Nanhai Commandery


Nanhai Commandery was an ancient Chinese commandery that existed from the Qin dynasty to the Tang dynasty. At the greatest extent, Nanhai's territories covered present-day Guangdong, Hainan, southeastern Guangxi and the southern tip of Fujian. The seat of Nanhai Commandery was Panyu.

History

In 214 BC, the Qin dynasty conquered Lingnan and established three commanderies, Nanhai, Guilin and Xiang within the region. After the collapse of Qin, Zhao Tuo, the Qin prefect of Longchuan County, Nanhai, established the Nanyue kingdom on Nanhai and surrounding commanderies. Panyu became the kingdom's capital.
In 112 BC, Nanyue was annexed by the Han dynasty. In the late Western Han period, Nanhai had a population of 19,613 households. The commandery administered 6 counties: Panyu, Boluo, Zhongsu, Longchuan, Sihui and Jieyang. During the Eastern Han period, a new county, Zengcheng, was created. By 140 AD, the population had grown to 71,477 households.
The Jin dynasty unified the Three Kingdoms in 280. At the time, the commandery recorded a population of 9,500 households. Two new commanderies were split off from Nanhai during Eastern Jin: Dongguan in 330 and Xinhui in 420. In 464, the population in Nanhai was 8,574 households. The number of counties had been increased to 10. The commandery was abolished when the Sui dynasty conquered the Chen dynasty.
During the Sui and Tang dynasties, Nanhai Commandery became an alternative name of Guang Prefecture. In 741, Nanhai administered 13 counties: Nanhai, Panyu, Zengcheng, Sihui, Huameng, Huaiji, Jianshui, Dongguan, Qingyuan, Hankuang, Zhenyang, Xinhui, Yining. The population was 42,235 households.