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Introdution of Shanghai
The
largest city in China and eighth largest in the world, with a recorded
population of 23 million (as of 2013) plus a huge unregistered temporary
floating populace, Shanghai is located on the Yangtze River Delta by
the East China Sea and is the busiest container seaport in the world.
Shanghai can be seen as a modern, figurative, electric playground for
many travelers and a place to make one’s fortune for many business
people; whatever one’s reason for being here, the city has certainly
earned its moniker, “The Pearl of the Orient!”
History of Shanghai
Early beginnings
Sites
around Shanghai dating back to the Neolithic Period indicate that the
west part of today's Shanghai had become land more than 6,000 years ago
and there were people living in the area at that time. Those ancestors
first lived by hunting, fishing and grazing and later by farming.
Up
until the 7th century AD, Shanghai itself, then known as Shen or Hu Tu
(after local bamboo fishing traps; the character hù still refers to
Shànghai to this day, observable on local car number plates), was simply
marshland. In fact, most of eastern modern Shanghai didn’t exist until
the 17th century, when a complex web of canals was designed to drain the
region. The early settlement of Shànghai sprung up at the confluence of
the Shanghai River (long since vanished) and the Huangpu River.
Ancient History
During
the Warring States Period (475 -221BC), Huang Xie, known as Lord
Chunshen of the Chu state, organized people to excavate the Huangpu
River. The river therefore has a nickname of 'Chunshen River' and
Shanghai has sometimes been referred to as 'Shen' ever since. Fishermen
living in the area at that time created a fishing tool called Hu, so it
has the other nickname of 'Hu'.
During
the Qin Dynasty (221 - 206BC) the city was not even a town. People used
boats in the former Mao Lake and the rivers of today's Songjiang
District to trade and do business.
From
the Han Dynasty (206BC - 220AD) on the industries of coin-casting,
metal-smelting and salt-production grew dynamically in the Shanghai area
and the economical connection between this area and the hinterland
gradually strengthened. Prosperity continued into the Jin Dynasty (265 -
420).
In the Sui (581 - 618) and
the Tang (618 - 907) Dynasties, it enjoyed rather fast progress, as
great importance was attached to the economic development of southern
China. The area became an important bread basket, thanks to proper
reclamation of arable land. After this the area gathered a larger
population by degrees and it had more economical and cultural exchange
with places at home and abroad.
In
751 during the Tianbao Years of the Tang Dynasty, Huating County was
established in today's Songjiang District, the heart of which is now in
the Huatinghai area in northeast Huating County. However at that time,
Shanghai had not yet developed its position as a major port. During the
Tianbao Years, Qinglong County had the busiest port, owing to its
advantageous location at the mouth of the Wusong River. Ships departing
from its port could sail to other cities along the inland rivers,
coastal cities and even Japan and Korea. Later, the silting of the
Wusong River made ships desert the port of Qinglong County, giving it a
good opportunity for growth.
During
the Northern Song Dynasty (960 - 1127), Shanghai, with its excellent
port and shipping conditions, gradually replaced Qinglong County as a
center of trade. Residential areas formed and the former fishing village
became a small town.
In 1267
during the Southern Song Dynasty (1127 - 1279), Shanghai Town was
officially established, under the jurisdiction of Huating County. Due to
increasing trade, a swarm of merchant ships gathered in the port of
Shanghai, making it more and more prosperous.
During the Yuan Dynasty (1271 - 1368) one of the country's seven Maritime Trade Offices was set up in the Town. In 1292 Shanghai County was set up in today's Minhang District. The economy thereafter saw even greater development, especially in the planting of cotton and the textile industry. Advanced cotton-spinning tools and techniques were introduced to promote its industry.
By the
Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644) Shanghai had already grown into the largest
cotton spinning base in China. Its textiles were popular at home and
abroad. With 'Sha Chuan' (the general name of sea-going junks) as the
main conveyance, the shipping industry, another mainstay of the economy
of Shanghai, was also well-developed. A great number of shops and
restaurants appeared, making Shanghai a busy, well-known busy city.
