NANJING, formerly known in the West as
Nanking, is one of China's greatest cities. Its very
name, "Southern Capital", stands as a
direct foil to the "Northern Capital" of
Beijing, and the city is still considered the
rightful capital of China by many Overseas Chinese,
particularly those from Taiwan. Today, it's a
wealthy, prosperous city, benefiting both from its
proximity to Shanghai, and from its gateway position
on the
Yangzi River , which stretches away
west deep into China's interior. Although it has
become rather an expensive place to visit, Nanjing
now offers a fairly cosmopolitan range of facilities
for the tourist, as well as a wealth of historic
sites that can easily fill several days'
exploration.
Occupying a strategic site on the south bank of
the Yangzi River in a beautiful setting of lakes,
river, wooded hills and mountain defences, Nanjing
has had an important role from the earliest times,
though not until 600 BC were there the beginnings of
a walled city. By the time the Han empire broke up
in 220 AD, Nanjing was the capital of half a dozen
local dynasties, and when the Sui reunited China in
589, the building of the Grand Canal began
considerably to increase the city's economic
importance. It became renowned for its forges,
foundries and weaving, especially for the veined brocade
made in noble houses and monasteries. During the
Tang and Song periods, Nanjing rivalled nearby
Hangzhou as the wealthiest city in the country,
until in 1368 the first emperor of the Ming dynasty
decided to establish it as the capital of all
China.
For centuries thereafter, although Nanjing's
claims to be the capital would be usurped by the
heavily northern-based Qing dynasty,
anti-authoritarian movements always associated
themselves with movements to restore the old
capital. For eleven years, in the mid-nineteenth
century, the Taiping rebels set up the
capital of their Heavenly Kingdom at Nanjing.
The siege and final recapture of the city by the
foreign-backed Qing armies in 1864 was one of the
saddest and most dramatic events in China's history.
After the Opium War, the Treaty of Nanking
which ceded Hong Kong to Britain was signed here in
1841, and Nanjing itself also suffered the indignity
of being a treaty port. Following the overthrow of
the Qing dynasty in 1911, however, the city flowered
again and became the provisional capital of the new
Republic of China, with Sun Yatsen as its first
president. Sun Yatsen's mausoleum, Zhongshan Ling
, on the edge of modern Nanjing, is one of the
Chinese people's great centres of pilgrimage.
In 1937, the name of Nanjing became synonymous
with one of the worst atrocities of World War II,
after the so-called Rape of Nanking , in
which invading Japanese soldiers butchered an
estimated three hundred thousand civilians.
Subsequently, Chiang Kaishek's government escaped
the Japanese advance by moving west to Chongqing,
though after Japan's surrender and Chiang's return,
Nanjing briefly resumed its status as the official
capital of China. Just four years later, however, in
1949, the victorious Communists decided to abandon
Nanjing as capital altogether, choosing instead the
ancient - and highly conservative - city of Beijing
in which to base the country's first
"modern" government.
Despite its fall in status, the city remains an
important rail junction - a great 1960s bridge
carries the Beijing-Shanghai line over the Yangzi -
and a major river port for large ships. Nowadays as
the capital of Jiangsu Province with a population of
more than four million, Nanjing, with its broad,
tree-lined boulevards and balconied houses within
Ming walls and gates, is one of the most attractive
of the major Chinese cities