Suzhou
Suzhou
苏州市
Sūzhōu Shì |
— Prefecture-level city — |
Historic Canal Street |
Location in Jiangsu |
Location in China
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Coordinates: |
Country |
China |
Province |
Jiangsu |
County-level divisions |
11 |
Established |
514 BC |
Government |
- Type |
Prefecture-level city |
- CPC Suzhou Secretary |
Jiang Hongkun (蒋宏坤) |
- Mayor |
Yan Li (阎立) |
Area[1] |
- Prefecture-level city |
8,488.42 km2 (3,277.4 sq mi) |
- Urban |
1,649.72 km2 (637 sq mi) |
Population (2009)[2] |
- Prefecture-level city |
6,332,900 |
- Density |
746.1/km2 (1,932.3/sq mi) |
- Urban |
2,402,100 |
- Urban density |
1,456.1/km2 (3,771.2/sq mi) |
Time zone |
Beijing Time (UTC+8) |
Postal code |
215000 |
Area code(s) |
512 |
GDP |
2009[2] |
- Total |
CNY 774.020 billion (USD 113.39 billion) |
- Per capita |
CNY 117,200 (USD 17,169) |
- Growth |
11.0% |
City flower |
Osmanthus |
City tree |
camphor laurel |
Regional dialect |
Wu: Suzhou hua (苏州话) |
License plate prefix |
苏E |
Website |
http://www.suzhou.gov.cn/ |
Suzhou (simplified Chinese: 苏州; traditional Chinese: 蘇州; pinyin: Sūzhōu; Suzhou dialect: [səu tsøʏ]; ancient name: 吳). Suzhou is a city on the lower reaches of the Yangtze River and on the shores of Lake Taihu in the province of Jiangsu, China. The city is renowned for its beautiful stone bridges, pagodas, and meticulously designed gardens which have contributed to its status as a great tourist attraction. Since the Song Dynasty (960-1279), Suzhou has also been an important centre for China's silk industry and continues to hold that prominent position today. The city is part of the Yangtze River Delta region.
The name of the city have been previously transliterated in English in various ways, including Su-chou (Wade-Giles system), Suchow, and Soochow. It is occasionally nicknamed the "Venice of the East" or "Venice of China".[3][4][5]
History
Suzhou, the cradle of Wu culture, is one of the oldest towns in the Yangtze Basin. 2500 years ago in the late Shang Dynasty, local tribes who named themselves "Gou Wu" lived in the area which would become the modern city of Suzhou.
In 514 BC, during the Spring and Autumn Period, King Helu (闔閭/阖闾) of Wu established "Great City of Helu", the ancient name for Suzhou, as his capital. In 496 BC, Helu was buried in Huqiu (Tiger Hill 虎丘).
In 473 BC Wu was defeated by Yue, a kingdom to the east which was soon annexed by the Chu in 306 BC. The golden era of Suzhou ended with this conquest. Remnants of this culture include remainders of a 2,500 year old city wall and the gate through it at Pan Gate.
The Humble Administrator's Garden
By the time of the Qin Dynasty, the city was known as Wu County. Xiang Yu (项羽) staged his historical uprising here in 209 BC, which contributed to the overthrow of Qin.
During the Sui Dynasty - in 589 AD - the city was renamed Suzhou.
When the Grand Canal was completed, Suzhou found itself strategically located on a major trade route. In the course of the history of China, it has been a metropolis of industry and commerce on the south-eastern coast of China.
During the Tang Dynasty (825 AD), the great poet Bai Juyi (白居易) constructed the Shantang Canal (called "Shantang Street" or 山塘街) to connect the city with Huqiu for tourists. In 1035 AD, the temple of Confucius was founded by famed poet and writer Fan Zhongyan (范仲淹). It became the venue for imperial civil examinations.
In February 1130, the advancing Jin army from the north ransacked and massacred the city. This was followed by the Mongol invasion (1275).