In 1685 during the Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1911), the Customs Office was established in the city. Consequently unprecedented progress was made in the shipping industry including freshwater carriage, Yangtze River shipping, coastal liners and international shipping. The port of Shanghai came to handle the largest quantities of imported and exported cotton cloth. Many ships berthed in the port, making it the main transfer point of maritime trade. As time passed, Shanghai gained its position as an important economic power, a water transport center and an international trading port in China
Old
ShanghaiIn 1840 Shanghai County had already grown to include today's
Huangpu District and the old city zone, bordering today's Qingpu
District in the west, Chuansha Town in today's Pudong New Area in the
east and Baoshan District in the north.
Modern History
1842:
The British establish a concession by forced treaty with the Qing
Dynasty after China loses the first Opium War. Concessions were governed
by the occupying country and were untouchable by Chinese law. The
French, Americans and Japanese soon followed the British in establishing
territories in Shanghai.
1930s: Shanghai has since become the most important port in Asia and the world's largest trading and banking firms have set up house along the Bund. Tea, silk and porcelain sail to Europe and America and opium comes in to pay for it. Shanghai is the most modern city in Asia - the Astor House Hotel has the first electric light bulb – but also the most licentious as opium dens, whorehouses and the ease of escaping the law abound. No visas or passports are required at the port and Shanghai soon becomes infamous as an exotic port of call.
1931-1941: Shanghai becomes a haven for Jews fleeing Nazi terror. As other countries closed their doors to immigrants in the lead up to the Second World War, over 20,000 Jewish refugees found asylum in Shanghai.
1937: Japanese bombs hit Shanghai and the foreigners evacuate en masse. Japanese control Shanghai and much of China's eastern coast until their defeat at the hands of the Allied Powers in 1945.
1943: The Allied governments abandon Shanghai during the War and sign their territories over to Chiang Kai-Shek and the Kuomintang government. The foreign concession era officially ends.
1949: Most foreigners have left Shanghai and the Chinese Communist state takes control of the city and the formerly privately-held businesses. Industry suffers until 1976 under the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) as hundreds of thousands of Shanghainese locals are sent to work in rural areas throughout China.
1976: The advent of Deng Xiaopeng's open door policy allowed a commercial revival to take place in Shanghai.
Shanghai Attractions
So
what kind of city is Shanghai? It’s important to make up your own mind –
arrive with an open mind, and form your own answer as you wander across
the city. Like a pearl on the banks of the Pacific Ocean, Shanghai has
already become China's fastest growing city and tourist destination.
Shanghai is an energetic international metro-polis. This modern metropolis combined with its rich heritage and Chinese culture has much to see and do. Shanghai attractions are plentiful and varied. There are a huge range of museums, colonial architecture, religious buildings, theatres, gardens, parks and shopping areas. It has such important sites as the Bund, Temple of Jade Buddha, Yu Garden, Old City Bazaar, Shanghai Museum, Children's Palace, Xintiandi, Former Residence of Dr.Sun Yat Sen, Oriental TV Tower, Shanghai Nanjing Road, Huangpu River cruising, and also showcase the water towns around shanghai of Zhuangjiajiao, Luzhi and Nanxun.
The Bund
The
Bund has been a symbol of Shanghai since a hundred years. It begins
with the Waibaidu Bridge at the estuary of Suzhou Creek in the north and
ends at Jinling Road in the south, with a total length of 1,500m.
The vast Huagpu River and the beautiful new embankment are on the east of the Bund. Here tourists can enjoy the beauty of Shanghai mother river - the Huangpu River - and the new looks of Lujiazui (one of the most prosper part in Shanghai) in Pudong district on the opposite bank. The section extending from the new Bund to Nanpu Bridge is called the Southern Bund, which will be into a new financial and business zone.
Yu Garden&Bazaar
Yuyuan
Garden is an important traditional tourist resort in Shanghai, which
enjoys the reputation of “the crown of beauty in southeast China”. Most
exquisitely decked out, the garden offers charming and pleasant views.
With noble flora and exotic rocks setting off each other, it serves as a
perfect model of “famous garden of Jiangnan”. Inside the garden there
is the site of the famous uprising of Shanghai’s Small Sword Society in
Qing Dynasty. On the 440 anniversary of the establishment of Yu Garden,
comrade Jiang Zemin brandished his writing brush and left the
inscription of “Famous Garden above the Sea”. The famous scenic spots of
the garden include the Wall of Cloud Piercing Dragon, Spring
Transforming Hall, Yu Linglong (Jade Exquisite), Moon Appreciating
Pavilion, Ancient Performance Stage, Grand Rockery.
