Zhangjiajing is located in the south-central mining area, adjacent to Bai Biao Village in the south, Xigangtou in the north and Hengxi Village in the northeast. 65438+ is 0.5km away from the seat of the district government. During the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, Zhang Cun people moved here from Nanzhaolin in Jingxing County and settled in the village. It is named Zhangjiajing because it is surrounded by high, middle and shaped like a well. The existing Jade Emperor Temple of Liangqing has the name of this village on the stone tablet during the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty (1620). Later, coal mining in No.3 Mine led to land collapse. From 1974, the villagers moved eastward from the original site, which lasted for three years. In 2003, the village area was 26.6 hectares. 2434 mu of cultivated land. There are 806 households with 2867 people in the village. There are 68 tractors, 32 cars, 52 tricycles, 7 harvesters, threshers 1 1 sets, 2 straw returning machines, 8 seeders1sets, rotary cultivators1sets, 4 large pumping stations and 3 water reservoirs in the village.
Beifeng Mountain is located in the south of the mining area, bordering Bai Biao in the north, Yangjiagou in the south and Jingxing No.3 Mine in the west. It is 3 kilometers away from the resident of the district government. This village, together with Zhongfeng Mountain and Nanfeng Mountain, was originally a village named Fengshan. It is named because it is located at the southern foot of Yunfeng Mountain. In the fourth year of the Northern Song Dynasty (608), there was the name of Fengshan Village on the monument of a thousand buddhas. In the early Qing Dynasty, the northern and southern parts of the original village became villages respectively. One who lives in the north is called Beifeng Mountain, and the other who lives in the south is called Nanfeng Mountain. In the records of Jingxing County in the eighth year of Yongzheng in Qing Dynasty, the names of Nanfeng Mountain and Beifeng Mountain have been given. In 2003, the village covered an area of 4 square kilometers, including cultivated land 1856 mu. There are 779 households with 2489 people in the village.
Nanfeng Mountain is located in the south of the mining area, adjacent to Zhongfengshan in the north, and adjacent to No.3 Mine of Jingxing Mining Bureau in the west and south. 3.5 kilometers away from the seat of the district government. The village, formerly known as Fengshan Village, is the same village as Beifengshan. In the early Qing Dynasty, it was divided into two villages, named Nanfeng Mountain because it lived in the south. In 2003, the total area of the village was113 mu, including 260 mu of residential area, 565 mu of cultivated land and 288 mu of forest land. There are 327 households in the village, population 1427.
Zhongfengshan is located in the south of the mining area, adjacent to Yangjiagou in the east, Nanfeng Mountain in the south and Jingxing No.3 Mine in the west. 3.3 kilometers away from the seat of the district government. The village was originally a part of Nanfeng Mountain, and 1957 became an independent village. Because it is located between Nanfeng Mountain and Beifeng Mountain, it is named Zhongfengshan. In 2003, the total area of the village was 1355 mu, including 880 mu of cultivated land and 42 mu of fruit trees. There are 730 households in the village with a total population of 1966.
Yangjiagou is located in the south of the mining area, between Beifeng Mountain and Zhongfengshan, across both sides of the mine, and adjacent to the No.3 Mine of Jingxing Mining Bureau in the west. It is 3 kilometers away from the seat of the district government. According to the inscription of Hengjianchou Temple for forty-four years (1779), the village existed at that time. Because most of the villagers are surnamed Yang and are located in the valley, they are named Yangjiagou. In 2003, the total area of cultivated land in the village was 622 mu, including 5 12 mu of cultivated land and 0/0 mu of woodland. There are 200 households in the village with a population of 838.
Bai Biao is located in the south of the mining area, with Yunfeng Mountain in the west, Xigou Village in the east, Beifengshan Village in the south and Zhangjiajing Village in the north. 2 kilometers away from the seat of the district government. The village, formerly known as Baihu Village, was named after being located under Baihuling. Later, due to the villagers' taboo on tigers and cannibalism, some people added three apostrophes to the word tiger, indicating that it meant to subdue tigers, and changed the name of the village to Bai Biao. The existing tombstone of the 12th year of Jiajing in Ming Dynasty (1533) bears Bai Biao's name. The total village area is 454 1 mu, including 498 mu of village area and 2077 mu of cultivated land. In 2003, there were 596 families with a population of 265,438+083. There are 26 tractors, 2 cars1car, 8 tricycles, 8 harvesters, 2 threshers, 2 straw returning machines, 5 seeders 10, 5 rotary cultivators, 3 large pumping stations, 3 reservoirs and 2 reservoirs in the village.
Jingxinglan is located in the north of No.4 Mine of Jingxing Mining Bureau in the south of the mining area, belonging to the enclave of jingxing mining area, with Mianhe River in the southwest, Mianzuo main canal in the west and Zhaizi in Jingxing County in the east. 10km away from the seat of the district government. According to legend, the village was evacuated during the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, and some immigrants from Shanxi Province moved to local villages. Because it is adjacent to Mianhe River, the land is humid, the aquatic plants are rich, and Vitex negundo (wild wood), Suaeda salsa and bluegrass are rich, so it is named Jingpulan. In the eighth year of Yongzheng, Jingxing County Records was recorded as Jingxing Lan, which seems to mean "Putin's grass is like a railing". The total area of the village is 2.4 square kilometers, with 733 mu of cultivated land and 200 mu of forest land. The village has ***39 1 household and population 14 13. In 2003, the village had 50 tractors, 65,438+00 seeders, 4 harvesters, 65,438+05 threshers, 65,438+00 rotary cultivators, 65,438+05 cars, 4 pumping stations and 65,438+00 reservoirs.
Located in the south of the mining area, Nanjinggou is an enclave in jingxing mining area, surrounded by Jingxing County, with Liujiagou, Gaojiazhuang and Wangjiazhuang in the east, Caoquan in the west, Lishuizi in the south and Zhoujiakeng in the northwest. 5.6 kilometers away from the seat of the district government. According to the genealogy of Nie in this village, when Nie moved here in the seventh year of Ming Dynasty (1634), the Xu villagers in Dongguan, Jingxing County had settled here. Because it is located at the bottom of the ditch, because it is high around and concave in the middle, it is named Nanjinggou. The village covers an area of 2.5 square kilometers. In 2003, there were 240 families with a population of 865. The working population is 400. There are 33 tractors, 0/4 automobiles/kloc, 0/4 tricycles/kloc, 2 harvesters, 0/2 threshers/kloc, 0/5 straw returning machines/kloc, 0/5 seeders/kloc, 5 rotary cultivators and large pumping stations/kloc.
Xigou is located in the south of jingxing mining area, adjacent to Qingquan in the east and Bai Biao in the southwest. 65438+ is 0.5km away from the seat of the district government. The village was originally named "Qingquan Xigou", because it is located in a ditch west of Qingquan, and it is an affiliated village of Qingquan Village, hence the name. Jade Emperor Temple in Liangshan, Liang Qing, in the forty-eighth year of Wanli in Ming Dynasty (1620), has the name of "Qingquan Xigou". It was renamed Xigou in the early Qing Dynasty. The name "Xigou Village" was included in Jingxing County annals in the eighth year of Yongzheng in Qing Dynasty. In 2003, the village area 165 mu, cultivated land 1475 mu and orchard 140 mu. The village has ***4 15 households and population 15 19.