In 1356, Suzhou became of the capital of Zhang Shicheng, one of the leaders of the Red Turban Rebellion against the Yuan Dynasty and the self-proclaimed King of Wu. In 1367 Zhang's main rival, Nanjing-based Zhu Yuanzhang took the city after a 10-month siege. Zhu - who was soon to proclaim himself as the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty - demolished the royal city (in the centre of Suzhou's walled city), and imposed crushing taxes on the city's and prefecture's powerful families.[6]
Despite the heavy taxation and the resettlement of some of Suzhou's prominent citizens' to the area of Hongwu's capital, Nanjing, Suzhou soon was prosperous again. When in 1488 the shipwrecked Korean official Choe Bu had a chance to see much of Eastern China - from Zhejiang to Liaoning - on his way home, he described Suzhou in his travel report as exceeding every other city in China he had seen.[7] Many of the famous private gardens were constructed by the gentry of the Ming and Qing dynasties. However, the city was to see another disaster in 1860 when Taiping soldiers advanced on and captured the city. In November 1863 the Ever Victorious Army of Charles Gordon recaptured the city from the Taiping forces.
The next crisis that met the city was the Japanese invasion in 1937. Many gardens were devastated by the end of the war. In the early 1950s, restoration was done on gardens such as Zhuo-Zheng Yuan (Humble Administrator's Garden) and Dong Yuan (East Garden) to bring them back to life.
In 1981, this ancient city was listed by the State Council, the PRC government, as one of four cities (the other three being Beijing, Hangzhou and Guilin) where the protection of historical and cultural heritage as well as natural scenery should ideally be treated with utmost care.
The classical gardens in Suzhou were added to the list of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1997 and 2000.
Administrative divisions
An old area in Pingjiang Road
The original ancient city of Suzhou was in a jurisdictional area called Wu County. The now defunct Wu County is currently divided between three districts Pingjiang District, Canglang District, and Jinchang District. Together these three districts form an urban core informally called Downtown Suzhou. To the east and west of this urban core Suzhou Industrial Park, and Suzhou High & New Technology Development Zone, respectively, were added. Two new districts, Xiangcheng District, Suzhou and Wuzhong District are under construction to the north and south, respectively, of the urban core.
Because Suzhou is one of the most prosperous cities in China, its development has a direct correlation with the growth of its satellite cities, most notably Suzhou Industrial Park, Kunshan, Taicang, Mudu, and Zhangjiagang, which together form Suzhou Prefecture. Suzhou's jurisdictional areas are home to many high-tech development enterprises.
Prosperous Suzhou by Qing Xu Yang
Suzhou has jurisdiction over (at county level):
- Districts:
- Canglang District (沧浪)
- Jinchang District (金阊)
- Pingjiang District (平江)
- Suzhou Industrial Park (工业园区)
- Suzhou High & New Technology Development Zone (高新区)
- Xiangcheng District (相城)
- Wuzhong District (吴中)
- County-level cities:
- Changshu (常熟)
- Taicang (太仓)
- Kunshan (昆山)
- Wujiang (吴江)
- Zhangjiagang (张家港)
County |
Township |
Taicang (太仓) |
Chengxiang (城厢镇), Sha (沙溪镇 ), Lu Du (陆渡镇), Liuhe (浏河镇), Pontoon (浮桥镇), Huangjing (璜泾镇), Shuangfeng (双凤镇 ) |
Wujiang (吴江) |
Songling (松陵镇) Tongli (同里镇) FENHU (汾湖镇) Flat Hope (平望镇) Shengze (盛泽镇) Zhenze town (震泽镇) 7 Du (七都镇) Taoyuan (桃源镇) Hengshan (横扇镇) |
Changshu (常熟) |
虞山镇、海虞镇、新港镇、辛庄镇、尚湖镇、梅李镇、支塘镇、董浜镇、古里镇、沙家浜镇 |
Zhangjiagang (张家港) |
杨舍镇、锦丰镇、塘桥镇、乐余镇、南丰镇、金港镇、凤凰镇、大新镇 |
Climate
Suzhou has a humid subtropical climate with hot, humid summers, and cool to cold, cloudy, damp winters with occasional flurries. The spring and autumn are much more pleasant.
