lingshanxianIntroduction:Introduction to Lingshan: Lingshan County is a county under the jurisdiction of Qinzhou City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. In the southwest of Guangxi, northeast of Qinzhou City. The county seat is 150 kilometers away from Nanning, 100 kilometers away from Qinzhou City, 150 kilometers away from Beihai City and 500 kilometers away from Guangzhou City. It is a famous "hometown of Chinese litchi, the hometown of Chinese milk buffalo and the hometown of Chinese snakes." Lingshan County is located in the southwestern part of Qinzhou Bay, the northwestern part of Qinzhou City, the coastal industrial city of Guangxi Beibu Gulf Economic Zone. It is adjacent to Hengxian and Suining Districts of Nanning City in the north, Hepu County of Beihai City in the south, and Pubei County in the east. West is connected to Qinnan and Qinbei District. Lingshan County has a long history. In the 18th year of Emperor Kaihuang (AD 598), Nanbin County was established. Tang Yiyuan (Year 794) was renamed Lingshan County. It was named after Xiling Mountain (now called Liufeng Mountain). Originally from Guangdong Province, it was incorporated into Guangxi in 1965 and is now in Qinzhou City. The county governs 18 towns, with an administrative area of 3,550 square kilometers and a population of 1.6 million. It is the third most populous county in Guangxi. At the end of 2012, Lingshan County's urbanization level was 33.6%, the county built-up area reached 20 square kilometers, and the county population was 210,000. The city scale entered the ranks of medium-sized cities. The transportation within the county is very convenient. The Qinzhou-Luwu first-class highway, the 209 national highway, the 308 and 310 provincial highways, the Zhangpu secondary road, the Wuli-Hepu secondary road, the Liqin railway and the Liujing-Qinzhou port expressway under construction It runs through the county; it has the geographical advantage of “backing against the southwest and facing Southeast Asia”.