Nanjing

[nahn-jing] /ˈnɑnˈdʒɪŋ/
noun, Pinyin.
1.
a port in and the capital of Jiangsu province, in E China, on the Chang Jiang: a former capital of China.
Also, Nanching, Nanking.

Jiangsu

[jyahng-sy] /ˈdʒyɑŋˈsü/
noun, Pinyin.
1.
a maritime province in E China. 40,927 sq. mi. (106,001 sq. km).
Capital: Nanjing.
Also, Kiangsu.
British Dictionary definitions for Nanjing

Nanjing

/ˈnænˈdʒɪŋ; ˈnænˈtʃɪŋ/
noun
1.
a port in E central China, capital of Jiangsu province, on the Yangtze River: capital of the Chinese empire and a literary centre from the 14th to 17th centuries; capital of Nationalist China (1928–37); site of a massacre of about 300 000 civilians by the invading Japanese army in 1937; university (1928). Pop: 2 806 000 (2005 est)

Jiangsu

/ˈdʒjæŋˈsuː/
noun
1.
a province of E China, on the Yellow Sea: consists mostly of the marshy delta of the Yangtze River, with some of China's largest cities and most densely populated areas. Capital: Nanjing. Pop: 74 060 000 (2003 est). Area: 102 200 sq km (39 860 sq miles)
Nanjing in Culture

Nanjing definition


City in eastern China on the Yangtze River, northeast of Shanghai; an industrial and transportation center.

Note: China's imperial capital on several occasions, it was made capital of the Republic of China by Sun Yat-sen in 1912 after the Chinese Revolution, by Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-shek from 1928 to 1937, and again from 1946 to 1949.
Note: During the Second Sino-Japanese War in the 1930s, Nanjing was the scene of a Japanese massacre (the Rape of Nanking) and became the seat of a puppet regime established by the Japanese.