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Why Chinese towns are so keen to lay claim to poets, philosophers and emperors

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A temple honouring Liu Bang in Pei county. Photo: Handout
Alice Yanin Shanghai

Two counties in eastern China have been feuding over which has the right to call itself the home town of one of the nation’s early emperors.

The case is the latest example of towns or counties on the mainland claiming links to famous ancient Chinese figures such as emperors, philosophers or poets as they try to lure investment and tourists.

Feng and Pei county administered by the city of Xuzhou in Jiangsu province have for years laid claim to the Emperor Gaozu, who was born as Liu Bang. He was the first emperor of the Han dynasty (206BC-AD220) and there are buildings and tourist spots linked to Liu in both counties.

Now the city government has ruled on the matter.

The city’s three-year plan, signed off by the central government’s State Council, says Feng county will be listed as Liu’s home town and be developed as a tourist centre. Pei county will be developed as part of Xuzhou’s central economy and as a major coal base in the province.

Internet users from Feng county are delighted and have called on their neighbours in Pei county to stop arguing about Liu’s origins. Most historians agree that Liu was born in Fengyi in what is now Feng county, but it was formerly administered under Pei county.

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