Yuli County

Yuli County as the official Romanized name, also transliterated from Mongolian as Lopnur County (Lop Nur), is a county in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and is under the administration of the Bayin'gholin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture. It contains an area of 59399 km2. According to the 2002 census, it has a population of 100,000.

Etymology
The etymology was discussed in detail in the article On the Place Name Yuli and Rouran (尉犁地名和柔然源流考) by Li Shuhui (李树辉).

The name Yuli was postulated to have come from Turkic (J)yrægir ("one who is stationed; one who stays"), the name of a Turkic clan, and derived from yræ-(verb form yryk, "to be stationed in") + -gir (adjectival suffix).

Both (J)yrægir and yryk were said to be recorded in the ancient dictionary Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk, although the exact Arabic-script forms are unknown, perhaps اُرَكِرْ Üregir, يُرَكِرْ Yüregir, the 15th clan of the Oghuz.

History
In 2016, Tuanjie was upgraded from a township to a town.

In 2018, Xingping was upgraded from a township to a town.

Geography
The county is bordered to the northeast by Toksun County.

Administrative divisions
Yuli County includes three towns and five townships:

Others:
 * XPCC 31st Regiment Farm (兵团三十一团, 31-تۇەن مەيدانى)
 * XPCC 33rd Regiment Farm (兵团三十三团, 33-تۇەن مەيدانى)
 * XPCC 34th Regiment Farm (兵团三十四团, 34-تۇەن مەيدانى)

Economy
, there was about 2,960 acres (19,564 mu) of cultivated land in Yuli.

Demographics
As of 2015, 68,281 (66.20%) of the 103,143 residents of the county were Han Chinese, 33,752 (32.72%) were Uyghur and 1,110 were from other ethnic groups.

As of 1999, 70.54% of the population of Yuli (Lopnur) County was Han Chinese and 28.68% of the population was Uyghur.

As of 1997, several townships had a majority of Uyghur residents including Ka'erquga Township (98.6%), Donghetan Township (98.5%), Akesufu/Akesupu Township (90.1%), Gulebage Township (65.3%), Xingping Township (61.6%) and others.

Transportation

 * China National Highway 218