Misplaced Pages

Togtoh County

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Togtoh County ( Mongolian : ᠲᠣᠭᠲᠠᠬᠤ ᠰᠢᠶᠠᠨ ; Chinese : 托克托县 ) is a county of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region , North China , it is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Hohhot , the capital of Inner Mongolia, located on the north bank of the Yellow River at which point that great river turns out of the Ordos Loop toward the south. It is under the administration of the regional capital of Hohhot , 78 kilometres (48 mi) to the northeast, with a population of around 166,192.

#242757

2-1545: Its villages include Hekou , formerly known as Hokow and Tchagan Kouren, which was once an important caravan center on the north bend of the Yellow River . Togtoh County is made up of 5 towns . Other: This Inner Mongolia location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Village (PRC) Provinces Autonomous regions Sub-provincial autonomous prefectures Autonomous prefectures Leagues (Aimag) (abolishing) Prefectures Provincial-controlled cities Provincial-controlled counties Autonomous counties County-level cities Districts Ethnic districts Banners (Hoxu) Autonomous banners Shennongjia Forestry District Liuzhi Special District Wolong Special Administrative Region Workers and peasants districts Ethnic townships Towns Subdistricts Subdistrict bureaux Sum Ethnic sum County-controlled districts County-controlled district bureaux (obsolete) Management committees Town-level city Areas Villages · Gaqa · Ranches Village Committees Communities Capital cities New areas Autonomous administrative divisions National Central Cities History: before 1912 , 1912–49 , 1949–present Villages ( Chinese : 村 ; pinyin : Cūn ), formally village-level divisions ( 村级行政区 ; Cūn Jí Xíngzhèngqū ) in China , serve as

4-523: A fundamental organizational unit for its rural population (census, mail system). Basic local divisions like neighborhoods and communities are not informal, but have defined boundaries and designated heads (one per area). In 2000, China's densely populated villages (>100 persons/square km) had a population greater than 500 million and covered more than 2 million square kilometers, or more than 20% of China's total area. By 2020, all incorporated villages (with proper conditions making it possible) had road access,

#242757