Kaiping

This article is about the city in Guangdong. For the district of Tangshan, Hebei, see Kaiping District. For the ancient city in Inner Mongolia, see Shangdu.
Kaiping
开平市
County-level city

Street in Chikan Town

Location of Kaiping City (pink) in Jiangmen City (yellow), Guangdong province, and the PRC
Kaiping

Location of the city centre in Guangdong

Coordinates: 22°22′N 112°41′E / 22.367°N 112.683°ECoordinates: 22°22′N 112°41′E / 22.367°N 112.683°E
Country People's Republic of China
Province Guangdong
Prefecture-level city Jiangmen
County seat Changsha Subdistrict (长沙街道)
Area
  Total 1,659 km2 (641 sq mi)
Population (2003)
  Total 680,000
  Density 410/km2 (1,100/sq mi)
Time zone China Standard (UTC+8)
Postal code 529300
Area code(s) 0750
Website www.kaiping.gov.cn
Kaiping
Simplified Chinese 开平
Traditional Chinese 開平
Taishanese Jyutping Hoi3 Pen6
(Kaiping dialect)
Hanyu Pinyin Kāipíng
Postal Map Hoiping

Kaiping (Chinese: 开平) is a county-level city in Guangdong province, People's Republic of China. It is located in the Pearl River Delta and is part of the Greater Jiangmen Region, the ancestral homeland of many overseas Chinese. It has a population of 680,000 as of 2003 and an area of 1,659 square kilometres (641 sq mi).[1] The locals speak a variant of the Taishan dialect. Kaiping is one of the homeland of overseas Chinese of Taishanese people and Chinese Americans.

Administration

Administratively, Kaiping City is under the jurisdiction of Jiangmen. It was set up as a city in 1993.

Geography

Kaiping City is located 140 kilometres (87 mi) away from Guangzhou, in the southwestern part of the Pearl River Delta. Kaiping consists of three port cities: Changsha, Xinchang, and Dihai.

Sights

Ruishi Diaolou

The Kaiping Diaolou (碉樓) are fortified multi-storey towers which were constructed in the Kaiping area from the early Qing Dynasty, reaching a peak in the 1920s and 1930s, when there were more than three thousand of these structures. Today, approximately 1,800 diaolou are still standing. The diaolou served two purposes: housing and protecting against forays by bandits. The Kaiping diaolou and villages were added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 2007.

Kaiping has traditionally been a region of major emigration abroad, and a melting pot of ideas and trends brought back by overseas Chinese made good. As a consequence, several watchtowers incorporate architectural features from China and the West.

Examples include:

Miscellaneous

Kaiping has been twinned with Mesa, Arizona, United States, since October 18, 1993.

Kaiping was a major source of emigrants at the turn of the 20th century. As a result, a large number of early Chinese Canadian and Chinese American communities had people who originated from Kaiping and its neighboring counties of Taishan, Enping and Xinhui. It is said that there are more Kaipingnese people living abroad today than there are Kaipingnese in Kaiping.

In 1973, various people originated from Kaiping (Hoi Ping) started Hoi Ping Chamber of Commerce Secondary School in Hong Kong.

References

  1. "Profile of Kaiping" (in Chinese). Retrieved 2008-07-12.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kaiping.