Introduction to Jiangxi: Jiangxi has a superior location and convenient transportation. It is located in the south of the Yangtze River. Since ancient times, it has been known as the "land of Qianyue", "the head of Wu, Chuwei, and Minting of Guangdong". It is known as "a land of moral integrity, a land of white cranes and fish and rice".
Part of Jiangxi Province belongs to the Economic Zone on the west coast of the Taiwan Strait. It has the largest freshwater lake in China - Poyang Lake. It is also one of the largest copper industrial bases in Asia. It has the "World Tungsten Capital" and the "Rare Earth Kingdom" , "China's Copper Capital" and "Hometown of Nonferrous Metals".
Jiangxi is rich in underground mineral deposits and is one of the provinces with a high level of supporting mineral resources in my country. The top three reserves in the country include copper, tungsten, silver, tantalum, scandium, uranium, rubidium, cesium, gold, associated sulfur, talc, pink quartz, wollastonite, etc. Copper, tungsten, uranium, tantalum, rare earths, gold, and silver are known as the "Seven Golden Flowers" of Jiangxi.
Jiangxi’s industrial system:
Since the Han Dynasty, Jiangxi has been an important shipbuilding base in the mainland. The Guo family and his daughter created the Longquan code in Longquan (now Suichuan) and made a significant contribution to the traditional timber trade. After the "Anshi Rebellion", Jiangxi's textile, ceramics, silver, copper, iron, lead and other mining and smelting industries all developed. Changnan (Jingdezhen) porcelain has become world-famous.
In the Southern Song Dynasty and the early Yuan Dynasty, Jingdezhen became a nationally famous porcelain capital and gradually became one of the centers of China's porcelain manufacturing industry. In the early Ming Dynasty, the handicraft industry was famous for its iron smelting, copper smelting and coin minting; handmade papermaking was spread all over the country; and the porcelain making industry was becoming increasingly developed. By the early Ming Dynasty, there were nearly 3,000 official and private kilns, with an annual output of hundreds of thousands of pieces of porcelain.