Hemmed in by hills,
NANCHANG
(Southern Prosperity), China sits on Jiangxi's
major river, the
Gan Jiang , some
70km south of where it flows into Poyang Hu.
Built on trade, today Nanchang has the rail
link with Shanghai and Changsha to thank for
its character; unfortunately, this mostly
reflects its steel and chemical industries
and an overbearing, incomplete
reconstruction since the 1950s. An initially
grey and noisy place afflicted by the usual
stifling summer temperatures, first
impressions are slightly moderated by the
handful of older monuments gradually being
resurrected, and the sheer enthusiasm with
which locals have grasped free-market
principles, crowding every alley with
stalls.
Provincial capital or not, Nanchang saw
little action until the twentieth century,
when the city was occupied by the Guomindang
army in December 1926. At the time, the
military was still an amalgam of Nationalist
and Communist forces, but when Chiang
Kaishek broke his marriage of convenience
with the Communists the following year, any
left-wing elements were expelled from the
Party. On August 1, 1927, Zhou Enlai
and Zhu De , two Communist GMD
officers, mutinied in Nanchang and took
control of the city with thirty thousand
troops. Though they were soon forced to flee
into Jiangxi's mountainous south, the day is
celebrated as the foundation of the People's
Liberation Army , and the red PLA flag
still bears the Chinese characters
"8" and "1" ( bayi)
for the month and day - as do several of
Nanchang's streets and public spaces.
The City
of Nanchang
Despite a few antiques rising from the
rubble, history has made Nanchang something
of a modern period piece, its architecture
mostly reflecting the Civil War years and
later Soviet-inspired industrialization.
Much of this, such as the overbearing ...
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