baotou Travel Guide
Baotou - a large industrial city in the remote regions o  f western
Inner Mongolia of China, is a place that is visited mainly
by people with more than just tourism in mind. The city
is a huge slab of urban area that runs for about 20km,
being both the largest city in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region and probablythe ugliest. Thankfully there are
a few areas out of town that are of interest, both scenically
and historically.
The
area where Baotou now lies was once a fairly arid grassland
that was populated by Mongolian nomads and grazers. Just
to the north of the both the Yellow River and the Gobi
Desert.
Baotou city was established in the Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911 AD) on a Neolithic site. It was named
"a land with deer" (Baotou) after the hundreds
of these creatures that used to be found here.
Baotou came to become the largest in the province after the Communists
came to power in 1950. The leaders of the revolution were
quick to take advantage of the huge quantities of iron,
coal and mineral deposits that the region contains. Nowadays
it is the biggest producer of iron and steel in China,
a factor that goes a long way to explain both the huge
population, of about one million, and the large quantities
of pollution that hangs in the atmosphere, the little
treated smog from the factories in the western section
of town. It also is one of the main reasons that the population
Baotou, in a remote area of former Mongolia, is dominated
by Han Chinese. The Han make up 90% of the total, the
Mongolians just 2.5% and the rest are of 21 other minorities,
including the Daur, Tibetan and Man.
This
city is mainly just a transit point
for those not here on business, and it is mainly visited
by orthodox followers of either Gelukpa Buddhism or the
cult of Genghis Khan. The Buddhist lamasery, Wudangzhao,
is a very popular sight set in hills covered by willow
trees. The Mausoleum of Genghis Khan, that possibly holds
the tyrannous warlord's ashes, is also not far.
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