Climate data for Suzhou |
Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Year |
Source: per MSN |
Landmarks
An entrance to the Youyicun garden
Xuanmiao Guan in Suzhou
A canal in downtown Suzhou
- Pan Gate is 2,500 years old and was first built by the state of Wu in the Warring States Period. It is renowned for its unique structure as a combined water and land gate.
- Tiger Hill (Huqiu)
- Xuanmiao Guan (originally built in 276)
- Huqiu Temple (originally built in 327, rebuilt in 1871)
- Hanshan Temple (Hanshan Si) (built in 503, destroyed and rebuilt many times, last reconstruction in 1896. It is a Buddhist temple.)
- Baodai Bridge, also called Precious Belt Bridge (built in 816, rebuilt in 1442)
- Shantang Canal (built in 825)
- Yunyan Pagoda (built in 961)
- Beisi Pagoda
- Ruiguang Pagoda (built in 1009)
- Lingering Garden (Liu Yuan)
- Master of the Nets Garden (Wang Shi Yuan) (built in the Song Dynasty)
- Great Wave Pavilion (Canglang Ting) (built in 1696)
- Mountain Villa with Embracing Beauty
- Lion Grove Garden (built in 1342)
- Garden of Cultivation
- The Retreat & Reflection Garden
- Couple's Retreat Garden
- Humble Administrator's Garden (Zhuozheng Yuan) (built in 1513, rebuilt in 1860)
- Gate of the Orient, the city's tallest building due for completion in 2011
- Suzhou Museum the newly built museum by I. M. Pei
- Suzhou Silk Museum
- Suzhou Museum of Opera and Theatre
Classical Gardens of Suzhou |
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This UNESCO World Heritage Site is inscribed as a single property, but composed of 9 separate gardens in Suzhou Prefecture |
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Lingering Garden · Garden of Cultivation · Humble Administrator's Garden · Master of the Nets Garden · Mountain Villa with Embracing Beauty · Great Wave Pavilion · Lion Grove Garden · Couple's Retreat Garden · The Retreat & Reflection Garden
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Industry
The Suzhou Industry Park (SIP) is the largest cooperation project between China and Singapore Government. It is located beside the beautiful Jinji Lake, which lies to the east of Suzhou Old city. On 26th February 1994, Vice Premier Li Lanqing and Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew represented China and Singapore respectively in signing the Agreement to jointly develop Suzhou Industrial Park. The project officially commenced on 12th May in the same year. SIP has a total jurisdiction area of 288 sq km, of which, the China-Singapore cooperation area covers 80 sq km with a planned residential population of 1.2 million.[8]
- Suzhou Industrial Park Export Processing Zone
The Suzhou Industrial Park Export Processing Zone was approved to be established by the government in April 2000, with a planning area of 2.9 sq km. It is located in Suzhou Industrial Park set up by China and Singapore. Inside the Export Processing Zone, all the infrastructures are of high-standard. With the information platform and electronic methods, all the customs declaration and other procedures can be handled on line. Investors can enjoys many preferential policies.[9]
- Suzhou Hi-Tech Industrial Development Zone
The Suzhou Hi-Tech Industrial Development Zone was established in 1990. In Nov. 1992, the zone was approved to be the national-level hi-tech industrial zone. By the end of 2007, foreign-invested companies had a total registered capital worth of USD 13 billion, of which USD 6.8 billion was paid in. SND hosts now more than 1,500 foreign companies. Some 40 Fortune 500 companies set up 67 projects in the district.[10]
Suzhou is the second largest industrial city (next to Shanghai) in China and also the second largest city among the cities in Yangtze Delta.
