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Although the ice skin mooncake is called mooncake, it is actually derived from the Vietnamese ice skin

Although the ice skin mooncake is called mooncake, it is actually derived from the Vietnamese ice skin

Although the ice skin mooncake is called mooncake, the actual source to the Vietnamese ice skin is not ours, and we will never force it to say that it is ours.

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But Hong Kong has always been our territory in China, and it is ours, and every point is indispensable.

In 214 BC, the Qin army basically occupied Lingnan. Subsequently, Qin Shi Huang set up the Lingnan region he seized into three counties: "Guilin, Xiang, and Nanhai". The area around Hong Kong was brought under the jurisdiction of Panyu County.

During the Han Dynasty, Hong Kong was subordinate to Boluo County, Namhae County.

In the sixth year of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (331 AD), Hong Kong was under the jurisdiction of Bao'an County, Dongguan County.

The Sui Dynasty incorporated its jurisdiction into Nanhai County, Guangzhou Province, and Bao'an County was also subordinate to Nanhai County, while Hong Kong remained under the administration of Bao'an County.

In the second year of the Tang Dynasty (757 AD), Bao'an County was changed to Dongguan County, and Hong Kong was still subordinate to Dongguan County.

During the Song and Yuan dynasties, a large number of mainland people moved to Hong Kong.

During the Yuan Dynasty of China, it belonged to Jiangxi Province, and set up an inspection department in Tuen Mun in the southwest of Hong Kong, garrisoning troops to prevent pirate invasion and defend the Guangzhou area.

During the Ming Dynasty, parts of Dongguan County were carved out of Dongguan County to form Xin'an County, which became the later Hong Kong area.

From then on, Hong Kong Island was under the jurisdiction of Xin'an County, Guangzhou Province, from the first year of the Ming Dynasty (1573 AD) until the 21st year of Daoguang of the Qing Dynasty (1841 AD).

On 9 June 1898, the British forced the Qing government to sign the "Special Clause on the Expansion of Hong Kong Boundary Sites" (commonly known as the "New Territories Lease"), forcibly leasing the area north of Boundary Street on the Kowloon Peninsula and south of the Shenzhen River, as well as more than 200 large and small islands, for a period of 99 years (ending on 30 June 1997).

On December 19, 1984, the Joint Declaration of the Government of the People's Republic of China and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland on the Question of Hong Kong was signed, and it was decided that the People's Republic of China would resume the exercise of sovereignty over Hong Kong on July 1, 1997.