Flights Hotels   
China Travel Home | China Travel Guide | China Hotels | China Flights | Group Travel | China Cities | China Provinces  FAQ


China Travel Guide Search for a City  
Destination Guides > Asia > China > Fujian, Guangdong and Hainan Island > Fujian > Xiamen

Xiamen
  Xiamen
 
· The City
  Orientation, Arrival And Accommodation
  Eating And Drinking
  Listings
  Explore Xiamen
  Hotels in Xiamen
XIAMEN - THE CITY

Hotels in Xiamen
    Gulang Villa Hotel Xiamen from  $40.00  USD  
    Xiamen Int Seaside Hotel Xiamen from  $91.00  USD  
    Gulang Villa Hotel Xiamen from  $40.00  USD  
More Hotels in Xiamen >>

The main pleasure in Xiamen, apart from visiting Gulangyu Island, is simply walking the streets of the old city. Starting from the Siming and Zhongshan Lu intersection, you'll be amazed at the juxtaposition of turn-of-the-century facades and clean orderly streets, pavements and shops. At the western end of Zhongshan Lu, where the seafront opens up, you'll see the island of Gulangyu right in front, across the water. Just south of Zhongshan Lu, on the waterfront, is a kiosk organizing boat trips, the most fascinating of which circumnavigates the Nationalist island of Jinmen (Sat & Sun; ¥80 per person) - for good views of the Guomindang front line, bring binoculars.

Southeast and east from the town centre there's a thin scattering of tourist sights. On Siming Nan Lu, about 2km south of Zhongshan Lu, you'll find the Overseas Chinese Museum (daily 9am-4.30pm; ¥6), accessible on buses #1 and #2. This houses collections presented by the huge Fujianese diaspora around the world, including pottery and some exceptional bronzes going back as far as the Shang dynasty, three thousand years ago. On the ground floor is an interesting display of paintings, photographs and relics depicting the life of Chinese people abroad over the centuries.

Another kilometre farther southeast (bus #1 to Xiada, Xiamen University) is the Nanputuo Si (daily 8am-5pm; ¥3), a temple built more than a thousand years ago on the southern slopes of Wulao Shan. This is one of China's most organized, modern-looking Buddhist temples, its roofs a gaudy jumble of flying dragons, human figures and multicoloured flowers, and containing among its collection of treasures a set of tablets carved by resistance fighters at the time of the early Qing, recording Manchu atrocities. Inside the main hall, behind the Maitreya Buddha, is a statue of Wei Tuo, the deity responsible for Buddhist doctrine, who holds a stick pointing to the ground - a sign which means the monastery is a rich one and can provide board and lodging for itinerants. The temple today is very active and has a vegetarian restaurant .

Immediately south of Nanputuo stands Xiamen University . From here you can cut through to Daxue Lu, the coastal road, which runs past attractive sandy beaches. A kilometre or so southwest brings you to Huli Shan Pao Tai (Huli Mountain Cannon Platform), at the terminus of bus #2. This nineteenth-century hunk of German heavy artillery had a range of 10,000 metres and was used during the Qing dynasty to fend off foreign imperialists. You can rent binoculars here to look across to the Nationalist-held island of Jinmen , which lies less than 20km to the west. Until 1984, because of the close proximity of Taiwan, this whole area was out of bounds, and the beaches were under a dusk-till-dawn curfew.

A lengthy hike from Nanputuo (at least two hours) takes you from inside the temple grounds, up and over the forested Wulao Shan behind the temple - otherwise, catch #bus 17 from the little street outside Nanputuo's entrance. Either way, you'll arrive at Wanshi Botanical Gardens (daily 6.30am-6.30pm; ¥5), where a stock of four thousand varieties of plant life includes a redwood tree brought here by President Nixon on his official visit to China. From the botanical gardens' north (main) gate, you cross a rail line to reach the Revolutionary Martyrs' Memorial, about 1.5km west of the town centre, near the #4 bus route. Southwest of here, along the rail line, is the Huxiyan (Tiger Stream Rock) on your right, built up high on a rocky hillside. If you climb up you'll find a great little temple nestling here amid a pile of huge boulders, and you can actually slip through a cave to one side and climb rock-hewn steps to the top of the largest boulder. A second small temple, called Bailu Dong (White Deer Cave), commands spectacular views over the town and the sea.


 

China Travel Home | China Travel Guides | Hongkong | Macau | Beijing | Shanghai | Guangzhou | Links | China Hotels | China Flights