History of Xiangtan

Pre-Ming Dynasty
Relics from the Daxi culture indicate that people inhabited the Xiangtan area in the 3rd millennium BC. Shang Dynasty bronzewares have been found in the region, as well as tombs from the Warring States period. During the Three Kingdoms Period, the kingdom of Eastern Wu built a city in the west of modern Xiangtan City and organized the Hengyang Commandery around it. In 749, the Tang Dynasty organized the area as Xiangtan County, centered at modern Yisu River. By the time of the Northern Song Dynasty, Xiangtan’s good access to both land and water trade routes had established it as the major commercial center of the region.

Ming and Qing Dynasties
Xiangtan prospered throughout the Ming Dynasty and Qing Dynasty upon an economic foundation of trading in rice and traditional Chinese medicinal ingredients, and was sometimes referred to as “Little Nanjing” or “Golden Xiangtan”. Prior to the Second Opium War, Xiangtan was a central transfer point for import and export goods going to and from ports in Canton, Shanghai, and Wuhan, supported by approximately 200,000 inhabitants.

Source From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xiangtan#History