Kim Kụ́

Kijulum (Sohainesian: 기즈ㅿ룸; Chinese: 金欅; Jīnjǔ; Vietnamese: Kim Kû́) is the capital and largest city of the eponymous province. It is the second most populous city in Sohainesia, having a population of 1,649,264.

History
Kijulum was first settled by Chinese settlers in 20 AD by Chinese settlers, calling it Jushan (欅山). After the Vietnamese arrived in 938, the city became a very rich city, so the city was renamed to Kim Kû́ Sân(金欅山) in 1062. During Khmer rule (1138-1428), the city was called Kijulum.

In 1858, Kijulum was the site of a major battle between the French and Dynastic Vietnam. It was renamed Ceusanne during French rule, and it was the site of violently supressed pro-Vietnamese rebellions, especially the Kim Kû̊ Sân mutiny of 1935. The mutiny lead to the independence of Sohainesia the following year.

The city's Chinese name was shortened to Jinju from Jinjushan after the Coup of 11/22. On September 10, 1970, Kijulum was the subject of several riots, lasting until the last riots were supressed on March 18, 1971. After the end of communist rule, Kijulum replaced Nuharul as the second-largest city in Sohainesia because Nuharul suffered from cheap labour demands and worker's strikes during communist rule, and Kijulum was chosen as the technology base of the Economic Miracle.

The famous Highway 94 was completed in Kijulum in 1984. Today, Kijulum is one of the most economically powerful cities of Southeast Asia.