Inevitably,
Beijing is on
everyone's itinerary, and the Great
Wall and the splendour of the Imperial
City are certainly not to be missed.
It's a city that's easy to be in, and
enjoy, but with skyscrapers aplenty, a
large foreign contingent and a wealthy
and chic population, Beijing is hardly
representative of the nation as a
whole. You need to dig under the
surface to find the more intimate,
private city that exists in the
dwindling number of twisted alleyways,
the
hutongs, to get the best
out of the place which can otherwise
seem vast, soulless and functional.
While you're here, don't forget that
Beijing offers the best food and
nightlife in the country. It's also a
good place to base yourself for a host
of easy short trips.
Chengde ,
just north of the capital, has some
stunning imperial buildings,
constructed by emperors when this was
their favoured retreat for the summer,
while today's city residents escape to
the quiet coastal towns of
Shanhaiguan
and
Beidaihe , which offer lush
countryside, grand old fortresses and
a welter of seaside kitsch.
The territory north of the Great
Wall has long had a reputation for
severely cold weather and hot-blooded
warriors, but the expanses of
countryside and milltowns of Dongbei
(Manchuria) stand out for their
preserves of nature, history and
multi-culturalism. Dongbei's frontier
with North Korea results in diverting
border towns like Dandong and
ports such as Dalian . Harbin
's onion-domed cathedrals and local
taste for vodka reveal Russia's
proximity, while Shenyang tells
the story of Dongbei's tumultuous
history: the Manchus, Russians,
Japanese, war lords, Nationalists and
Communists each controlled it in the
course of the twentieth century. The
region contains most of China's
natural resources, but recent closings
of state-owned factories make tourism
the leading growth industry, as its
cities undertake a "Manchurian
Makeover". Short on glitz but
deep in snow and long on character, a
trip to Dongbei reveals the closest
thing to "real" China a
visitor can find.
Most visitors head for the greater
attractions south of the capital,
along the Yellow River Valley ,
the cradle of Chinese civilization,
where remnants of the dynastic age lie
scattered in a unique landscape of
loess terraces. The cave temples at Datong
and Luoyang are magnificent,
with huge Buddhist sculptures staring
out impassively across their now
industrialized settings. Of the
dynastic capitals, Xi'an is the
most obvious destination, where the
celebrated Terracotta Army still
stands guard over the tomb of Emperor
Qin Shi Huang. Other, less visited
ancient towns, including sleepy Kaifeng
in Henan, and Qufu , the
birthplace of Confucius in Shandong,
hold treasures of dynastic
architecture as well as offering an
intimate, human scale that is missing
in the large cities. The area is also
well supplied with holy mountains,
some of the few places in
twentieth-century China that provide
an unbroken continuity with the past:
grandmothers still shuffle their way
up Tai Shan , perhaps the
grandest and most imperial of the
country's pilgrimage sites, to pay
homage to deities as old as Chinese
civilization itself; Song Shan
in Henan sees more contemporary
pilgrims, followers of kung fu, making
the trek to the Shaolin Temple, where
the art originated; while Wutai
Shan in Shanxi rewards travellers
with some of the best-preserved
religious sites in the country, as
well as a lush and pretty alpine
setting.
Central China forms a basin around
the middle reaches of Asia's longest
river, the Yangzi . Once the
interior's single most important
transport artery, several thousand
kilometres are still plied by regular
passenger ferries, providing one of
the world's great river journeys past
countless images of everyday Chinese
life. Meandering upstream through the
provinces of Anhui, Hubei, Hunan and
Jiangxi, the shores of the two massive
freshwater lakes Poyang and Dongting
are heavily farmed, while a host of
bustling riverside ports, including Wuhan
, modern metropolis and former
European concession, thrive on an
increasing industrial and
manufacturing momentum. Relics of the
past range from two-thousand-year-old
tombs and third-century battlefields
to the Hunanese village of Shaoshan
, Mao Zedong's birthplace. Away from
the river lurk some evocative
landscapes: the classically
"Chinese" cloud-and-pine
draped peaks of Huang Shan in
Anhui; Hubei's Wudang Shan ,
covered in aged, esoteric Taoist
temples; and the splintered cliffs and
forested wilds of western Hunan's Wulingyuan
Scenic Reserve .
Dominating China's east coast is
the great port city of Shanghai
, for years the country's main gateway
to the outside world and, apart from
Hong Kong, its most Westernized city.
After years of stagnation, Shanghai is
again booming, and alongside the
Art-Deco monuments of the old
European-built Bund, a thoroughly
modern city, crowned with two of the
world's tallest skyscrapers, is
emerging. Around Shanghai are areas
offering some of China's most
characteristic scenery - low-lying and
wet, criss-crossed with canals and
dotted with historic towns. Jiangsu
Province, to the north, is home to Suzhou
with its famous ornate gardens, built
by Ming dynasty scholars and
officials, while a short way to the
west lies the city of Nanjing ,
crowded with relics from its
tumultuous history as Ming and
Nationalist capital of China. South
from Shanghai, in Zhejiang Province at
the terminus of the historic Grand
Canal, sits Hangzhou , one of
China's greenest and most scenic
cities. Hangzhou is located along the
historic lake Xi Hu, whose shore and
neighbouring hills abound with walking
opportunities. Off the coast, an
overnight journey by boat from
Shanghai, the Buddhist island of Putuo
Shan is rarely visited by foreign
tourists, but is superbly attractive,
with beaches, rural walks and
monasteries.
