447°N 91.352817°E / 29.672447; 91.352817
CountryChina
Autonomous regionTibet
Prefecture-level cityLhasa
District seatDêqên
Area
 • Total1,373 km2 (530 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[1]
 • Total32,318
 • Density24/km2 (61/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Websitewww.dzq.gov.cn
Dagzê, Lhasa
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese达孜区
Traditional Chinese達孜區
Tibetan name
Tibetanསྟག་རྩེ་་ཆུས།

Dagzê District is a district of Lhasa immediately east of the district of Chengguan, Tibet. The Lhasa River runs through the district. As of 2013 the total population was 29,152, mostly ethnic Tibetans engaged in agriculture. The district is home to the Ganden and Yerpa monasteries.

Location

The built-up area (pink) within the Dagzê District (yellow)

Dazi means "Tiger peak" in Tibetan. It was founded in 1354. Dazi District was established in 1959.[2] The district lies on both sides of the middle reaches of the Lhasa River. It is 20 kilometres (12 mi) to the east of the city of Lhasa in Chengguan District. Zhanang County is to the south, Maizhokunggar County to the east and Linzhou County to the north.[3]

The total area of the district is 1,373 square kilometres (530 sq mi). It has an average elevation of 4,100 metres (13,500 ft) above sea level, and descends from higher ground in the north and south to 3,730 metres (12,240 ft) in the lowest part of the Lhasa river valley.[2] Dazi is in a semi-arid plateau monsoon climate zone. The average temperature is 7.5 °C (45.5 °F), with about 130 days free of frost. Average rainfall is 450 millimetres (18 in).[3]

Administration

Dagzê District includes one town and five townships.[4] The district seat is Dêqên Town, which had a population of 7,382 in 2003.

Name Tibetan Tibetan Pinyin Chinese Pinyin
Town
Dêqên Town བདེ་ཆེན་གྲོང་རྡལ། Dêqên Chongdai 德庆镇 Déqìng Zhèn
Townships
Targyai Township དར་རྒྱས་ཤང་། Targyai Xang 塔杰乡 Tǎjié Xiāng
Zangdog Township གཙང་ཏོག་ཤང་། Zangdog Xang 章多乡 Zhāngduō Xiāng
Tanggar Township ཐང་དགར་ཤང་། Tanggar Xang 唐嘎乡 Tánggā Xiāng
Xoi Township ཞོག་མདའ་ཤང་། Xog Xang 雪乡 Xuě Xiāng
Dromdoi Township འབྲོམ་སྟོད་ཤང་། Zhomdoi Xang 帮堆乡 Bāngduī Xiāng

People and economy

As of 2013 the total population was 29,152.[2] Most of the people are ethnic Tibetan but there are some Han people and other ethnic minorities.[citation needed] The main occupation is agriculture, including production of wheat, barley, rapeseed, potatoes and other vegetables. Livestock include yaks, cattle, sheep, chickens and ducks. Pigs are also farmed, mainly indoors. As of 2012 per capita income of farmers and herdsmen was 6,740 yuan.[2] A growing amount of fruit and greenhouse-grown organic vegetables, edible mushrooms and medicinal plants is being marketed under the "Dazi Pure" label.[5] As a sideline people make ethnic handicrafts.[3]

Infrastructure

In 2010 there were 28 schools in the county, including one junior high school and one kindergarten, with 276 full-time teachers. There is a district hospital and five township hospitals. The Sichuan-Tibet Highway (China National Highway 318) runs through the county.[3]

The Dazi Bridge, built by the Highway Bureau of Xizang Autonomous Region in 1984, crosses the Lhasa River. It is a steel suspension bridge with a main span of 500 metres (1,600 ft) and a deck width of 4.5 metres (15 ft).[6] In November 2014 it was reported that a new suspension bridge over the Lhasa River linking highway S202 to highway G318 was 80% complete, and would be opened to traffic in 2015. The total length including approaches was 1,400 metres (4,600 ft), with the bridge being 727 metres (2,385 ft) long. The roadbed was 12 metres (39 ft) wide. The total investment was 88 million yuan.[7]

Monasteries

The main monasteries in Dagzê are Ganden Monastery and Yerpa. [8]Gandain monastery was built after 1409 at the initiative of Je Tsongkhapa, founder of the Gelug sect, and is the most important of this sect. It is 57 kilometres (35 mi) from Lhasa on the slopes of Wangbori Mountain at an elevation of 3,800 metres (12,500 ft), on the south bank of the Lhasa River in Dagze County. The mountain is said to have the shape of a reclining elephant.

The monastery includes Buddha halls, palace residences, Buddhist colleges and other buildings.[9] Dra Yerpa temple, on a hillside in Dagze County, is known for its meditation cave connected with Songtsän Gampo, the 7th century Tibetan ruler.[10][8]

References

  1. ^ "关于发布拉萨市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报" (in Chinese). Government of Lhasa. 2021-06-10.
  2. ^ a b c d Dazi Overview, Dazi county.
  3. ^ a b c d Basic Dazi & , DIIB.
  4. ^ 2022年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码 (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China.
  5. ^ Sonam Wangdu 2014.
  6. ^ Dazi Bridge, Structurae.
  7. ^ Wei Guo 2014.
  8. ^ a b Sung, K.; Rgyal, L.B. (2021). Amdo Tibetan: A Comprehensive Grammar Textbook: ༄༄།། ཨ་མདོའི་ཁ་སྐད། (in Dzongkha). Taylor & Francis. p. 466. ISBN 978-1-000-24861-6. Retrieved 2024-03-14.
  9. ^ Gandain Monastery, China Intercontinental, p. 2.
  10. ^ Van Beek, S.; MacCue, G.; Choegyal, L. (1993). Tibet: Lhasa-Khathmandu. Insight pocket guides. APA. ISBN 978-962-421-540-3. Retrieved 2024-03-14.

Sources

  • "Basic Dazi". Dazi Industry and Information Bureau. Archived from the original on 2015-02-21. Retrieved 2015-02-21.
  • "Dazi Bridge". Structurae. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
  • "Dazi Overview". Dazi county government. 2013-07-10. Archived from the original on 2015-02-21. Retrieved 2015-02-21.
  • Gandain Monastery. China Intercontinental Press. 1997. ISBN 978-7-80113-312-0. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
  • "Dazhi County to create a clean and healthy industry to cultivate high-grade boutique fruits and vegetables". China Tibet News. 2014-04-03. Archived from the original on 2015-02-21.
  • Wei Guo (2014-11-05). "80% of Lhasa New Dazi Bridge is completed and will be open to traffic next". Lhasa Evening Post. Archived from the original on 2015-02-22.
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