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Hefei Introduction Cuddled
in the very heart of Anhui, Hefei, the capital of the province, is an ancient
town with more than 2,000 years of history. Unfortunately much of this is not
overly noticeable, and most travellers will neglect the area, or merely pass it
en route to Anhui's more scenic spot, Huangshan, to the southeast. The most stirring
interest with the city is in the ancient tales from this area, partly immortalised
in the book The Three Kingdoms (Sanguo yanyi). This
book is still known today, one of the series of four ancient classics whose other
titles include The Water Margin (Shui huzhuan),
The Journey to the West (Xi you ji) and The Dream of
the Red Chamber (Honglou meng). Accounts
of the city only came to popular fame after 200 AD, around the time that the crumbling
Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220 AD) was at an end. As with most cases of dynastic
decline, it was the military strategists most capable of instigating the discontented
masses that were to rise to the fore. These were the warlords, that were soon
to become kings of their own fiefdoms, most famously the Shu Han Kingdom
(221-263 AD), the Wei Kingdom (220-265 AD) and the Wu
Kingdom (222-280 AD). Hefei, a small town at that time, was of strategic
importance since practically it was the center of this region. For the town it
was the bloody battles that occurred between Caocao's Wei forces
and the troops of the Wu Kingdom's Sun Quan that remain as popular
stories. There remain a few relics around town that remember these times, most
notably the battleground of Leisure Ford, that is now a park, and the site of
the troops drillground, that is now the Mingjiao Temple.
The
city was to return to its position as an administrative and economic area. Almost
eight centuries after the struggles of the Three Kingdoms period, in the Northern
Song (960-1127 AD), came the birth of a Hefei child who was to become a paragon
for Chinese. Named Bao Zheng, this child was to grow up to become
known as the most conscientious and uncorrupt high official in all of China. The
area where he was born, Hefei, still commemorates his honest name, by displaying
the tools of his trade, his execution cutters, and the area where he allegedly
used to live, in a park just to the southeast of the city center. From
this time on Hefei was to remain in relative quiescence, broken only once in the
latter years of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911 AD) with the struggles of the Taiping
Rebellion (1851-1860 AD). After a demographic revolution in the early
1900s, the city became a regional trading hub, and this continued until after the Communist
succession, when the development of rail lines helped to further boost its economy
and secure its position as the provincial capital. Today Hefei is the industrial
center of the province, with a population of 1.2 million, although for a city
of its size it is not overly polluted. It is also well known as a center for learning,
and is now home to more than 30 universities and institutes of higher education.
The most renowned of these, the University of Science and Technology
(Zhongguo kexue jishu daxue), has in recent years become fairly contentious
in sending many of its students abroad for study. For travellers the area is not
all bad, helped both by the ring of parks the circle the city center, and a fairly
friendly atmosphere. Hefei, capital
of Anhui Province, is situated between the Changjiang (Yangtze) and
the Huaihe River. It covers an area of 50 square kilometers. Hefei is famous for
its scenic beauty and abundant produces. It scenic spots and historical sites
include Xiaoyao Jin (Leisure Ford), an ancient battlefield where a famous battle
was fought in the Three Kingdoms Period; the Lecturing Rostrum where Caocao (Emperor
of Wei, one of the there kingdoms) trained his crossbowers; the Mingjiao Temple
on the Lecturing Rostrum built in the Tang Dynasty, the Memorial Temple of Bao
Zheng, an upright of the Song Dynasty, in which stands the statue of Bao Zheng;
and Lianquan Ting (pavilion of Honest Spring). |
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