Basking 2000m above sea level in the fertile heart
of the China Yunnan plateau,
KUNMING does its best
to live up to its English title as the City of
Eternal Spring. However, until recently it was
considered a savage frontier settlement, and
authorities began to realize the city's promise only
when people exiled here during the Cultural
Revolution refused offers to return home to eastern
China, preferring Kunming's more relaxed life,
better climate and friendlier inhabitants. Today,
the city's immediate face is an ordinary blend of
broad, monochrome main roads and glassy modern
office blocks, but beneath this there's an air of
satisfied well-being in the crowded restaurants,
bustling streets and markets supplying year-round
fresh produce. The people, too, are mellow enough to
mix typically Chinese garrulousness with
introspective pleasures, such as quietly greeting
the day with a stiff hit of Yunnanese tobacco from
fat, brass-bound bamboo pipes. There are other
novelties - clean pavements enforced since 1987 by
on-the-spot fines, and a low-profile but sizeable
gay community - suggesting that Kunming's two
million or so residents enjoy a quality of life
above that of most urban Chinese.
Historically the domain of Yunnan's earliest
inhabitants and first civilization, Kunming long
profited from its position on the caravan roads
through to Burma and Europe and was visited in the
thirteenth century by Marco Polo, who found the
locals of Yachi Fu (Duck Pond Town) using
cowries for cash and enjoying their meat raw. Little
of the city's wealth survived the 1856 Muslim
rebellion, when most Buddhist sites in the capital
were razed, or events some forty years later, when
an uprising against working conditions on the Kunming-Haiphong
rail line saw 300,000 labourers executed after
France shipped in weapons to suppress the revolt.
(The line, designed by the French so that they could
tap Yunnan's mineral resources for their colonies in
Indo-china, was only completed in 1911.) Twenty-five
years later, war with Japan brought a flock
of wealthy east-coast refugees to the city, whose
money helped to establish Kunming as an industrial
and manufacturing base for the wartime government in
Chongqing. The allies provided essential support for
this, importing materials along the Burma Road from
British-held Burma, and, when that was lost to the
Japanese, through the volunteer US-piloted Flying
Tigers , who flew in supplies over the Himalayas
from British bases in India. The city consolidated
its position as a supply depot during the Vietnam
War and subsequent border clashes, though during the
Cultural Revolution buildings that missed the
attentions of nineteenth-century vandals perished at
the hands of the Red Guards. Virtually all that
remained were cleared when the city centre was
rebuilt in its current "modern" style to
impress visitors attending the 1999 World
Horticultural Expo . Survivals include a couple
of temples, the long-established university
and a Minorities' Institute set up in the
1950s to promote mutual understanding among Yunnan's
multi-faceted population.
Since the mid-1980s, Kunming has also enjoyed
snowballing tourism and foreign investment.
Neighbouring nations such as Thailand trace their
ancestries back to Yunnan and have proved
particularly willing to channel funds into the
capital. The city has become ever more developed and
accessible as a result, an easy place to experience
the bustle of a healthy Chinese city, with good
food, warm summers and tolerably cool, bright
winters. It's also just a short hop to temples and
landscapes surrounding the sizeable lake, Dian
Chi , and the celebrated Stone Forest .