Transportation
Railway
CRH in Suzhou Staion
Suzhou is conveniently located on the Jinghu Railway linking Shanghai and Nanjing, the provincial capital, to both of which there is hourly railway service. Suzhou Railway Station is among the busiest passenger stations in China, having 139 trains stopping daily. The Station is currently being renovated and expanded to serve the needs of the future. It will possibly have similar designs like the Shanghai South Railway Station and Beijing South Railway Station. D-Series Trains take average 45 minutes to Shanghai and an hour and half to Nanjing. From July 2010, the new G-series high speed train opens, and it only takes about 25 minutes for the top speed train among all the G-series from Suzhou train station to Shanghai Hongqiao station. However, the price of the G-series ticket is twice than that of the D-series. The price of the G-series second class is about 40RMB (6USD).
Expressway and Highway
The 8 lane cross section of the Huning Expressway.
The Jiangsu-Shanghai Expressway connects Suzhou with Shanghai, alternatively, there is also the Yangtze Riverine Expressway and the Suzhou-Jiaxing-Hangzhou Expressway. In 2005, the new Suzhou Outer Ring was completed, linking the peripheral county-level cities of Taicang, Kunshan, and Changshu. China National Highway 312 also passes through Suzhou.
Air Transport
Although Wuxi Shuofang Airport and Guangfu United Airlines Airport serve as two municipal airports, and the State Council approved of the construction of an airport exclusively serving Suzhou in 2003, air transportation from Suzhou continues to be conducted primarily at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport and Shanghai Pudong International Airport in Shanghai.
Water Transport
By water, Suzhou is connected with Zhangjiagang, Luzhi, Liujia, Changshou and Shimonoseki, Japan.
There are also some small rivers in the city serving as touristing lines.
Metro
The Suzhou Metro is currently being constructed, it consist of two independent lines, one running East<->West and one running North<->South serving Suzhou Industrial Park and Wuzhong Dirstrict. Two lines are scheduled to open in 2011.[11]
Culture
The Yunyan Pagoda, or Huqiu Tower, a tower that is now leaning due to lack of foundational support (half soil, half rock), built during the latter part of the
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms era (907-960 AD).
The Beisi Pagoda of Suzhou, built between 1131 and 1162 during the
Song Dynasty (with later renovations), 76 m (243 ft) tall.
The "xi shi" stone bridge
- Chinese opera: Kunqu originates in the Suzhou region, as does the much later Suzhou Opera. Ballad-singing, or Suzhou pingtan, is a local form of storytelling that mixes singing (accompanied by the pipa and sanxian) with portions in spoken dialect.
- Silk
- Handicrafts: Suzhou embroidery, fans, Chinese musical instruments, scroll mounting, lanterns, mahogany furniture, jade carving, silk tapestry, traditional painting pigments of Jiangenxutang Studio, the New Year's wood-block prints of Taohuawu Studio.
- Paintings
- Calligraphic art
- Cuisine: Yangcheng Lake huge crab
- Suzhou Silk Hand Embroidery Art
- Suzhou is the original place of "Jasmine", a song sung by Chinese singers or actresses thousands of times on the occasions of almost every important meetings or celebrations. Jasmine is also the symbol of Suzhou as well as Tai Hu Lake.
- Suzhou Gardens: Gardens in Suzhou have an ancient history. The first garden in Suzhou belonged to the emperor of Wu State in Spring and Autumn Period (BC 600). More than 200 gardens existed in Suzhou between 16th century and 18th century. Gardens in Suzhou were built according to the style of Chinese Paintings. Every view in a garden can be seen as a piece of Chinese Painting and the whole garden is a huge piece of Chinese Paintings. At present, the Humble Administrator's Garden, built in 16th, is the largest private garden in Suzhou. It belonged to by Wang Xianchen, an imperial censor.
- Suzhou embroidery together with embroidery of Hunan, Sichuan and Guangdong are called as the "Four Famous Embroideries". Suzhou tapestry method is done in fine silks and gold thread. Other art forms found in this area are sculpture, Song brocade, jade and rosewood carving.
