Lianjiang Introduction: Lianjiang County, Fuzhou City, Fujian Province, under the jurisdiction of the county, as early as 5,000 years ago, the ancient ancestors of the ancient ancestors here to expand the earth, the Western Jin Dynasty Taikang three years (282) Jianxian, the first five set up in Fujian One of the counties, originally called "Wenma County", Tang Wude six years (623) was renamed Lianjiang County. Because the county is shaped like a winged phoenix, it is named "Fengcheng", and the nickname is "Yudu Jinfeng", which means auspicious. It is located on the southeast coast of Fujian Province, on the north bank of the Minjiang Estuary, on the Taiwan Strait in the east, east of Taiwan and Mazulie Island, and Fuzhou, the provincial capital of Xiqiao. The land is 50 kilometers away from the river; the south is bordered by the Minjiang River; the north is controlled by the two provinces. The county has a total area of 4,280 square kilometers, including a sea area of 3,112 square kilometers and a land area of 1,168 square kilometers (including the Mazulie Island to be unified). It administers 270 villages in 22 townships, with a registered population of 641,400 and a resident population of 566,000. 2012). There are “Sanwan (Luoyuan Bay, Huanghua Bay, Dinghai Bay), Sankou (Kemenkou, Minjiang Estuary, Minjiang Estuary), and five passages (Shenhai Expressway, 104 National Highway, Wenfu Railway, Fuzhou Ring Expressway). Highway and 201 Provincial Highway) is one of the first batch of open coastal counties in the State Council. It is located at the forefront of the economic zone on the west coast of the Taiwan Strait. The provincial capital city is a half-hour economic circle and is a major channel in Fujian Province and even the southeast coast. Huanghua Town is only 8 kilometers away from Mazulie Island. The Huanghua Peninsula has a Taiwan-plated mooring point and a trade point to Taiwan. It is the leading area for the realization of the "three links" on both sides of the Taiwan Straits. Due to the civil war between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party, the territory of the former Lianjiang County was divided into two. The 36 islands and reefs (including the original Changle County and Luoyuan County) located in the outer seas of Nanji Island and Beijiao Island were controlled by the Taiwan authorities. In 1953, Lianjiang County (commonly known as Mazu) was merged, and the main part of Lianjiang County in mainland China was owned by the Government of the People's Republic of China. Therefore, it is the same as the “Fujian Province” that exists on both sides of the strait. The two places also have their own “Lianjiang County”, which is the only county that divides the two sides.