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Chinese Great Wall Great Wall The Great Wall of China, built at the Spring and Autumn times and Warring period 2000 years ago, after Qin dynasty unified China, the walls were joined together to Great Wall. In Han and Ming dynasty, the Great Wall was renewed so extensively and voluminously that is was called a miracle all over the world. It is located to the south of China, east from Shanhaiguan , west to Jiayuguan, with total length 6700 kilometers, generally known as” Great Wall”. But what we see today is the Great Wall of Ming dynasty.The main engineering of the Great Wall is the grand and tall walls stretching for thousands of kilometers, many of which are built on the highest peak of the mountain. Along the ridge to outline the zigzag and topographic feature of the mountain, shaping a magnificent leaping great dragon, a symbol of Chinese nation. Along the Great Wall there are hundreds of junctures and passes, thousands of beacon towers, which have broken the dullness of the walls. Among the scenes of the Great Wall, Beijing Badaling is the strongest, and the best preserved, also the best place for you to visit the Great Wall. The Great Wall is with high tourism and historical, cultural significance. Through elaborate exploration and restoration, Shanhaiguan, Juyongguan Badaling, Simatai,.Mutianling,Jiayuguan have become the famous scenic spots at home and abroad. At present , the Great Wall, the Pyramid of Egypt, Colosseo of Rome, Leaning Tower of Pisa, Italy and so on are called World Seven Wonders. It is the monument of Chinese ancient culture and crystallization of wisdom, symbolizing the Chinese people are uniting together and the national spirit. The Great Wall was listed into the World Heritage Directory in December,1997.The Great Wall, like the Pyramids of Egypt, the Taj Mahal(1) in India and the Hanging Garden of Babylon(2), is one of the great wonders of the world. Starting out in the east on the banks of the Yalu River in Liaoning Province, the Wall stretches westwards for 12,700 kilometers to Jiayuguan in the Gobi desert, thus known as the Ten Thousand Li Wall in China. The Wall climbs up and down, twists and turns along the ridges of the Yanshan and Yinshan Mountain Chains through five provinces——Liaoning, Hebei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, and Gansu and two autonomous regions——Ningxia and Inner Mongolia, binding the northern China together. Historical records trace the original construction of the Wall to defensive fortification back to the year 656 B.C. during the reign of King Cheng of the States of Chu. Its construction continued throughout the Warring States period in the fifth Century B.C. when ducal states Yan, Zhao, Wei, and Qin were frequently plundered by the nomadic peoples living north of the Yinshan and Yanshan mountain ranges. Walls, then, were built separately by these ducal states to ward off such harassments. Later in 221 B.C., when Qin conquered the other states and unified China, Emperor Qinshihuang ordered the connection of these individual walls and further extensions to form the basis of the present Great Wall. As a matter of fact, a separate outer wall was constructed north of the Yinshan range in the Han Dynasty(206 BC——1644 BC.), which went to ruin through years of neglect. In the many intervening centuries, succeeding dynasties rebuilt parts of the Wall. The most extensive reinforcements and renovations were carried out in the Ming Dynasty (1368——1644) when altogether 18 lengthy stretches were reinforced with bricks and rocks. It is mostly the Ming Dynasty Wall that visitors see today. The Great Wall is divided into two sections, the east and west, with Shanxi Province as the dividing line. The west part is a rammed earth construction, about 5.3 meters high on average. In the eastern part, the core of the Wall is rammed earth as well, but the outer shell is reinforced with bricks and rocks. The most imposing and best preserved sections of the Great Wall are at Badaling and Mutianyu, not far from Beijing and both are open to visitors.The Wall of those sections is 7.8 meters high and 6.5 meters wide at its base, narrowing to 5.8 meters on the ramparts, wide enough for five horses to gallop abreast. There are ramparts, embrasures, peep-holes and apertures for archers on the top, besides gutters with gargoyles to drain rain-water off the parapet walk. Two-storied watch-towers are built at approximately 400-meters internals. The top stories of the watch-tower were designed for observing enemy movements, while the first was used for storing grain, fodder, military equipment and gunpowder as well as for quartering garrison soldiers. The highest watch-tower at Badaling standing on a hill-top, is reached only after a steep climb, like "climbing a ladder to heaven". The view from the top is rewarding, hoverer. The Wall follows the contour of mountains that rise one behind the other until they finally fade and merge with distant haze. A signal system formerly existed that served to communicate military information to the dynastic capital. This consisted of beacon towers on the Wall itself and on mountain tops within sight of the Wall. At the approach of enemy troops, smoke signals gave the alarm from the beacon towers in the daytime and bonfire did this at night. Emergency signals could be relayed to the capital from distant places within a few hours long before the invention of anything like modern communications.There stand 14 major passes (Guan, in Chinese) at places of strategic importance along the Great Wall, the most important being Shanghaiguan and Jiayuguan. Yet the most impressive one is Juyongguan, about 50 kilometers northwest of Beijing.Known as "Tian Xia Di YI Guan" (The First Pass Under Heaven), Shanghaiguan Pass is situated between two sheer cliffs forming a neck connecting north China with the northeast. It had been, therefore, a key junction contested by all strategists and many famous battles were fought here. It was the gate of Shanghaiguan that the Ming general Wu Sangui opened to the Manchu army to suppress the peasant rebellion led by Li Zicheng and so surrendered the whole Ming empire to the Manchus, leading to the foundation of the Qing Dynasty. (1644-1911) Jiayuguan Pass was not so much as the "Strategic pass Under the Heaven" as an important communication center in Chinese history. Cleft between the snow-capped Qilian Mountains and the rolling Mazong Mountains, it was on the ancient Silk Road. Zhang Qian, the first envoy of Emperor Wu Di of the Western Han dynasty (206 B.C-24 A.D), crossed it on his journey to the western regions. Later, silk flowed to the west through this pass too. The gate-tower of Jiayuguan is an attractive building of excellent workmanship. It has an inner city and an outer city, the former square in shape and surrounded by a wall 11.7 meters high and 730 meters in circumference. It has two gates, an eastern one and a western one. On each gate sits a tower facing each other. The four corners of the wall are occupied by four watch towers, one for each. Juyongguan, a gateway to ancient Beijing from Inner Mongolia,
was built in a 15-kilometer long ravine flanked by mountains. The cavalrymen
of Genghis Khan swept through it in the 13th century. At the center of
the pass is a white marble platform named the Cloud terrace, which was
called the Crossing-Street Dagoba, since its narrow arch spanned the main
street of the pass and on the top of the terrace there used to be three
stone dagobas, built in the Yuan Daynasty(1206-1368). At the bottom of
the terrace is a half-octagonal arch gateway, interesting for its wealth
of detail: it is decorated with splendid images of Buddha and four celestial
guardians carved on the walls. The vividness of their expressions is matched
by the exquisite workmanship. Such grandiose relics works, with several
stones pieced together, are rarely seen in ancient Chinese carving. The
gate jambs bear a multi-lingual Buddhist sutra, carved some 600 years
ago in Sanskrit(3), Tibetan, Mongolian, Uigur(4), Han Chinese and the
language of Western Xia. Undoubtedly, they are valuable to the study of
Buddhism and ancient languages.As a cultural heritage, the Wall belongs
not only to China but to the world. The Venice charter says: "Historical
and cultural architecture not only includes the individual architectural
works, but also the urban or rural environment that witnessed certain
civilizations, significant social developments or historical events."
The Great Wall is the largest of such historical and cultural architecture,
and that is why it continues to be so attractive to people all over the
world. In 1987, the Wall was listed by UNESCO as a world cultural heritage
site.
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