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'''Lucheng''' (潞城, ]: Lùchéng) is a ] in southern ] province of the ]. It covers an area of 615 km² and has a population of 210,000. It is a division of the ] of ] which was founded in ]. Lucheng's economy is driven by ] and ] mining. | '''Lucheng''' (潞城, ]: Lùchéng) is a ] in southern ] province of the ]. It covers an area of 615 km² and has a population of 210,000. It is a division of the ] of ] which was founded in ]. Lucheng's economy is driven by ] and ] mining. | ||
A village in Lucheng county, ], sometimes translated as ], was made famous by the book '']'' written by ]. The book chronicles the changes Changchuang underwent after it was |
A village in Lucheng county, ], sometimes translated as ], was made famous by the book '']'' written by ]. The book chronicles the changes Changchuang underwent after it was freed from ] control by the communist ]. | ||
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Revision as of 05:38, 19 January 2006
Lucheng (潞城, pinyin: Lùchéng) is a county-level city in southern Shanxi province of the People's Republic of China. It covers an area of 615 km² and has a population of 210,000. It is a division of the prefecture-level city of Changzhi which was founded in 1994. Lucheng's economy is driven by coal and limestone mining.
A village in Lucheng county, Changchuang, sometimes translated as Long Bow, was made famous by the book Fanshen written by William H. Hinton. The book chronicles the changes Changchuang underwent after it was freed from Japanese control by the communist Eighth Route Army.
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