In China's southeast, comprising
the coastal provinces of Fujian and
Guangdong, as well as Hainan Island,
you'll find all the paradoxes of any
rapidly industrializing nation:
incredible economic success in
go-ahead Special Economic Zone cities
such as Guangdong's Zhuhai and
Shenzhen, back to back with chronic
poverty throughout the region's rural
population; and a lust for modernity
and Westernization, refuted by staunch
conservatism. Only a short hop from
Hong Kong, the chaotic city of Guangzhou
(Canton) and the adjacent industrial
sprawl of the Pearl River Delta
have it all to the point of absurdity:
skyscrapers and temples, beggars and
businessmen, nightclubs and
traditional opera, fast food and the
finest in classical Chinese cuisine.
Guangzhou also shares a fair
scattering of European architecture
with other cities across the region -
the Fujian island port of Xiamen
is the nicest - built by colonial
victors after the nineteenth-century
Opium Wars. Elsewhere, towns such as Chaozhou
proudly retain their traditions,
seemingly little disturbed by recent
history, while the Guangdong-Fujian
border is home to ethnic Hakka, who
live as they have done for centuries
in massive fortified stone apartments.
Hainan at first glance seems to have
no heritage at all, just a very nice
beach, but there's a little more depth
to the place if you dig hard enough -
most rewarding is a visit to the Li
villages in the island's central
highlands.
Returned to Beijing in 1997, but
enjoying a degree of autonomy that's
unprecedented in modern times ,
Hong Kong is one of the most
interesting cities in the world and is
likely to remain so for a long time,
as its officials choose how to shape
the city's future. There is almost
nothing Hong Kong cannot offer in the
way of tourist facilities, from fine
beaches, to colonial remains to
stunning cityscapes. It also contains
more good eating, drinking and
nightlife than the rest of China put
together. Macau , too, is well
worth a visit, if not for its casinos
then for its Baroque churches and fine
Portuguese cuisine.
Aside from major tourist
attractions, much of southwestern
China is only just beginning to be
probed by visitors, though Sichuan's Chengdu
and Yunnan's Kunming remain two
of China's most interesting and
easy-going provincial capitals, and
the entire region is, by any
standards, exceptionally diverse.
Guanxgi and Guizhou provinces are
known for their dramatic limestone
scenery, the most famous of which
surrounds the Li River near Guilin
in Guangxi, while over in Sichuan
, pilgrims flock to see the colossal
Big Buddha carved into a cliffside at Leshan
, and to ascend the holy mountain of Emei
Shan . The new province of
Chongqing, formerly part of eastern
Sichuan, marks the start of river
trips down the Yangzi through the Three
Gorges , while Yunnan sets the
tone for the whole area, with
landscapes encompassing everything
from snowbound summits and alpine
lakes to steamy tropical jungles.
Sichuan has a similar variety, while
the damp highlands shared by Guizhou
and Guangxi descend south to a hot
coastline. As Yunnan and Guangxi share
borders with Vietnam, Laos and Burma,
while Sichuan rubs up against Tibet,
it's also not surprising to find that
all four provinces have very
independent histories, and are home to
near-extinct wildlife and dozens of
ethnic autonomous regions, whose
attractions range from the traditional
Naxi town of Lijiang and Dai
villages of Xishuangbanna in
Yunnan, to the exuberant festivals and
textiles of Guizhou's Miao and wooden
architecture of Dong settlements in
Guangxi's north.
The huge area of China referred to
as the Northwest is where the people
thin out and real wilderness begins.
Inner Mongolia, just hours from
Beijing, is already at the frontiers
of Central Asia; here you can follow
in the footsteps of Genghis Khan by
horse-riding on the endless grasslands
of the steppe. Otherwise, following
the Yellow River east, the old Silk
Road heads west out of Xi'an and
you can follow it right through China
and out through its western borders.
Highlights en route start with the
fabulous Buddhist sculptures at Maiji
Shan and Bingling Si just
outside Lanzhou , while south
from Lanzhou lies the delightful rural
retreat and Buddhist monastery town of
Xiahe . Further to the west, in
the northwestern part of Gansu, you'll
find the terminus of the Great Wall of
China, the famous last fort of Jiayuguan
, and nearby, one of the major draws
of all China, the fabulous Buddhist
cave art in the sandy deserts of Dunhuang
.
West of here lie the mountains and
deserts of vast Xinjiang, where China
blends into old Turkestan and where
simple journeys between towns are
epics of modern bus travel. The oasis
cities of Turpan and remote Kashgar
, with their donkey carts and bazaars,
are the main attractions, though the
blue waters of Tian Chi, offering
alpine scenery in the midst of searing
desert, are deservedly popular. Beyond
Kashgar, travellers face some of the
most adventurous routes of all, over
the Karakoram or Torugut passes to
Pakistan and Kirgyzistan respectively.
Tibet , now open to independent
travellers, still sounds the most
exotic of all travel possibilities -
and so in some ways it is, especially
if you come across the border from
Nepal or brave the long road in from
Golmud in Qinghai Province.