- The Suzhou Museum has a rich collection of relics from many eras. The collection includes revolutionary records, stele carving, folk customs, drama and verse, Suzhou embroidery, silk cloth, gardens, coins and Buddhist artifacts.[12]
Notable people
- Statesmen
- Fan Zhongyan (范仲淹)
- Yen Chia-kan (嚴家淦)
- Women
- Poets
- Bai Juyi (白居易) (772–846) was a Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty. His poems mostly concern his responsibilities as governor of several small provinces. He is also renowned in Japan (where his name is read Hakkyo'i, はく きょい).
- Fan Chengda (范成大) (1126-1193 AD)
- Playwrights
- Feng Menglong (冯梦龙) (1574-1645 AD)
- Painters
- Tang Yin (唐寅)
- Wen Zhengming (文徵明)
- Wen Zhenheng (文震亨) (1585-1645 AD)
- Physicists
- Philosophers
- Gu Yanwu (顾炎武)
- Zhang Taiyan (章太炎)
- Others
- Thomas Dao (1921-2009), physician who developed breast cancer treatment alternatives.[13]
- Huston Smith
- Carina Lau (刘嘉玲), actress
Quotes
- "A very great and noble city... It has 1600 stone bridges under which a galley may pass." - Marco Polo
- "Capital of Silk", "Land of Abundance", "Gusu city" (姑苏), "Cradle of the Wu Culture", and "World of Gardens", "Oriental Venice or Venice of the East"- nicknames of Suzhou
- 上有天堂 下有蘇杭 "Heaven above, Suzhou and Hangzhou below." - Chinese saying
- 生在苏州,住在杭州,吃在广州,死在柳州。 "Born in Suzhou, live in Hangzhou, eat in Guangzhou, and die in Liuzhou." - Chinese saying.
- 美不美 太湖水 親不親 故郷人 "Beautiful or not beautiful, nothing is more beautiful than the waters of Taihu (Lake Tai). Related or not related, we are all the people of the same village." - Chinese saying
Education
High Schools
- Suzhou High School
- Suzhou No.10 High School
- Suzhou No.1 High School
An exhibition of Penjing in one of the gardens in Suzhou.
Public institutions having full-time Bachelor's degree programs include:
- Soochow University (苏州大学)
- University of Science and Technology of Suzhou (苏州科技学院)
- Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University (西安交通利物浦大学)
Postgraduate Institution
Private Schools
- EtonHouse International School-Suzhou
- Suzhou Singapore International School
- Skema Business School : China's campus of the french business school (MSc Doing business in Asia...)
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Suzhou (including 7 districts and 5 county-level cities under Suzhou's jurisdiction) has more than 50 sister cities, twin towns and provinces:
- Venice Italy
- Victoria, British Columbia Canada
- Ikeda, Osaka Japan
- Kanazawa, Ishikawa Japan
- Portland, Oregon USA
- Tulcea County Romania
- Jeonju Republic of Korea
- Kameoka, Kyoto Japan
- Riga Latvia[14]
- Ismaïlia Egypt
- Grenoble France
- Nijmegen Netherlands
- Esbjerg Denmark
- Konstanz Germany
- Taupo New Zealand
- Nabari, Mie Japan
- Porto Alegre Brazil
- Jacksonville, Florida USA
- Riihimäki Finland
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- Taebaek South Korea
- Nowy Sącz Poland
- Kiev Ukraine
- Zaporizhia Ukraine
- Logan, Queensland Australia
- Antananarivo Madagascar
- Santiago del Estero Province Argentina
- Viña del Mar Chile
- Yeongju South Korea
- Daisen, Tottori Japan
- Riesa Germany
- Rotorua New Zealand
- Santa Luċija Malta
- Hirokawa, Fukuoka Japan
- Portland, Victoria Australia
- Eiheiji, Fukui Japan
- Marugame, Kagawa Japan
- Ayabe, Kyoto Japan
- Sendai, Kagoshima Japan
- Townsville, Queensland Australia
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- Whittier, California USA
- Brest France
- South El Monte, California, USA
- Grootfontein Namibia
- Tahara, Aichi Japan
- Tottori, Tottori Japan
- Rosolina, Italy
- Uchinada, Ishikawa Japan
- Bourgoin-Jallieu France
- Dubbo, New South Wales Australia
- Chiba, Chiba Japan
- Hwaseong, Gyeonggi South Korea
- Nago, Okinawa Japan
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References
- ↑ "Table showing land area and population". Suzhou People's Government. 2003. http://suzhou.sz2500.com/english/Survey/pic/d.jpg. Retrieved 2007-09-07.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "2009年苏州市国民经济和社会发展概况" (in Simplified Chinese). Suzhou Municipal Statistic Bureau. 2010-01-20. http://221.224.13.103/dpt/show.asp?ID=50871. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ "Suzhou real China outside Shanghai". The Times (London). http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/travel/destinations/china/article6732037.ece?print=yes&randnum=1151003209000. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
- ↑ Fussell, Betty (1988-03-13). "Exploring Twin Cities By Canal Boat". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1988/03/13/travel/exploring-twin-cities-by-canal-boat.html?pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
- ↑ Linda Cooke Johnson, Cities of Jiangnan in Late Imperial China. SUNY Press, 1993. ISBN 079141423X, 9780791414231On Google Books, pp. 26-27.