Shanghai world financial center
The
Shanghai World Financial Center (SWFC; Chinese: ????????) is a
skyscraper located in the Pudong district of Shanghai, China. It was
designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox and developed by the Japanese Mori
Building Company. It is a mixed-use skyscraper, consisting of offices,
hotels, conference rooms, observation decks, and ground-floor shopping
malls. Park Hyatt Shanghai is the hotel component, containing 174 rooms
and suites. Occupying the 79th to the 93rd floors, it is the
second-highest hotel in the world, surpassing the Grand Hyatt Shanghai
on the 53rd to 87th floors of the neighboring Jin Mao Tower.
It
is 492 metres high, has 104 floors (101 above ground, 3 below ground),
and three platforms for visitors on floors 94, 97, 100 (Sky Bridge, 474
metres). The prices vary for the different platforms. From the highest
platform one can enjoy the view of the skyline and the Jinmao Tower
(????, jin mào dà shà).
Shanghai Xin Tian Di
Xintiandi(New
Heaven and Earth) is an affluent shopping, eating and entertainment
district of Shanghai ,China. It is an historical and cultural character
of the city tourist attractions, composed of an area of reconstituted
traditional Shikumen("stone gate") houses on narrow alleys, some
adjoining houses which now serve as book stores, cafes and restaurants,
and shopping malls. Xin Tian Di is unique because of its concept of
construction. It retains the antique walls, tiles and exterior of the
Shikumen housing of old Shanghai. On the other hand, its interior
embodies a totally different world of international gallery, bars and
cafes, boutiques or theme restaurants. When you walk into it, you will
get the taste of both Shanghai in the 1920's and the sonic modern
lifestyle of urbanites of the 21st century.
Longhua Temple
The
Longhua Temple is located on the Longhua area (formerly Longhua
township) of Shanghai. Its street address is No. 2853 Longhua Road
(Longhua Lu), which is the oldest, largest and most majestic Buddhist
building in the lower reaches of the Yangtze River Delta. It's also one
of the best reserved temples in Shanghai and the pagoda is the only one
in Shanghai that existed before modern times. This spiritual attraction
is famous for its old temple, old tower, and temple fair. With
collections of various sutras, golden seal, and figures of Buddha from
Tang, Ming and Qing dynasties.
Shanghai Pudong New Area
Lying
in the east of Shanghai and at the east edge of the Yangtze River
Delta, Pudong New Area (hereafter referred to as Pudong) is located at
the estuary of the Yangtze River on the west side of the Pacific Ocean,
connecting both Nanhui District and Minhang District in the south and
looking on to the other side of the river where lie the districts of
Xuhui, Luwan, Huangpu, Hongkou, Yangpu and Baoshan both in the north and
west of Shanghai.
After twenty-two
years of development, Pudong has become the engine of the economic and
social development of Shanghai. With the ever-changing urban landscape,
an outward-looking, multifunctional and modern new urban pattern has
come into being. Known as "China's symbol of reform and opening up and
epitome of Shanghai's modernization", Pudong has won the "National
Civilized City" title, and so on.
Central
Pudong is filled with new skyscrapers, office buildings and hotels and
offices for over 2,000 foreign companies, including many in the Fortune
500. Among the factories there is $1.5 billion General Motors plant that
churns out Buicks. On the far eastern end, about 32 kilometers from
downtown Shanghai, is the new international airport connected to
downtown Shanghai by the maglev train. There is an impressive river walk
with shops and cafes and good views of river traffic and sights on the
opposite shore.
Since October,
2004, Pudong New Area has set up, one after another, six functional
zones of Lujiazui, Zhangjiang, Jinqiao, Waigaoqiao, Sanlin and Chuansha,
speeding up the inter-action between zones and towns and promoting the
zonal integration, thus energetically pushing forward a new round of
development and opening up in Pudong.
