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Chengdu
travel guide
Chengdu is depicted in a poem as
"Chengdu Landscape, as if endowed by the Ninth Heaven, is shared in the
creations of many a master artist." A magnificent and modern provincial capital,
Southeast of the Sichuan basin, Chengdu enjoys temperate climate and plentiful
products. The city located between latitude 10255 and 10453 east and longitude
3006 and 3126 north. With an annual rainfall of 997.6 mm, it occupies an area of
12,389.6 square kilometers, and now has over 3 million inhabitants in the city
proper, and over 10 million in greater Chengdu. The average annual temperature
of 16.2 , an annual sunshine time is 1,239 hours and the frost-free period is
300 days. Chengdu is more than 2,000 years old. In contrast to some other
Chinese urban centres, and despite raging redevelopment, Chengdu has managed to
preserve the atmosphere how one might imagine China to have once been sometime
in the past. Chengdu was already the political, economic, and cultural centre of
western Sichuan by 400 B.C. During the Five Dynasties Period (907-960), Meng
Chang, a ruler of later Shu, had numerous hibiscus trees planted on the city
wall, so the town eventually became known as the City of Hibiscus. Chengdu, also
known as the hibiscus city or the brocade city, has been a famous cultural
centre with age-old colorful traditions of both religious and civil significance
for the past 2,500 years in Chinese history. With the coming of the spring,
peach blossoms abound on the plain and rape-seed flowers tinge the landscape
golden while the wafting cooking smoke curls up from the farm huts amidst bamboo
groves. All this makes the city and its suburbs truly poetic. The annual happy
occasions of the traditional lantern festival, flower show, the yearly opening
of the sluices at the Dujiangyan, the dragon boat races at Xinjing, and the
folk-lore sing song contests at Wang-cong Memorial Temple are also charming and
captivating scenes. The old street scene at Huanglongxi township, the gorgeous
mansions of the Liu family at Dayi county and a number of picturesque civilian
villages are well preserved for people and future generations to appreciate. In
Tiexiangsi, there is the College for Buddhist nuns in China, and the Guanyin
Temple in Xinjing has preserved the most lively color sculpture and
wall-painting of Ming Dynasty, Zhaojue Temple, Wenshu Monastery, Baoguang Temple
and Daci Temple in the city are known as "the four famous Buddhist monasteries
in western Sichuan". Hemingshan at Diyi county is the sacred seat of origin for
Taoism, and Qingyang Palace is the best preserved memorial temple for Laotzu,
the founder and master of the Taoist faith. Sichuan opera with the Chengdu brand
as representative, is one of the principal genres of regional drama. It is
particularly famous for its sense of humor and its unique skills in"Changing
one's countenance". Built on flat ground, Chengdu can easily be explored on foot
or by bicycle. It has almost a southern aspect, with colorful old streets lined
by scores of small restaurants and walkways that remain crowded until late with
traders, buyers, and people out for a stroll.
Wuhou
Memorial Temple
Wuhou Temple (Temple of Marquis Wu) in the
southern suburbs of Chengdu is dedicated to the memory of both Liu Bei
(161-223), Emperor of the Kingdom of Shu in the Three Kingdoms period (220-280),
and Zhuge Liang (181-234), Prime Minister of the Kingdom. The board hung above
the gate reads "Han Zhaolie Temple" (Zhaolie was a title given to Liu Bei
posthumously). But the temple is commonly called Wuhou Memorial Temple (Zhuge
Liang was conferred on the title of Wu Xianghou after his death). The memorial
temple, dignified and simple in style, houses 47 statues of Liu Bei, Zhuge Liang
and other civil officials and senior generals of the Kingdom. The temple is
furnished with many inscribed stone tablets, the most famous being the Tablet of
Triple Success of the Tang Dynasty (618 -907) with its text by Prime Minister
Pei Du, calligraphy by Liu Gongchuo and carvings by Lu Jian. The couplets
written on scrolls and hung on the pillars in the temple are well-known for
numerous aphorism.
