The name Hohhot first appeared in the Mongolian biography of Anda Khan, which recorded: "The world-famous holy Lord Atan Khan (that is, Atan Khan), in the Year of the Monkey (Tibetan calendar, that is, the sixth year of Qin Long in the Ming Dynasty, 1572), convened unparalleled craftsmen to imitate the lost metropolis. Under the sunshine of Hala and Harbin,
"Harouna", the Mongolian language is Montenegrin, and it is also called "Harouna", "Kalangwu" and "Mokala" in Ming and Qing works, which is now Daqingshan. "Hatun River" is the Wuli Shahe River flowing down from Wutushu Valley in the northwest of Hohhot, that is, the Zhada Haihe River in Suiyuan Tongzhi Draft. The name of Hohhot in the Biography of Anda Khan is the earliest record so far.
Extended data
Hohhot is a national historical and cultural city, one of the birthplaces of Chinese civilization, with a long history and splendid culture. In the pre-Qin period, King Wuling of Zhao set up Yunzhong County here, so the address was in Tuoketuo County, southwest of Hohhot. During the Republic of China, it was the capital of Suiyuan Province. After the merger of Mongolia and Suiyuan, Hohhot became the capital of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The downtown area of Hohhot was originally formed by the merger of Guihua City and Suiyuan City in the late Qing Dynasty and the Republic of China, hence the name Guisui.
Hohhot is located in the north of China, the northern frontier and the inland of Eurasia. It is the core city of Hu Baoyin Urban Agglomeration and the central city of Hubao E Urban Agglomeration. It is an important bridge connecting the Yellow River Economic Belt, the Eurasian Continental Bridge and the Bohai Economic Zone, and it is also an important central city along the border for China to open to Mongolia and Russia.
Baidu encyclopedia-Hohhot