Pudong
New Area has four state-level development zones of Lujiazui Financial
and Trade Zone, Jinqiao Export Processing Zone, Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park
and Waigaoqiao Free Trade Zone and one city-level development zone of
Sunqiao Modern Agriculture Development Zone. It is composed of 12
sub-districts of Weifang, Lujiazhui, Tangqiao, Nanmatou, Shanggang,
Dongming, Zhoujiadu, Yangjing, Jinyang, Hudong, Puxing and Huamu as well
as 11 towns of Chuansha, Heqing, Gaodong, Gaoqiao, Gaohang, Jinqiao,
Tangzhen, Zhangjiang, Beicai, Caolu and Sanlin.
Shanghai Oriental Pearl Radio & TV Tower
The
Oriental Pearl TV Tower (Chinese: ?????; pinyin: Dongfang Míngzhuta,
official name: ???????) is a TV tower in Shanghai, China. The Oriental
Pearl Tower is located at the tip of Lujiazui in the Pudong district, by
the side of Huangpu River, opposite The Bund of Shanghai.
It
was designed by Jiang Huan Cheng of the Shanghai Modern Architectural
Design Co. Ltd. Construction began in 1991 and the tower was completed
in 1995. At 468 m (1,535 feet) high, it was the tallest structure in
China from 1994–2007, when it was surpassed by the Shanghai World
Financial Center. The Oriental Pearl Tower belongs to the World
Federation of Great Towers.
Shanghai Cuisine
Nanxiang Steamed Stuffed Bun
This
snack is a famous and popular one originating from Nanxiang Town in the
northern Jiading District of Shanghai. Dating back over 100 years,
Nanxiang Steamed Stuffed Bun features the typical Shanghai flavor. It is
famous for its thin wrap, big stuffing, strong flavor and tender meat.
Besides
the use of refined flour and pork, Nanxiang Steamed Stuffed Bun has
many special ingredients. Water, salt, sugar, soy, sesame and ginger are
added to make the stuffing. Even without MSG, shallot or garlic, the
buns stay fresh with a delicious flavor. The main pork stuffing is mixed
with various seasonal ingredients: bamboo shoot for spring, shrimp for
summer and crab for autumn. It's hard to believe that the stuffing is
two times larger than the wrap. Miraculous, isn't it?
Fried Stuffed Bun
Fried Stuffed Bun with nearly 100 years' history is a typical indigenous snack of Shanghai.
The wraps of the buns are made of semi-fermented paste, and the stuffing is made of pork, shallot, ginger, soy, pepper, and sesame oil. The stuffed buns are put in rows in a big pan and fried, being sprayed with water several times during cooking. Finally, sesame and shallot are sprinkled on the buns, and then the wonderful Fried Stuffed Buns are prepared!
With a thin and soft wrap, a golden-colored and crispy bottom, and delicious meat, this snack tastes best when served hot.
Fried
Stuffed Buns were first served in many teahouses in old Shanghai.
Special fried stuffed bun restaurants began to appear in 1930s. At
present, there are hundreds of such restaurants. The stuffing is varied
to include chicken, crab and shrimp.
Chop Rice Cake
It
is a fried snack mainly made of a big pork chop and rice cakes. There
are two restaurants that are famous for Chop Rice Cake - Shuguang
Restaurant (formerly known as Xiao Chang Zhou) and Xian De Lai
Restaurant. The two restaurants have been famous since the 1930s. Chop
Rice Cakes offered by them are prepared in completely different ways
therefore each has its own unique taste. It is hard to tell which is
better. So better to taste both!
Vegetable Stuffed Bun
Chinese
name: ???? (sù cai bao zi) As the name suggests, this is without meat
but the flavor is not reduced at all. For veggies, these buns, stuffed
with greengrocery, mushroom, bamboo shoots and dried bean curd, are a
good choice.
Leisha Dumpling
Chinese
name: ??? (léi sha yuán) This is a kind of glutinous rice dumpling
stuffed with meat, sweetened bean paste, or sesame. Covering with a
layer of adzuki bean powder, this snack is tastier and keeps longer.
Won Ton
Shanghai
people, in particular, have a very clear opinion dividing won tons into
big ones and small ones. The big ones are stuffed with shepherd's purse
and pork while the small ones are stuffed with meat alone. A half kilo
of wrapping is sufficient for 50 big won tons or 70 small ones. So you
can imagine how thin the wrap is! The soup is also a key element.
Generally, broth is for the big won tons and chicken soup for the small
ones.
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