Changsha

Changsha
长沙市
Nickname: 
"星城" (Star City)
Motto(s): 
"心忧天下,敢为人先"
(Care About the World, Dare to Be Pioneers)
Location of Changsha City in Hunan
Changsha
Location of the city centre in Hunan
Coordinates (Changsha municipal government): 28°13′41″N 112°56′20″E / 28.228°N 112.939°E / 28.228; 112.939
CountryChina
ProvinceHunan
Municipal seatYuelu District
Divisions9 County-level divisions, 172 Township divisions
Government
  TypePrefecture-level city
  BodyChangsha Municipal People's Congress
  CCP SecretaryWu Guiying
  Congress ChairmanXie Weidong
  MayorZhou Haibing
  CPPCC ChairmanWen Shuxun
Area
11,819 km2 (4,563 sq mi)
  Urban
2,154.1 km2 (831.7 sq mi)
  Metro
3,911.1 km2 (1,510.1 sq mi)
Elevation
63 m (207 ft)
Population
 (2022)
10,420,600 
  Urban
5,980,707
  Urban density2,800/km2 (7,200/sq mi)
  Metro
10,500,000
  Metro density2,700/km2 (7,000/sq mi)
  Rank in China
19th
Ethnicity
  Han99.22%
  Minorities0.78%
GDP
  Prefecture-level cityCN¥ 1.526 trillion
US$ 214.4 billion
  Per capitaCN¥ 144,525
US$ 20,294
Time zoneUTC+08:00 (China Standard)
Postal code
410000
Area code0731
ISO 3166 codeCN-HN-01
HDI (2016)0.817– very high
License Plate湘A
湘O (police and authorities)
City treeCamphor tree
City flowerAzalea
LanguagesHunanese(Changsha dialect), Mandarin
Websiteen.changsha.gov.cn
Changsha
"Changsha" in Simplified (top) and Traditional (bottom) Chinese characters
Simplified Chinese长沙
Traditional Chinese長沙
Hanyu PinyinChángshā
Xiang[tsã13 sɔ33] (listen)
Literal meaning"Long Sandbar"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinChángshā
Bopomofoㄔㄤˊ   ㄕㄚ
Wade–GilesChʻang2-sha1
IPA[ʈʂʰǎŋ.ʂá] (listen)
Wu
RomanizationZan-so
Xiang
IPA[tsã13 sɔ33] (listen)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationChèuhngsā
JyutpingCoeng4-saa1
IPA[tsʰœŋ˩.sa˥]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTn̂g-soa
Former names
Qing Yang
Traditional Chinese青陽
Simplified Chinese青阳
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQīngyáng
Wade–GilesChing-yang
Lin Xiang
Traditional Chinese臨湘
Simplified Chinese临湘
Literal meaningOverlooking the Xiang
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLínxiāng
Wade–GilesLin-hsiang
Tan Zhou
Chinese潭州
Literal meaningEddy Prefecture
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTánzhōu
Wade–GilesT‘an-chou

Changsha is the capital of Hunan, China. It is the 15th most populous city in China with a population of 10,513,100, the third-most populous city in Central China, and the most livable city in China, located in the lower reaches of the Xiang River in northeastern Hunan.

The city forms a part of the Greater Changsha Metropolitan Region along with Zhuzhou and Xiangtan, also known as the Changzhutan City Cluster. Greater Changsha was named one of the 13 emerging mega-cities in China in 2012 by the Economist Intelligence Unit. It is also a National Comprehensive Transportation Hub, and one of the first National Famous Historical and Cultural Cities in China. Changshanese, a kind of Xiang Chinese, is spoken in the downtown area, while Ningxiangnese and Liuyangnese are also spoken in the counties and cities under its jurisdiction. As of the 2020 Chinese census, the prefecture-level city of Changsha had a population of 10,047,914 inhabitants.

Changsha has a history of more than 2,400 years of urban construction, and the name "Changsha" first appeared in the Yi Zhou Shu written in the pre-Qin era. In the Qin dynasty, the Changsha Commandery was set up, and in the Western Han dynasty, the Changsha Kingdom was established. The Tongguan Kiln in Changsha during the Tang dynasty produced the world's earliest underglaze porcelain, which was exported to Western Asia, Africa and Europe. In the period of the Five Dynasties, Changsha was the capital of Southern Chu. In the Northern Song dynasty, the Yuelu Academy (later Hunan University) was one of the four major private academies over the last 1000 years. In the late Qing dynasty, Changsha was one of the four major trade cities for rice and tea in China. In 1904, it was opened to foreign trade, and gradually became a revolutionary city. In Changsha, Tan Sitong established the School of Current Affairs, Huang Xing founded the China Arise Society with the slogan "Expel the Tatar barbarians and revive Zhonghua" (驱除鞑虏,复兴中华), and Mao Zedong also carried out his early political movements here. During the Republican Era, Changsha became one of the major home fronts in the Second Sino-Japanese War, but the subsequent Wenxi Fire in 1938 and the three Battles of Changsha from 1939 to 1942 (1939, 1941 and 1941–42) hit Changsha's economy and urban construction hard.

Changsha is now one of the core cities in the Yangtze River Economic Belt and the Belt and Road Initiative, a Beta- (global second-tier) city by the GaWC, a new Chinese first-tier city and also a pioneering area for China-Africa economic and trade cooperation. Known as the "Construction machinery capital of the world", Changsha has an industrial chain with construction machinery and new materials as the main industries, complemented by automobiles, electronic information, household appliances, and biomedicine. Since the 1990s, Changsha has begun to accelerate economic development, and then achieved the highest growth rate among China's major cities during the 2000s. The Xiangjiang New Area, the first state-level new area in Central China, was established in 2015. As of 2023, more than 180 Global 500 companies have established branches in Changsha. The city has the 22nd largest number of skyscrapers in the world. The Human Development Index of Changsha reached 0.817 (very high) in 2016, which is roughly comparable to a moderately developed country.

As of 2023, Changsha hosted 59 institutions of higher education, ranking 8th nationwide among all cities in China. The city houses four Double First-Class Universities of Hunan, National Defense Technology, Central South, and Hunan Normal. It is a major center of research and innovation in the Asia-Pacific with a high level of scientific research outputs, ranking 23rd globally in 2024. Changsha is the birthplace of super hybrid rice, the Tianhe-1 supercomputer, China's first laser 3D printer, and China's first domestic medium-low speed maglev line. Changsha has been named the first "UNESCO City of Media Arts" in China. The city is home to the Hunan Broadcasting System (HBS), the most influential provincial TV station in China.