Huma County


Huma County is a county in the far north of the Heilongjiang province, People's Republic of China. The county seat is located on the right bank of the Amur River, a few kilometers upstream from the fall of the Huma River into the Amur.
It is under the administration of the Daxing'anling Prefecture.
The opposite side of the Amur River is in Amur Oblast, Russia, where there is a village with the same name in Russified form, Kumara.

History

Kumarsk, the predecessor of the present-day Huma, was a fortified Russian town in the Amur River region, founded in 1652 by Yerofey Khabarov and his companions, during his retreat from Achansk, corresponding to the present-day Khabarovsk, where he was besieged by Manchu and Daur allied forces.
On 13 March 1655, the Komar fortress, defended by the ataman Onufriy Stepanov and his 500 Cossacks, was besieged by a Qing army led by Ming'andali consisting of 10,000 men. The outnumbered defenders repulsed several assaults. The defeated Manchu lift the siege the following month. The town was ceded to Qing Empire after the treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689.

Administrative divisions

Huma County is divided into 2 towns, 5 townships and 1 ethnic township.
;2 towns
  • Huma
  • Hanjiayuan
;5 townships
  • Sanka
  • Jinshan
  • Xinghua
  • Oupu
  • Beijiang
;1 ethnic township
  • Baiyinna Oroqen

    Climate

Huma County has a monsoon-influenced humid continental climate with very warm, humid summers and severely cold, extremely dry winters. The monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from in January to in July, and although temperatures consistently average above from May to September, the annual mean, at, is low enough to form sporadic permafrost on sheltered sites, which is unusual for areas with this climatic classification. More than 70% of the annual precipitation occurs from June to September. With monthly percent possible sunshine ranging from 52% in May and July to 70% in February, sunshine is generous and the area receives 2,581 hours of bright sunshine annually.