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As the capital of the People's Republic of China, Beijing
( Its former English name is Peking ) is the national political
and cultural center. It's both an old and a new city--old
in its cultural heritage and new as the capital of the country.
The story of Beijing dates back long before the recorded
history. The fragments of the bones of "Peking Man",
dated to a period about 300,000----500,000 years ago, were
discovered in a village to the southwest of the present-day
city. In the same area, the fossils of the "Upper Cave
Man" dating back 18,000 years were also found.
In the later 1,000 years, it has been China's political
and cultural center. Beijing was established as the secondary
capital of the Liao Kingdom (916-1125) in 938. In the Jin
Kingdom (1115-1234), Beijing began to serve as the central
capital in 1151.
In 1263, just before the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) was founded,
Beijing was made by Kublai Khan the Great Capital and a grand
metropolitan city which became the center of international
cultural exchanges in the Orient. The foundation of the layout
of present Beijing was laid in 1404, when the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644) decided to move the capital from Nanjing to Beijing
and started a large-scale construction. Many of the ancient
palace buildings, temple structures and gardens that are still
visible today can be traced back to this period or later.
Weak Ming rulers and corrupt bureaucrats finally doomed
the Ming Dynasty. The last Ming emperor hanged himself behind
the Imperial Palace and the Qing succeeded the Ming and ruled
China in Beijing from 1644 to 1911.
Following the 1911 revolution that overthrew the Qing Dynasty,
Beijing became the area of important political events, such
as the May Fourth Movement. On October 1, 1949, Beijing became
the capital of the People's Republic of China, while it has
a whole area of 16808 sq km (about 6500 sq mi).
Today's Beijing is mingled with tradition and modernity.
While seeking for industrialization, the Government is also
carrying out a conservation program to protect the traditional
houses in the downtown area to partly maintain Beijing's original
outlook.
The city has many places of historic interest and scenic
beauty, including the Forbidden City, the largest and best-preserved
ancient architectural complex in the world; the Temple of
Heaven, where Ming and Qing emperors performed solemn rituals
for bumper harvests; the Summer Palace, the emperors' magnificent
garden retreat; the Ming tombs, the stately and majestic mausoleums
of 13 Ming Dynasty emperors; and the world-renowned and genuinely
inspiring Ba-da-ling section of the Great Wall.
Large-scale construction since the founding of the People's
Republic of China in 1949 has brought great changes to Beijing.
Today's Beijing still retains the alluring fascination of
an ancient capital, but has added a small forest of skyscrapers
and a complete range of municipal facilities, transforming
itself into an attractively modern metropolis redolent of
history.
Beijing's city emblem trees are the Chinese Scholartree
and the arborvitae. It's city emblem flowers are the China
rose and chrysanthemum. Smoking is not allowed in public places
such as hospitals, office buildings, theatres, cinemas, museums,
planes, and trains.
Welcome to Beijing.
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