Baoan Town has a long history.
Xia belonged to Yuzhou, Shang and Zhou were Yinghou states, it belonged to Chu in the early Spring and Autumn Period, and it was the fiefdom of Ye Gong Shen of Zhuliang.
Yeyang County, Nanyang County in Qin Dynasty, belonged to Ye County, Nanyang County in the Western Han Dynasty. It was the fiefdom of Prince Ding of Changsha during the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty.
During the Eastern Han Dynasty, it belonged to Nanyang County of Jingzhou. During the Three Kingdoms period, it belonged to Ye County, Nanyang County of Jingzhou in Wei Dynasty. In the second year of Huangchu (AD 221), Emperor Wen of Wei Dynasty, Yiyangna was separated and placed under the jurisdiction of Yiyang County of Jingzhou.
At the beginning of the Western Jin Dynasty, it belonged to the Nanyang Kingdom of Sima and Cambodia.
During the Liu and Song Dynasties of the Southern Dynasty, starting from the 26th year of Yuanjia (AD 449), it successively belonged to Nanyang County of Yongzhou, Yingzhou, Nanzhongfu, Beicheng County of Jiancheng County, and Heshan County of Luyang County of Guangzhou (now Lushan).
Emperor Xiaoming of the Wei Dynasty, Xiaochangzhong (AD 526), ??belonged to Xiangzhou, and Emperor Xiaojing of the Eastern Wei Dynasty (AD 534), belonged to Nanding County, Xiangzhou, Nan'an County.
From AD 538 to the establishment of the Sui Dynasty, the town successively belonged to Jianzhou Nan'an County, Dingnan County, Xiangzhou, Nanxiangcheng County, Dingnan County, etc.
At the beginning of the Sui Dynasty (AD 581), it belonged to Dingnan County, Yingchuan County, Yuzhou, and later Dingnan County was merged into Ye County.
During the Tang Dynasty and the Five Dynasties, it belonged to Yezhou, Xuzhou, Xianzhou, Ruzhou, Yezhou, Beilizhou, Luzhou, Xuzhou, Xianzhou, Henan Province Ruzhou, Linru County, Xianzhou, Ruzhou, Xu
Prefecture, Ruzhou, Henan Province, etc.
In the Northern Song Dynasty, it belonged to Ye County, Ruzhou, on the northwest road of Beijing.
In the Jin Dynasty, it belonged to Nanjing Road (originally Bianliang Road) in Yuzhou.
At the beginning of the Yuan Dynasty, it first belonged to Suizhou, and then to Yuzhou, Nanyang Prefecture on Bianliang Road. In the 27th year of the Yuan Dynasty (1290), after the imperial court established Xingzhongshu Province, it belonged to Ye County, Yuzhou, Nanyang Prefecture, Xingzhongshu Province, Jiangbei, Henan.
In the Ming Dynasty, it belonged to Ye County, Yuzhou Prefecture, Nanyang Prefecture, Henan Province, and in the Qing Dynasty, it belonged to Ye County, Nanyang Prefecture, Henan Province.
In the second year of the Republic of China (1913), the town was affiliated to South Henan Road. The following year, South Henan Road was changed to Ruyang Road and was under the jurisdiction of Ruyang Road.
In the 22nd year of the Republic of China (1932), it was affiliated to the southern district of Jiuxian County, Ye County, Henan Sixth Administrative Supervision District (i.e. Nanyang Special Office). It was called Baoan Town from 1944 to 1946.
After liberation in November 1947, it first belonged to the Fifth Commissioner's Office (in Lushan), Dushu District, Lunan County.
Later it was changed to the Second Commissioner's Office (in Wuyang), Dushu District, Lunan County.
In the summer of 1948, it withdrew from Lunan County and returned to Ye County.
In February 1949, the Second and Fifth Commissioner's Offices merged to form the Xuchang Commissioner's Office.
Later, the town belonged to Ye County, Xuchang Prefecture.
In 1950, it became the fifth district of Yexian County. In 1955, the district was withdrawn and the central township was established. In 1961, the organizational system was restored and a security area was established with a medium-sized people's commune.
It was changed to Bao'an Township in 1984 and restored to Bao'an Town in September 1989.
In September 1983, it was classified as Ye County of Pingdingshan City.
Therefore, this place has been a battleground for military strategists since ancient times, and there is little peace. People are eager to live and work in peace and contentment, so they named it "Baoan" to ensure peace.
In the Ming Dynasty, it was called Baodian.