Monday, February 11, 2008

Pingyao - A Feel Of The Days Long Gone By


Once the banking capital of the Qing China, Pingyao was abandoned in favour of Shanghai and Hong Kong. Left behind the industrialization and other novel fads, it has preserved an almost unnatural museum-like feel to it. Painstakingly maintained nowadays, it offers an amazing plethora of sightseeing spots tucked away in unassuming nooks and corners. Most guidebooks merit the town only as a night-over destination, probably because the best sights are not so obvious and take time and patience to discover.


Stately rows of 19th- century shops and mansions line mostly pedestrianized streets. I became simply infatuated with the hand-carved eaves elaborately decorated with exquisite paintings and lanterns - a sort of Qing nouveau-riche chic, even if nouveau here refers to the dust-covered 1850s. Enter one of the vintage townhouses to see the understated luxury that surrounded the high and mighty financial tycoons of the yesteryear.


Or, you can choose to see it all from the above - on a walk along the 8-mile-long mint-condition city wall affording you a peek in people's yards or sweeping vistas looking like an antique painting. Every cobblestone on the wall wide enough for a squadron to march on bears an engraved seal of the maker - what a feat of industriousness!


There are many more star attractions apart from the Banking Museum touted in most guidebooks as the only tourist draw. The supremely photogenic Taoist temple is still in a very active use. Right across the street, the Confucian temple is the proverbial oasis of tranquillity with cypress trees said to be 1,500 years old. Its flamboyantly ornate entrance gate is well worth admiring for a while. For a few coins, you are allowed to toll the bell or bang the ceremonial drum - all supposed to bring certain types of luck, depending on the number of strokes you make.

Pingyao also boasts a superbly restored traditional city hall - a whole executive compound in fact, complete with a gaol, dressed up attendants and stagings of Qing court hearings. Traditional theatrical performances in a beautifully decorated pavilion could be of great interest to a foreign tourist but are advertised only in Chinese. The town derives most of its tourist traffic domestically and the Chinese must probably think that Western tourist do not care for quaint old-fashioned Oriental towns that look straight from a 19-century travel magazine. What a fallacy!

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Xi'an - Terracotta Army, Hot Springs And Mosques>>>

Xi'an - Terracotta Army, Hot Springs & Mosques


"Rome in the West, X'i'an in the East." The starting point of the legendary Silk Road, Xi'an is one of the most ancient continuously inhabited cities in China. In fact, it has been a royal capital for 11 dynasties since its semi-mythical beginnings some time around BC 2200. Both Nara and Kyoto, the original imperial capitals of Japan were styled after Xi'an.

Most visitors come here for the UNESCO World Heritage Terracotta Warriors, but there is infinitely more to the city and it surroundings than that. The lofty Ming walls - ones of the few remained in China - surround the inner city and you can have a walk on top of them around the whole city without ever having to climb down. The Forest of Stelae Museum houses a large array of stones with ancient engravings - best enjoyed with some initial knowledge Chinese history and calligraphy, yet quite impressive with a good explanation by a knowledgeable guide.


In the heyday of the Silk Road Xi'an was the proverbial melting pot of nations. Islam arrived here at a very tender age in 650 with Prophet Mohammed's uncle. Nestorianism - a heretical Christian school - made its début there even earlier, in 635, inspiring the later medieval tales of the Prester John's mythical Christian kingdom in the East. Its only vestige nowadays is the Nestorian Stele, but Islam is well established and thriving.

For a very "un-Chinese" experience, stroll through the Moslem Quarter and sample the delicious lamb skewers, roasted carp and mutton bread soup - heavy on tangy herbs and ground coriander seeds, delicious but nothing like Chinese food you would expect. In the market you can find another local speciality famous throughout China - various dried fruit and exotic nuts galore.


For a time of peace and serenity linger on in the tranquil Great Mosque that looks very little like a mosque. Its garden is full of exquisite stone carvings that, in break with the Islamic teachings, are not shy of animal motifs. Foreign concepts need to be translated into Chinese by way of explanation, and very often the Chinese renditions grab the essence of their subject sharply and succinctly. Islam in Chinese is Pure Religion, describing concisely the purest form of modern monotheism.


To get the biggest possible kick from the Terracotta Army, you need to read on its historical background. It is a very poignant story of the country's mightiest man who was scared of death and thousands of his subjects who slaved decades to build his tomb only to be all slaughtered so as the secret of their ruler's grave remained hidden. And it very well did for over 2 thousand years, until not such a long time ago. Even now, the emperor's tomb itself - said to contain mercury rivers and gemmed ceilings - is yet to be excavated.


Apart from the Terracotta Warriors, there are many more worthy sites in the vicinity - like the palatial Huaqing Hot Springs, the place where back in the 7th century Tang emperors indulged in sensuous luxury with their concubines and where centuries later in 1936 the course of modern Chinese history was turned around in the infamous Xi'an Accident. These days, it is a venue for grand costume performances harking back to the dynasties of the yesteryear.


