Huilai County (postal: Hweilai; ) is a county covering part of the eastern coast of Guangdong province, China, facing the South China Sea to the south. It lies under the jurisdiction of Jieyang. According to the 2020 Chinese census, the county has a population of 1,040,779 under its hukou, (household registration) system. Amongst them, 437,430 are downtown residents.
In ancient times, the territory of presentâÂÂday Huilai belonged to the lands of the Baiyue (ç¾è¶Â) peoples. During the Qin and Han dynasties, it fell under the jurisdiction of Boluo (Ã¥ÂÂç¾ ) and Jieyang (æÂÂé½) counties of Nanhai Commandery (Ã¥ÂÂæµ·é¡). In 331 CE (Xianhe 6, Eastern Jin; æÂ±æÂÂé¹¹å Âå¹´), a portion of Jieyang County was separated to establish Haining County (海寧縣), which belonged to Dongguan Commandery (æÂ±å®Âé¡); its administrative seat was located in what is now western Huilai. In 621 CE (Wude 4, Tang dynasty; Ã¥ÂÂæÂ¦å¾·åÂÂå¹´), Haining was merged into Haiyang County (æµ·é½), under the administration of Chaozhou Prefecture (æ½®å·ÂåºÂ).
In 1524 (Jiajing 3, Ming dynasty; æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂéÂÂä¸Âå¹´), parts of Chaoyang County (æ½®é½縣) and Haifeng County (æµ·è±Â縣) were carved out to create Huilai County, which thereafter remained under the administration of Chaozhou Prefecture until the end of the Qing dynasty. The county was named after Huilai Du (æÂ ä¾Âé½; Du was a subdivision of a County), the administrative division where the county seat was established. In 1525 (Jiajing 4; Ã¥ÂÂéÂÂÃ¥ÂÂå¹´), the county seat was fortified as a walled city and named Huicheng (æÂ åÂÂ). Because it lies to the southeast of Kuiling (èµ嶺), it was also historically known as Kuiyang (èµé½; lit. south of Kuiling). Kuiling was named for the abundant growth of mallow (èµ, kuÃÂ) or sunflower-like plants that historically covered the mountain ridge.
In the early Republic of China, especially during the Eastern Expedition campaigns (æÂ±å¾ÂæÂÂæÂÂ) of the 1920s, the Guangdong Military Government established a series of transitional administrative and military bodies to restore governance in the Dongjiang, Chaoshan, and Meixian regions after they were retaken. These institutions reflected the evolving balance between military control and civil administration. Their functions shifted progressively from military pacification (è»ÂäºÂå¹³å®Â) with Reconstruction Offices (Ã¥ÂÂå¾ÂèÂÂ), to administrative restoration (è¡ÂæÂ¿æÂ¢å¾©) with the Administrative Offices (è¡ÂæÂ¿å ¬ç½²), and finally to regional security and stabilization with the Pacification Commissions (ç¶ÂéÂÂ堬署).
During the Republic of China period, Huilai County was successively placed under the jurisdiction of the Guangdong Military GovernorâÂÂs Office (廣æÂ±é½ç£åºÂ), the ChaoâÂÂXun Circuit (潮循éÂÂ) under the Provincial Surveillance Commissioner (å·¡æÂÂ使), the Dongjiang Administrative Commission (æÂ±æ±Âè¡ÂæÂ¿å§Âå¡堬署), the Eastern District Pacification Commission (æÂ±åÂÂç¶ÂéÂÂå§Âå¡堬署), and later the Fifth and Seventh Administrative Inspectorates of Guangdong Province (廣æÂ±çÂÂ第äºÂãÂÂ第ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂè¡ÂæÂ¿ç£å¯Âå°Âå¡堬署).
In 1912 (æ°ÂÃ¥ÂÂå Âå¹´; the first year of the Republic of China), following the abolition of the Qing prefectural system, Huilai County came under the Chaoshan Pacification Commissioner (æ½®æ±Âå®ÂæÂ«ä½¿), an office subordinate to the Guangdong Military GovernorâÂÂs Office and responsible for the former Chaozhou region. In 1914 (æ°ÂÃ¥ÂÂä¸Âå¹´), the Provincial Surveillance Commissioner established the ChaoâÂÂXun Circuit (潮循éÂÂ), headed by a daoyin (éÂÂå°¹). As a formal administrative division under the Beiyang government (Ã¥ÂÂæ´ÂæÂ¿åºÂ), it governed the former regions of Chaozhou, Huizhou, and adjacent areas. In 1920, Huilai was reassigned to the ChaoâÂÂMei Reconstruction Office (潮梠åÂÂå¾ÂèÂÂ), and in 1925 to the Dongjiang Administrative Reconstruction Office (æÂ±æ±Âè¡ÂæÂ¿åÂÂå¾ÂèÂÂ). By April 1949, shortly before the founding of the PeopleâÂÂs Republic of China, the county was incorporated into the Seventh Administrative District of the Chaoshan Region (æ½®æ±Âå°åÂÂ第ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ).