- ↑ Brook, Timothy. (1998). The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22154-0. Page 45.
- ↑ Rightsite.asi | Suzhou Industry Park
- ↑ Rightsite.asia | Suzhou Industrial Park Export Processing Zone
- ↑ Rightsite.asia | Suzhou Hi-Tech Industrial Development Zone
- ↑ "苏州轻轨1号线—4号线详细规划图 (Suzhou LRT Line 1-4 Detailed Map)" (in Chinese). Official Website of the Suzhou Government. 2007-03-20. http://www.suzhou.gov.cn/newssz/sznews/2007/3/20/sznews-8-52-22-3613.shtml. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
- ↑ "Suzhou Museum". http://www.szmuseum.com/szbwgen/index.html.
- ↑ Hevesi, Dennis. "Dr. Thomas Dao, Expert on Treatment of Breast Cancer, Dies at 88", The New York Times, July 25, 2009. Accessed July 26, 2009.
- ↑ "Twin cities of Riga". Riga City Council. http://www.riga.lv/EN/Channels/Riga_Municipality/Twin_cities_of_Riga/default.htm. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
External links
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■ = Sub-provincial city ■ = Prefecture-level city
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World Heritage Sites in China |
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Ancient Building Complex in the Wudang Mountains · Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom · Classical Gardens of Suzhou · China Danxia · Dazu Rock Carvings · Fujian Tulou · Historic Ensemble of the Potala Palace, including the Jokhang and Norbulingka · The Great Wall · Huanglong Scenic and Historic Interest Area · Imperial Palaces of the Ming and Qing Dynasties in Beijing and Shenyang · Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties · Jiuzhaigou Valley Scenic and Historic Interest Area · Kaiping Diaolou and Villages · Old Town of Lijiang · Longmen Grottoes · Lushan National Park · Historic Centre of Macau · Historic Monuments of Dengfeng, including the Shaolin Monastery and Gaocheng Observatory · Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor · Mogao Caves · Mount Emei Scenic Area, including Leshan Giant Buddha Scenic Area · Mount Huang · Mount Qingcheng and the Dujiangyan Irrigation System · Mount Sanqing · Mount Tai (Taishan) · Mount Wutai · Mount Wuyi · Chengde Mountain Resort and its outlying temples including the Putuo Zongcheng Temple and the Puning Temple · Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian · Ancient City of Ping Yao · Sichuan Giant Panda Sanctuaries · South China Karst · Summer Palace, an Imperial Garden in Beijing · Temple and Cemetery of Confucius and Kong Family Mansion, Qufu · Temple of Heaven: an Imperial Sacrificial Altar in Beijing · Three Parallel Rivers of Yunnan Protected Areas · Ancient villages in Southern Anhui - Xidi and Hongcun · Wulingyuan Scenic and Historic Interest Area · Yin Xu · Yungang Grottoes
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