On the way to the magnificent Hua Shan, one of the 4 most important mountains in Taoism and reputedly gods' favourite abode, there is the unjustly overlooked Xiyue Temple. Built for exclusive avail by the Imperial Court for important Taoist sacrifices and ceremonies, it uses the breath-taking backdrop of the Hua Shan Mount in the Chinese technique of "borrowed landscape" - with a truly ravishing result.

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Nanjing - The Swanky Capital of The South >>>

Nanjing - The Swanky Capital Of South


Nanjing - the Southern Capital, as opposed to Beijing - the Northern Capital - combines antiquity and modernity with a panache. This happy marriage is perhaps best epitomised by the ... Scenic Spot - a tiny if nicely laid out park, with fine Ming-style tea pavilion-come restaurant, set amidst the looming skyscrapers of Beijing Road.

Nanjing's modern avenues are broad, clean and nicely laid out, with a very human-friendly atmosphere rare in world's big cities. The shiny clean ultra-modern metro - if still with only one line - beats mass transit systems of most Western cities.

City's entertainment hub - the Fuzimiao Area - is clearly geared towards tourists with gilded dragon-shaped boats and scores of souvenir shops. It is, however, a very lovely place to hang around as it is in authentic Ming-style quarters full of very picturesque sights. Sample a piece from each of the food stalls dealing in tasty Chinese titbits and you will not need a dinner.


One of the most dramatic points of Nanjing's turbulent history is presented just around the corner in the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom History Museum. The Taiping rebellion - one of the deadliest conflicts in human history - was a reaction to China's humiliation by Western powers in the mid-19th century. Peasant rebels with Utopian ideology aimed at creating an egalitarian society only to create their own elaborate hierarchy an get bogged down in inner strife for power. Arguably, it was world's first Socialist state and Nanjing was its capital.

Less known is the fact that until 2002 Nanjing was also the official - if on paper only - capital of Taiwan, the Republic of China. When the Kuomintang Government had to escape to Taiwan, they never left the hope of coming back with vengeance and thus Taipei was regarded as only the provisional capital.


The much touted Xuanwu Lake area is a sprawling city park set on five connected islands encircled by the city walls - world's longest. It offers great views of Nanjing's modern skyline across the water but apart from a few historic rocks is of little interest for a foreign visitor.

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Yangzhou - The Treasure Box Garden >>>

Suzhou - The Silk Capital Of China


Suzhou's heyday as a silk trade centre has left behind a several nice sights scattered around the city. We used the city as the hub for travelling in the area and our short stay did not justice to the Silk Capital of China. I hope to spend more time there some time soon.

Just a side note: the much touted Humble Administrator's Garden is rather bleak compared with what you find elsewhere in China but I hear many other gardens in the city are very beautiful.



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Tongli - The Water Village >>>

Yangzhou - The Treasure Box Garden


Yangzhou is worth visiting if only for the tremendous Slender West Lake Garden. It is huge, so reserve a whole day for your visit. Despite its size, it's so exquisitely planned and executed, you feel yourself inside a jewellery box - every inch is finely tended, every few steps provide a view to yet another haunting vista with arched bridges, toy-like tea pavilions, elaborate rockeries and quizzical ponds full of turtles and brightly-coloured carps.


Unfortunately, the ungainly colourful night lighting turns this amazing feat of horticulture into a gaudy monstrosity so make sure to leave before the dark lest the magic is rudely destroyed.



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Suzhou - The Silk Capital Of China>>>





Tongli - The Water Village


Tongli is a twee fishing village on the Tai Lake criss-crossed by cutesy canals lined with characteristic houses and crossed by picturesque bridges. In fact, the whole setting so photogenic that it could have very well been set up on purpose as a tourist bait but in fact the village is authentic. Once a fishermen's settlement, nowadays it derives most of its income - surprise surprise - from tourism as well as serving the daily catch in the numerous canal-side restaurants. Its status, deservedly so, is so close to an open-air museum that you cannot even enter without a ticket, that fortunately includes entrance to all the museums - except for the intriguingly named Chinese Sexual History Museum.

As seems the order of the day in all canal cities, take Venice or Amsterdam, the food turned out universally bland and overpriced but Tongli is nevertheless a very pleasant and laid back place, well worth at least an overnight stay . Most tourists seem to come on a day tour, so you will be spoilt for choice of available accommodation. The best bet then would be the museum-come-hotel furnished with authentic period furniture and overlooking a charming garden with carp-filled ponds.