After the first Eastern Expedition recaptured the ChaozhouâÂÂMeixian area in 1925, the government created the ChaoâÂÂMei Reconstruction Office (潮梠åÂÂå¾ÂèÂÂ) to restore order in the immediate aftermath of the campaign. Its jurisdiction covered the Chaoshan and Meixian regions, and its functions were later inherited by broader transitional bodies. As the Eastern Expedition expanded across the Dongjiang basinâÂÂincluding Huizhou, Chaozhou, and MeixianâÂÂthe Dongjiang Administrative Reconstruction Office (æÂ±æ±Âè¡ÂæÂ¿åÂÂå¾ÂèÂÂ) was established to coordinate governance across the entire war zone (æÂ±æ±ÂæÂ°åÂÂ). This represented a shift from localized postwar management to regionâÂÂwide administrative consolidation. By late 1925, as military conditions stabilized, its responsibilities were gradually transferred to newly formed administrative offices. In November 1925, following the second Eastern Expedition, the Dongjiang Administrative Reconstruction Office was formally reorganized to replace the earlier ChaoâÂÂMei Reconstruction Office. Proposed by Chiang KaiâÂÂshek, the reorganization aimed to unify postwar administration across all Dongjiang jurisdictions. However, in February 1926, the Guangdong Nationalist Government adopted a more formal administrative committee system, abolishing the office and replacing it with the Dongjiang Administrative Committee Office.
On 1 February 1926, the Dongjiang Administrative Committee Office (æÂ±æ±Âè¡ÂæÂ¿å§Âå¡堬署), also known as the Administrative Committee Office for the Dongjiang Jurisdictions (æÂ±æ±ÂÃ¥ÂÂ屬è¡ÂæÂ¿å§Âå¡堬署), was officially established in Shantou. Appointed by the Guangdong Nationalist Government, its administrative commissioners, including at one point Zhou Enlai (å¨æÂ©ä¾Â), oversaw governance in the Dongjiang region. With the launch of the Northern Expedition (Ã¥ÂÂä¼Â) and the restructuring of local administration, the office completed its transitional mission and was abolished in July 1926. In July 1926, the Dongjiang Administrative Committee Office was replaced by the Eastern District Pacification Commission (æÂ±åÂÂç¶ÂéÂÂå§Âå¡堬署). Formed during the period of cooperation between the Nanjing and Guangdong factions (寧粵åÂÂæµÂ), and associated with the Chen Jitang (鳿¿Â棠) administration, this body strengthened military and security control over eastern Guangdong, including the ChaoâÂÂMei and Dongjiang regions. It functioned as a military or semiâÂÂmilitary institution focused on stabilization after basic civil administration had been restored. As Chiang KaiâÂÂshekâÂÂs central forces entered Guangdong and Chen Jitang fell from power, the older local pacification system was reorganized. The commission was eventually replaced by the Nationalist GovernmentâÂÂs Administrative Inspectorates and new military structures, and was abolished around 1936 following the Liangguang Incident (堩廣äºÂè®Â).
In May 1949, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) took control of Huilai, and a new government was established in August of the same year. In December 1958, Huilai County was abolished and its territory was merged into Puning and Chaoyang counties. In March 1961, the county was restored as an independent administrative unit. In 1983, following the merger of Shantou Prefecture and Shantou City, Huilai County was placed under the jurisdiction of Shantou. On 7 December 1991, with the approval of the State Council, the administrative status of Jieyang County was abolished and the prefectureâÂÂlevel city of Jieyang was established, administering Rongcheng District, Jiedong County, Puning City, Jiexi County, and Huilai County. In 1992, when Jieyang was upgraded from a countyâÂÂlevel city to a prefectureâÂÂlevel city, Huilai County was reassigned to JieyangâÂÂs administration, where it remains today.
Huilai Station (æÂ ä¾Âç«Â) is the only intermediate station of the ShantouâÂÂShanwei Railwayà(æ±Âæ±Âéµ路) within Jieyang, and it serves as the origin station for passenger services on the JieyangâÂÂHuilai Railway. It is located south of Donglong Village (æÂ±é´æÂÂ) in Donglong Town (æÂ±é´é®), Huilai County, approximately 500 meters from the village and 3 kilometers from the county seat. The station opened on December 26, 2023, simultaneously with the completion and inauguration of the ShantouâÂÂShanwei Railway. During peak periods, it is expected to handle up to 1,200 passengers per hour.