In the year of Tianhe and BeiTuesday (AD 567), the pumice salt wells and their surrounding areas were set up in Luoyuan County and Fushi County under their jurisdiction.
In the second year of Emperor Kai of Sui Dynasty (AD 582), he left the county and moved to Luzhou, with a county area of about 6.5438+0.5 million hectares.
In the 23rd year of Zhenguan in Tang Dynasty (AD 649), it was renamed Fuyi County to avoid the word "the world" in Li Shimin.
In the Northern Song Dynasty, in the fourth year of Gande (AD 966), he was promoted to county governor and transferred to Fulu Road in Zizhou (Tongchuan), with a territory of about 300,000 hectares.
In the first year of Taiping Xingguo (AD 976), it was renamed Fushun County, namely Fushun Salt Supervision Bureau, because it avoided the word "righteousness" in Zhao Kuangyi.
In the 12th year of Yuan Shizu Zhiyuan (AD 1275), Fushun Salt Supervision Bureau was changed to Fushun Anfu Embassy, and in the 20th year (AD 1283), it was promoted to Suzhou and transferred to Sichuan.
In the fourth year of Hongwu in Ming Dynasty (A.D. 137 1), Jiangzhou was a county and transferred to the state capital. Because it was in the Qing Dynasty.
In the early years of the Republic of China, he was transferred to Sichuan South Road and Yongning Road.
In the 17th year of the Republic of China (AD 1928), Taoism was under the jurisdiction of Sichuan Province.
In the 24th year of the Republic of China (A.D. 1935), it was placed under the seventh administrative supervision area of Sichuan Province, with a county area of 3310.2 million mu.
After liberation, Fushun County was successively assigned to Lu Xian, Longchang, Luzhou and Yibin.
1983 has been placed under the jurisdiction of Zigong since Yibin.