Beijing - geography.
Publié le 04/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
other polluting materials contributes to the city’s severe air and water pollution.
V EDUCATION AND CULTURE
Beijing has more colleges and universities than any other Chinese city.
The most prominent institutions are Peking University, founded in 1898; and Tsinghua University,founded in 1911, which is the most prestigious scientific and technical institution in the country.
Both institutions are located in the northwest suburbs, an areaassociated with higher education and research.
Also in this area are the People’s University, founded in 1937, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, founded in 1949.
Beijing also has many museums and cultural activities.
There are numerous theaters, including the People’s Theater, the Capital Theater, and the Nationalities Theater.The Beijing Concert Hall is among the venues for musical performances.
There are also art museums and a museum of natural history.
VI POINTS OF INTEREST
Despite much recent construction, Beijing remains a city of great monuments, palaces, temples and other reminders of the past glory of imperial China.
The PalaceMuseum, located within the Forbidden City, was the former residence and official site of the imperial family and court.
Built more than 500 years ago, this complexcomprises a series of great halls and palaces which served for official and ceremonial occasions of state, banquets, and residential purposes.
To the west of this complexis Zhongnan Hai, a large park and cluster of lakes that is walled and serves today as the residential compound for China’s top leadership.
Immediately south of the Forbidden City is Tiananmen Square.
This is the site of large celebrations and rallies, such as the National Day celebrations held each year onOctober 1.
On the east side of the square is the Museum of China’s History and Revolution, and in the center is the Monument to the Heroes of the People and the tombof Mao Zedong, who established the Communist form of government in China in 1949.
In 1989 the square was the site of massive student demonstrations which wereviolently suppressed by the army.
See Tiananmen Square Protest.
In the northwestern suburbs are tombs of most emperors of the Ming dynasty, who ruled in China from 1368 to 1644.
The tombs are approached by the long Avenueof the Animals, lined with marble lions, elephants, camels, and horses.
Northwest of the Ming Tombs, within the municipal boundaries, is a portion of the Great Wall.
Of the many temples in the old city, perhaps the best known and most beautiful is the complex known as the Temple of Heaven, located in Tian Tan Park in thesouthern part of the outer city.
This complex includes two circular ceremonial buildings with blue-tiled roofs.
These were the shrines where China’s emperors worshiped;after the Communist revolution in 1949, the Temple of Heaven became a public park.
Other noteworthy temples include the Confucian and Lama temples and theTemple of the White Dagoba built to commemorate the visit of the fifth Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, in 1651.
Major sporting events are held at the Beijing Stadium, the Workers’ Stadium, and the Sports Ground.
Other parks include the Summer Palace in the northwest suburbsand the surrounding temples and parks known as the Fragrant Hills, which were established as religious retreat areas and hunting grounds.
Beijing also has a majorzoo, a planetarium, and a former imperial observatory famed for its ancient cosmological and astronomical devices.
VII HISTORY
Settlement in the vicinity of modern Beijing traces back to 3000 BC or earlier.
Its location on the northern flank of the Huabei Pingyuan (North China Plain) was crucial as a geographic and political intersection between the settled farming populations of the Han Chinese to the south and west and the nomadic tribal groups to the north,northeast, and northwest.
An administrative capital was built here during the Zhou (Chou) dynasty (1045?-256 BC).
In the 10th century AD the Khitan Mongols from the northeast conquered part of north China and established their southern capital on the site of present-day Beijing. Early in the 12th century they were defeated by the Jurchen who established the Jin (Chin) dynasty and rebuilt the city on a larger scale.
The truly grand and elaborate development of the city emerged after the Mongol conquest of China and the establishment of the Yuan (Yüan) dynasty in the 13thcentury.
The Mongol ruler Kublai Khan decided to establish his capital at Beijing in 1272, and for the first time the new capital, named Khanbalik, became the politicaland administrative center for all of China.
In 1368 Zhu Yuanzhang (Chu Yüan-chang) established the Ming dynasty and designated Nanjing as his capital.
He soon overran the Yuan capital at Beijing and changedthe city’s name to Beiping, which means Northern Peace. After his death in 1398 a struggle ensued between Zhu’s grandson, who was the son of Zhu’s deceased eldest son and the rightful heir to the throne, and Zhu’s second eldest son, who usurped the throne and ruled as the Yongle emperor.
The Yongle emperor moved the Mingcapital to Beijing in 1420 and gave the city its current name, which means Northern Capital. The city developed and grew, and the basis for its current design and layout was implemented during this time.
Additional construction of temples and palaces occurred during the succeeding Qing (Ch’ing) dynasty, which ruled from 1644to 1911.
Following the overthrow of the Qing and the establishment of the Republic of China in 1911, Beijing remained the political center of China until 1928.
The NationalistParty, headed by Chiang Kai-shek, moved the capital to Nanjing and renamed Beijing to Beiping, the city’s former name under the early Ming dynasty.
During WorldWar II the city was occupied by the Japanese from 1937 to 1945 but was spared much damage.
Following the Communist revolution in 1949, the city’s name waschanged back to Beijing and designated the capital of the newly established People’s Republic of China.
In 2001 the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2008Summer Olympic Games to Beijing.
Contributed By:Clifton W.
PannellMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
All rights reserved..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Beijing - geography.
- How Beijing deals with pollution and global warming ?
- Pékin, en pinyin Beijing (« capitale du Nord »), capitale de la République populaire de Chine, au nord de la plaine centrale chinoise, et à 140 km de la mer Jaune (golfe de Bohai).
- Tokyo - geography.
- Toronto - geography.