Famous for its gardens, beautiful women and silk,
the ancient and moated city of
SUZHOU, China, just
sixty minutes from Shanghai by train, lies at the
point where the rail line meets the Grand Canal,
about 30km to the east of Tai Hu. The town itself is
built on a network of interlocking canals whose
waters feed the series of renowned
classical
gardens which are Suzhou's pride and glory.
Crisscrossed with water and dotted with greenery,
the city retains enough traces of its original
character to merit a visit of at least several days,
though these days Suzhou's chief claim to fame -
from the locals' point of view - is as home to
"Little Singapore", an entire industrial
city being built on the outskirts by Singaporean
investment.
He Lu, semi-mythical ruler of the Kingdom of Wu,
is said to have founded Suzhou in 600 BC as his
capital, but it was the arrival of the Grand
Canal more than a thousand years later that
marked the beginning of the prosperity of the city.
The silk trade , too, was established early
here, flourishing under the Tang and thoroughly
booming when the whole imperial court moved south
under the Song. To this day, silk remains one of
Suzhou's sources of income.
With the imperial capital close by at Hangzhou,
Suzhou attracted an overspill of scholars, officials
and merchants, bringing wealth and patronage with
them. In the late thirteenth century, Marco Polo
reported "six thousand bridges, clever
merchants, cunning men of all crafts, very wise men
called Sages and great natural physicians".
These were the people responsible for carving out
the intricate gardens that now represent Suzhou's
primary attractions. When the first Ming emperor
founded his capital at Nanjing, the city continued
to enjoy a privileged position within the orbit of
the court and to flourish as a centre for the
production of wood block and weaving of silk. The
business was transformed by the gathering of the
workforce into great sheds in a manner not seen in
the West until the coming of the Industrial
Revolution three centuries later.
Until recently, Suzhou's good fortune had been to
avoid the ravages of history, despite suffering
brief periods of occupation by the Taipings in the
1860s and by the Japanese during World War II. The
2,500-year-old city walls, however, which even in
1925 were still an effective defence against
rampaging warlords, were almost entirely demolished
after 1949, and the parts of the old city that still
survive - moats, gates, tree-lined canals, stone
bridges, cobblestoned streets and whitewashed old
houses - are disappearing fast. Soon there may be
little more than the famous gardens themselves to
provide testimony to the city's past.