Surprisingly affordable, it is adjacent to the Wooden Carving Museum brimming with truly astonishing carvings featuring famous Chinese tales and historical episodes, many with very handy English explanations that allow you to appreciate just how rich, diverse and much more ancient than anything you have encountered Chinese civilisation is. Another star attraction in the museum are hand-made Ming canopied beds assembled from thousands of separate pieces of redwood and mother of pearl in a mind-boggling feat of craftsmanship.





Another worthy tourist stop is the Dendrite Museum, where fanciful dendrite cuts are arranged according to the themes - Seasons, Poetry, Life, Natural Disasters, etc. They were collected over many decades by a couple of aesthetically inclined railway construction engineers and finally donated to the nation to establish this museum. Many of the captions are beautiful quotes from ancient Chinese poetry that greatly augment the overall experience, provided your mastery of Chinese has reached a certain level.

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Tunxi - The Breezy Gateway to Huangshan >>>


Tunxi - Breezy Gateway to Huangshan

The modern and pleasantly laid town of Tunxi is more widely known as Huangshan City, named so after the major tourist attraction to which it serves as a transportation and accommodation hub. It has a very well restored old quarter, which in fact is a very long pedestrianised street with scores of back lanes lined with fine local Anhui style houses and all sorts of craft, curios and tea shops.

Many of them specialise in calligraphic scrolls and related paraphernalia for Tunxi City has been since long ago widely renown in China for its skilled calligraphers. It comes as no surprise that world's largest inkstone, weighing over 12 metric tons, is housed in a museum here.

Another merchandise prominently featured in the Old Town is fine green tea grown in the adjacent mountains. Some sorts are so prized that jars of those are used as state gifts to foreign dignitaries. We bought a bag of the same tea that Chinese President presented to Vladimir Putin on his state visit. Local tea is equally popular with more regular folks - from dawn till very late busloads upon busloads of Chinese tourists descend upon the street all walking away with shopping bags full of tea tins.


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Huangshan - Mountain Range From A Classical Chinese Poem >>>

Huangshan - Mountain Range From A Classical Chinese Poem


The beauty of this mountain range is of an epic level and defies any camera or verbal description. A 10-minute cable car ride - or a 6-km walk up the steep stairs - whisks you inside a classical Chinese poem painted in ink on silk paper. Precarious looking if sturdy walkways clinging to the sides of precipitous cliffs lead you from one to another stunning view of exquisitely shaped lofty peaks most aesthetically covered with twisted pine trees.

With a bit of luck, you can see the famed yunhai - "the sea of clouds" - spreading beneath your feet to the horizon with fairytale-like rocks protruding from below like islands in the ocean. If that view was not breathtaking enough, wait for the sunset!




Everything at the top - from water and food to laundry and souvenirs - is hauled on the shoulders of sinewy porters who climb up and down the exhausting thousands of steep steps a few times a day, never without a load. Their labour, close to human right abuse in the presence of the ultra-modern cable car whizzing over their heads, is largely underappreciated, yet makes possible your poetic pleasures of nature appreciation. Please eat up every bit on your plate when yo are there as a gesture of respect!

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Hongcun - Water Buffalo Shaped Village >>>

Hongcun - Water Buffalo Shaped Village


Known as a "village in a Chinese painting", Hongcun is another UNESCO World Heritage site. It has gained gained international fame as a location for the martial arts epic "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon".


The village is laid out in the shape of a water buffalo. A nearby hill is interpreted as the head, and two large trees standing on it mark the horns. Four bridges across the stream can be seen as the legs and the houses of the village form the body. Inside the “body”, the many small canals can be seen as the intestines and the moon-shaped ponds as the stomachs.



Hongcun's 150 or so houses are the famous fortified Huizhou courtyard houses. Built to withstand earthquakes as well as attacks by bandits, the tall whitewashed walls with high windows protect the fine carved wood interiors.




Hongcun has a nice dreamy quality about it and its gentle beauty attracts hundreds of Chinese art students who clutter every walkway and open space honing their en plein air sketching skills. A few kilometres away, there is a Painters' Village where artists from all over China are gathered to supply Western hotel chains with industrial quantities of masterly copies of famous European paintings.

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Shanghai - Carnival Of Life >>>

Shanghai - Carnival Of Life

Brash and bold, China's second biggest city has always been about money. It sprang up to sudden fame as a concession port in the 19th century and by the 1930s it became world's third largest financial centre. Its re-birth in 1990 as a Special Economic Zone, brought it back to the ranks of major international cities.


The two banks of the river are testament to Shanghai's two highest historical peaks. The Bund side, the heart of colonial Shanghai, is rich in nostalgic European splendour of grand Art Deco buildings. Across the river, Pudong is an ethereal city of the future, looking more like computer graphics.







As is the case with material success oriented cities, like New York, Hong Kong, Casablanca or Moscow, the atmosphere in Shanghai is electrifying. And as ever, in a truly miraculous way, on the rich soil of greed, ambition and vanity grow fine flowers of creativity, innovation and independent thinking.

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