Giant
Panda Breeding Research Base
The Giant Panda Breeding Research Base is
located on the mountain of Futoushan in the northern suburbs of the city, 18km
away from the town center. The Giant Panda Museum is a unique museum set up for
Giant Panda's in the world, it collects and shows fruits of human knowledge,
review and research on the Giant Panda. The Museum shows almost 300 rare, fine
pictures and scientific , full & accurate charts about Giant Panda, exhibits
literatures and monograph on Giant Panda's at all times and in different places
of the world. It shows practical specimens of Giant Panda's from fossils to
every part of dissection, dejection and main types of food bamboo etc. The
Museum also built many large zoology scope-boxes with an area of 300m2, such as
remote antiquity as Giant Panda zoology environment, Giant Panda danger
situation, and Giant Panda zoology environment in Qinling, Liangshan, Xiangling,
Minshan, and Qionglai Mountain. The Museum systematically and completely
introduces Giant Panda's evolvement history, ancient and nowadays distribution,
general situation, condition and research of human to Giant Panda's. This lets
people roundly know Giant Panda's, understand efforts made by our government to
protect and save the animal which is loved by people all of the world and
consciously arose the feeling to love and protect Giant Panda's and their
natural habitat.
We recommend that the best time to visit is in the morning,
between 8:30 and 10am, during feeding time. Outside these hours it's likely the
bears will be indulging in their favorite pastime, sleeping!
Fu's
Thatched Cottage
The Thatched Cottage of Dufu, located by
the side of the Huanhua Stream in Chengdu's western suburb. It was the residence
of Dufu, the great poet of the Tang Dynasty when he took refuge in Chengdu.
Du Fu (712-70 AD),one of China's most famous poets, left home at the tender
age of 20, becoming a court official at the former capital in Chang'an (near
Xi'an). Du Fu's civil service duties did not last long however, and he was
captured by rebels and forced to flee the city for Chengdu after only a few
years. It was in Chengdu, at this small and simple house, that Du Fu was
inspired to write more than 200 poems which are regarded today as masterpieces
of realist poetry.
Dufu's Thatched Cottage covers an area of 16 hectares.
The Gate, the Screen Wall, the Lobby, the Hall of Verse History, and the Gong Bu
Temple are lined one by one along the middle axis, flanked by corridors and
other auxiliary buildings. The bronze statue of Dufu in the Hall of Verse
History is broad-minded. The clay sculpture of Dufu was enshrined in the Gong Bu
Temple is very lifelike. Among and between them are trees and bamboo groves,
winding brooks and linking small bridges.
All these give the place an
atmosphere of solemnity, meanwhile a sense of beauty and grace. Around the hones
are bamboo fences and inside the fences are vegetable and herb plots, easily
remind people of the scenes described in Dufu's poems. While taking a quiet walk
in such a historical and cultural environment, visitors are apt to be brought
back to the ancient times.
Sichuan Opera
As one of the major opera schools in China,
the Sichuan Opera has a long history. It originated at the end of the Ming
Dynasty and the beginning of the Qing Dynasty. At that time there were several
different forms of popular theatre in the Sichuan area which gradually developed
and blended with the local culture to finally merge into the present Sichuan
Opera.
Sichuan Opera is well-known in China, and is characterized by
solo singing, skillful acting, rich percussion and incredibly funny comedies.
Special characters use stunts such as quick face changes without makeup, jumping
through burning hoops and hiding of swords. The magical face changes are
particularly famous.
Face changing is the essence and highlight of Sichuan
Opera. It is a kind of stunt which involves the on-stage change of mask or
facial makeup, via masks or facial painting, without the audience noticing. It
is amazing that, with a magical sweep of a hand, the actors can change their
masks successively in an incredibly short time. Face changes first appeared 300
years ago. Initially the opera masters changed their face during a performance
by blowing into a bowl of red, black or gold powder, which immediately stuck to
their oiled skiny. By the 1920s, actors began to use layers of masks made of
oiled paper. During the performance, actors would peel off one after another in
a very short time. Now, the masters use painted silk masks, which can be worn in
layers. No matter how closely you watch, you don’t see the mask being changed.
BEIJING
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