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Meaning
of the name
"Garrison (of the Yangzi) River"
A historical and famous city
which integrates industry, port and tourism into a whole;
a solid foundation for industry and a good environment
for investment with convenient transport facilities,
abundant natural resources
Attractions in Zhenjiang
Location
On the south bank of the Yangzi River (Chang Jiang),
200 km (120 miles) northwest of Shanghai and 60 km (40
miles) east of Nanjing.
Neighboring Areas: Zhejiang,
Anhui, Shandong provinces and Shanghai Municipality
Population: 2.65 million
Area: 3,843 sq km
History
Zhenjiang was the seat of feudal domains from the
8th century BC onwards. After it was captured by Qin,
the first Chinese emperor, in 221 BC, it became a county
town. After being conquered by the Sui in 581 AD, it
was made a garrison to guard the entrance to the Yangzi
River. Its importance grew with the building of a precursor
to the Grand Canal, when it became the chief collection
and forwarding center for tax grain paid by the Yangzi
delta region.
The city reached its zenith under the Song dynasty
(960-1279), when it produced fine silks, satins, and
silverware for the emperors. In about 1300, a census
reported that some Nestorian Christians were living
in Zhenjiang.
Zhenjiang suffered from strife during the Opium War
(1839-42) when it was bombarded by British warships,
and again during the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864).
Zhenjiang declined economically with the closure of
the northern portion of the Grand Canal in the 1850s,
and the obstruction of the entrance to the southern
canal in the 20th century.
From 1928 to 1949, during the Nationalist (Guomindang)
regime of Chiang Kaishek, Zhenjiang was made the capital
of Jiangsu Province, while Nanjing (the present-day
capital of Jiangsu) served as the capital of China.
Zhenjiang is still one of China's busiest ports for
domestic commerce, serving as a hub for trade between
northern Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, and Shanghai.
The trade mostly consists of grain, cotton, oils, and
lumber. The other main industries are mostly in the
field of food processing and paper pulp manufacturing.
It is famous among Chinese for its heroic resistance
against the British (in 1842 and 1949) and the Japanese
(in the Second World War).
Culture
In a park on the edge of Zhenjiang there is a spring
which was described in the Tang dynasty (618-907 AD)
as being the best in Jiangsu for the making of tea (Number
One Lifespring Under Heaven).
The hilly scenery in Zhenjiang's southern suburbs was
considered beautiful enough to be the theme of many
landscapes by Chinese painters.
Near the Zhenjiang Museum in Boxian Park is the Shaozong
Library, which among other documents contains a 100-volume
collection of old sayings and proverbs, dating from
the 7th to 11th centuries.
Pearl S. Buck (1892-1973), the Nobel Prize-winning
author of The Good Earth and other novels about China,
lived in Zhenjiang with her missionary parents until
the age of 15. Her childhood home is preserved on the
grounds of a radio factory in Zhenjiang.
Zhenjiang is home to the Silkworm Raising Research
Institute of the Academy of Agricultural Science of
China.
Food
A local specialty is a steamed meat pastry called
Crab Cream Bun. Other famous special products include
fragrant vinegar, pork, and pickles.
Folklore
Because of its strategic location on the Yangzi
River, Qin, the first Emperor of China, believed that
the fengshui (magical earth powers) of Zhenjiang were
too strong, so he ordered 3,000 prisoners to dig a tunnel
through a hill to divert the powers away.
In the traditional Chinese story The Tale of the White
Snake, a magical, 1000 year old snake who could take
the form of a woman escapes through a cave in Gold Hill,
to be reunited with her lover in the far-away city of
Hangzhou. An illustrated translation of the Tale of
the White Snake
Climate situated in the north part of
subtropical zone with the monsoon climate; frost-free
of 23.7 days, average sunlight of 2057.2 hours, frog
period of 20 days
Average Temperature: 15 C
annually
Rainfall: 1507.8 mm annually
Mountains: Mt.Great Hua and Shilichangshan
Rivers:
the
Yangtze River, the Jinhang Canal
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