Introduction
For other uses, see Jinhua (disambiguation). Prefecture-level city in Zhejiang, People's Republic of ChinaJinhua 金华市Kinhwa, Tsin UaPrefecture-level cityViews of Jinhua City center from Jinhua MountainsBayonglouWanfo PagodaJinhua Railway StationJinhua-Yiwu New DistrictOld City Center in Wucheng DistrictYanweizhou ParkLocation of Jinhua City jurisdiction in ZhejiangInteractive map of JinhuaCoordinates (Jinhua municipal government): 29°04′44″N 119°38′49″E / 29.079°N 119.647°E / 29.079; 119.647CountryPeople's Republic of ChinaProvinceZhejiangCounty-level divisions9Township-level divisions191Municipal seatWucheng DistrictGovernment • Party SecretaryZhao Guangjun (赵光军) • MayorJi Junmin (暨军民)Area • Prefecture-level city10,926.16 km2 (4,218.61 sq mi) • Urban2,049.5 km2 (791.3 sq mi) • Metro2,049.5 km2 (791.3 sq mi)Population (2020 census) • Prefecture-level city7,050,683 • Density645.3029/km2 (1,671.327/sq mi) • Urban1,463,990 • Urban density714.32/km2 (1,850.1/sq mi) • Metro1,463,990 • Metro density714.32/km2 (1,850.1/sq mi)GDP • Prefecture-level cityCN¥ 470.4 billionUS$ 62.0 billion • Per capitaCN¥ 72,192US$ 11,096Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)Area code579ISO 3166 codeCN-ZJ-07License Plate Prefix浙GCity flowerCamellia[citation needed] Jinhua"Jinhua" in Simplified (top) and Traditional (bottom) Chinese charactersSimplified Chinese金华Traditional Chinese金華Literal meaning"Golden Flourishing"TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinJīnhuáWade–GilesChin1-hua4IPA[tɕín.xwǎ] Jinhua is a prefecture-level city in central Zhejiang province in eastern China. It borders the provincial capital of Hangzhou to the northwest, Quzhou to the southwest, Lishui to the south, Taizhou to the east, and Shaoxing to the northeast. Its population was 7,050,683 as of the 2020 census including 1,463,990 in the built-up (or metro) area made of two urban districts (not including yet the satellite city of Lanxi, which has become essentially a suburban offshoot of Jinhua's main urban area). Jinhua is rich in red soil and forest resources. The Jinhua or Wu River flows through the Lan and Fuchun to the Qiantang River beside Hangzhou, which flows into Hangzhou Bay and the East China Sea. In medieval China, it formed part of the water network feeding supplies to the southern end of the Grand Canal. It is best known for its dry-cured Jinhua ham.