Tianjin,
also known as the diamond of the Bohai Gulf and the gateway
to the capital of the People's Republic of China, is one of
the biggest industrial and port cities in China. The city has
a long and illustrious history, and the marks that the past
has imprinted upon the place can still be seen today, albeit
in diminished, and diminishing, form. For the visitor today,
this legacy can still be glimpsed, in the varied and beautiful
architecture of the old concessionary areas, amongst the foibles
and antiques to be found in the winding streets of the antique
market, and with visits to the profusion of religious buildings
that litter the city.
Notable history of the city
began with the excavation of the Grand Canal in the Sui Dynasty
(581-618 AD). At this time, Tianjin was considered to be one
of China's most important military fortresses. Any "aliens"
would have to get through Tianjin for direct access to the capital,
a mere 80km to the west. The city, starting in the mid-Tang
(618-907 AD), also became known as the transportation route,
via canal, of most food and silk from the north to the south.
In 1860, after the First Opium War, Tianjin was further expanded
as a business and communications center. By the end of the 19th
century, it had grown into a bustling center with a population
of approximately 300,000 citizens. As a result of the Peking
Treaty signed in the wake of the Second Opium War, Tianjin became
an open port for foreign trade with concession areas earmarked
for foreign residents of various countries.
The 20th century has witnessed earth-shaking
changes in Tianjin, three successive wars (Democratic Revolution
in the 1910s, Anti-Japanese War from the mid-1930s to mid-1940s
and the civil war immediately afterwards) and a devastating
earthquake in 1976 were to change the face of Tianjin forever.
The turbulence of this period was to greatly slow the economic
pace of the city and it was not until the end of the Cultural
Revolution, as the dust of the earthquake settled, that Tianjin
got back on track. Foreign and domestic money pored in to the
municipality, especially after the establishment of the Tianjin
Economic and Technological Zone. Nowadays it is the future that
is driving the look of Tianjin, with many of the old architecture
making way for modern buildings. |