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Changsha
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There's
little evidence to show that the site of CHANGSHA ,
Hunan's tidy, nondescript capital, has been inhabited
for three thousand years, but it has long been an important
river town and, prior to Qin invasions in 280 BC, was
the southern capital of the kingdom of Chu . Caught
in the crossfire of the nineteenth-century peasant rebellions
which swept through central China, most of what was
left of the old city was torched in the 1940s by the
Guomindang, who were trying to dislodge Japanese resistance,
and the rest was largely cleared in recent modernizations.
While ancient sites and objects occasionally surface
nearby - such as Shang-era bronze wine jars, and the
magnificently preserved contents of three Han burial
mounds - their presence is swamped by more contemporary
structures: busy clover-leaf intersections, grey concrete
facades and stylish modern street lighting.
Primarily, though, Changsha is known for its links
with Mao . Aged eighteen and intent on becoming educated,
he arrived here from his native village as nationwide
power struggles erupted following the Manchu dynasty's
fall in 1911, and soon put aside his studies to spend
six months in the local militia. After he returned to
the classroom in 1913, Changsha became a breeding ground
for secret political societies and intellectuals, and
by 1918 there was a real movement for Hunan to become
an independent state. For a time, this idea found favour
with the local warlord Zhao Hendi , though he soon violently
turned on the students and workers who supported him.
Mao, by now a teacher, was singled out and fled to Beijing,
where he was soon to co-found the Chinese Communist
Party. He later returned to the city and spent much
of the 1920s organizing peasant uprisings in rural Hunan.
Mao was by no means the only young Hunanese profoundly
affected by these events, and a number of his contemporaries
later surfaced in the Communist government: Liu Shaoqi
, Mao's deputy until he became a victim of the Cultural
Revolution; four Politburo members under Deng Xiaoping,
including the former CCP chief, Hu Yaobang ; and Hua
Guofeng , Mao's lookalike and briefly empowered successor.
Today, Changsha's few formal attractions are dominated
by the Chairman's presence, though there are also a
couple of parks to wander around, and a fascinating
Provincial Museum . The only real day trip from Changsha
is out to Mao's birthplace at Shaoshan , 90km to the
southwest, a very pleasant excursion made easier by
well-organized public transport.
Attractions
in Changsha
Neighboring Areas: Jiangxi,
Guangdong, Guizhou, Sichuan, and Hubei provinces; Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region
History: a history back to an original large town during the Spring and Autumn
and Warring States Periods (770-331 B.C.), called Qingyang;
set up as Changsha prefecture in 331 B.C. after the
first emperor of the Qin dynasty unified China; opened
to foreign traders in 1904
Climate featured by drastic temperature
difference in spring; abundant sunlight in summer and
autumn, short frozen period and long hot period
Average Temperature: 17.5 C
annually and 4.6 C
in January and 28.6 C
in July
Rainfall: annual average of 1378mm
Mountains: Mt. Yuelu
Rivers: Xiangjang River, Liuyanghe River
and Ladaohe River
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