Shaanxi
Province,
in
the
very
heart
of
China,
receives
its
name
because
it
lies
to
the
west
(xi)
of
Shaan
(Henan
Province's
old
name).
Encompassing
most
of
the
middle
stretch
of
the
Yellow
River,
the
200,000-sq.
meter
province
boasts
a
population
of
35
million,
a
relatively
large
concentration
for
its
size
and
backwater
location.
The
province
has
long
been
a
strange
mix
of
harsh
living,
with
its
barren
and
dusty
northern
plains,
and
luxurious
civilisation,
centered
upon
its
ancient
capital
Xi'an.
In
such
varied
circumstances
the
province
has
a
rich
historical
legacy,
both
ancient
and
modern.
Settlement
in
the
province
spans
back
to
the
Neolithic
age,
and
some
of
China's
oldest
inhabitant
remains
were
found
here,
spread
along
the
life-sustaining
Yellow
River.
It
was
in
the
Shang
Dynasty
(1600-1100
BC),
however,
that
settlement
became
more
widespread,
and
it
was
from
this
time
that
written
records
have
been
recovered.
It
was
after
this
reign,
beginning
with
the
Zhou
Dynasty
(1100-221
BC),
that
the
province's
most
famous
city,
Xi'an,
was
to
take
the
stage,
as
dynasties
took
either
the
city
or
"cities"
in
its
locale,
as
their
capital.
Xi'an
has
served
as
the
capital
for
altogether
13
kingdoms
and
empires,
spanning
some
1,100
years.
The
Han
Dynasty
(206
BC-220AD)
took
their
capital
near
Xi'an,
and
brought
a
period
of
prosperity
to
the
province
that
has
rarely
been
seen
since.
The
Silk
Road,
that
came
to
prominence
then,
was
to
bring
not
only
monetary
wealth,
but
also
a
range
of
cultural
treasures,
from
western
settlers
to
Buddhism.
This
second
treasure
was
to
become
most
significant
in
Shaanxi,
both
in
its
capital
Xi'an
and
in
a
pretty
nearby
mountain,
Huashan.
Xi'an
was
to
be,
fairly
consistently,
China's
main
political
center
up
until
the
end
of
the
Tang
Dynasty
(618-907
AD).
From
the
Tang
things
went
downhill
for
Shaanxi.
Being
so
close
to
the
hard
to
control
north,
the
province
had
long
been
fairly
unstable,
and
as
the
less
volatile
eastern
coast
became
favoured
by
successive
emperors,
Shaanxi
was
left
behind.
Poverty
stricken
peasants
were
again
to
become
the
norm
here,
and
so
it
remained
for
many
years.
Rebellion
and
famine
left
many
dead,
and
it
was
in
such
a
condition
that
the
communists,
harassed
into
a
Long
March
by
a
carefully
Machiavellian
Nationalist
Government
(Guomindang),
were
to
find
the
province
in
late
1936.
The
"Red
Army",
under
the
overall
command
of
a
Mr.
Mao
Zedong,
were
to
set
up
base
in
a
little
known
town
called
Yan'an.
From
this
area,
and
from
a
fame
derived
from
practical
"Policies
for
the
People"
(land
redistribution,
arming
the
peasants,
protection
etc.),
the
Chinese
Communist
Party
(CCP)
were
to
start
their
attempts
to
overcome
both
the
devilish
foreign
menace,
the
Japanese,
and
the
betrayers
of
patriarchy,
the
Guomindang.
After
the
CCP
was
officially
established
in
Beijing
on
the
first
of
October
1949,
and
the
weary
leaders
of
the
revolution
settled
themselves
comfortably
into
Zhongnanhai,
the
new
Forbidden
City,
Yan'an
quickly
became
a
Mecca
for
millions
of
communist
believers.
As
the
years
passed,
however,
this
journey
of
moral
obligation
for
all
has
become
one
of
interest
for
only
the
very
motivated.
The
province
looked
again
to
be
heading
towards
obscurity
and
poverty,
until
a
group
of
peasants,
digging
a
well
in
a
field
near
to
Xi'an,
dropped
into
what
is
now
considered
to
be
one
of
China's
most
important
tourist
destinations,
the
terracotta
guards
of
the
dead
tyrant-emperor
Qin
Shihuang
(Qin
Dynasty,
221-206
BC).