With it's long history of over 2,300 years, Chengdu
was proclaimed one of the 24 cultural and historical cities by the
State Council at the first batch.
Early in the 4th century BC, Kaiming IX, king of ancient Shu,
moved the capital from ?¡ãGuangdu Fanxiang?¡À (now called Shuangliu)
to Chengdu. "A town was built in this area in the first year
and the capital in the second year?¡À, so the ancestor name the
city as Chengdu, which means ?¡ãbecame a capital?¡Àin Chinese.
In 311 B.C, people of Qin Dynasty (221 BC-208 BC) built a protective
wall around Chengdu city according to the construction standard
practiced in Xianyang, capital of Qin Dynasty. Thus, the wall
was erected with a height of 3.5 meters and a perimeter of 6 kilometers,
marking the beginning of Chengdu City.
The Dujiangyan Irrigation System was constructed under the lead
of Li Bing, prefect of Shu Prefecture. The Dujiangyan brings the
vast Chengdu Plain under irrigation and protects it against droughts
and floods for over 2000 years. Chengdu plain was turned into
the Land of Abundance with temperate climate and fertile soil.
In Western Han Dynasty (206 BC- AD 23), brocades produced in
Chengdu enjoyed good popularity in China. The government assigned
Jinguan (an official in charge of brocade production) to administrate
the brocade production in Chengdu and the Jinguan City was constructed.
So Chengdu is also called Jinguan City or ?¡ãBrocade City?¡À.
In the Five Kingdoms Period (907-960), Mengchang, king of the
Latter Shu Kingdom, decreed to plant hibiscuses on the protective
wall of the city, so Chengdu is also called the City of Hibiscus.
Through the history, Chengdu was a city densely covered by rivers
and dotted with bridges, while trees grew in profusion and flowers
bloomed all year around. No wonder that a traveler from France
in the 19th century praised Chengdu as Oriental Paris. Over 2,000
years, Chengdu has remained a city of military importance in Southwest
China on politics, economy and military affairs. Gongsun Shu,
king of Western Han Dynasty, Liu Bei, emperor of the Three Kingdoms
and Meng Zhixiang, King of the Latter Shu Kingdom all founded
their capital in Chengdu. Later in the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368),
the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911),
it remained the location of government for Sichuan province. Early
in Ming Dynasty (1912-1949), it was the capital city of Sichuan
province. On December 27, 1949, Chengdu was liberated and chosen
as the location for the administration office for Sichuan province.
Since 1952, when Sichuan resumed its status as an administrative
province, Chengdu became capital.
Chengdu has also been a city with prosperous industry and booming
business activities. In the Qin Dynasty (221 BC-206 BC) and the
Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD220), it was a well-known business center.
In the Han Dynasty, it was one of the five best cities in China,
the other four cities being Luoyang, Handan, Linzi and Wan. It
ranked second, next only to Yangzhou in the Tang Dynasty (618-907),
in the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), next only to the capital
city, Bianjing. Early in Tang Dynasty and Song Dynasty, the commerce
and trade in Chengdu had outgrown the traditional family workshops,
gradually developing into a modern city of sophistication. Each
month was devoted to different fair: January for lamps, February
flowers, March silkworms, April embroideries, May fans, June incense,
July jewel wares, August sweet-scented osmanthus trees, September
wines, October plum trees, and December peach wood charms. Besides,
in the downtown areas, the markets for after-supper shopping began
to flourish. Even to this day, names of some old streets testify
to that history, including names like Yanshi Street (street for
salt trade), location of city council, and business Street, location
of branch office of Communist Party of China in Sichuan. Paper
money appeared and was first used in China, Chengdu being its
birthplace. At that time, workshops for paper money making were
located in Jingchong Temple to the north of Chengdu city (today
known as Wan-fu Temple, Temple of Ten Thousand Buddhas). The paper
money made here was the earliest paper money ever used, which
played a significant role in promoting trade, financial transaction,
and economic development.
Chengdu also has the longest history for gas exploration and
utilization. Early in the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 23),
natural gas was discovered and used in salt-refinery. Li Bing,
Magistrate of Sichuan province then, built canals to lead rivers
to flow before Chengdu city, greatly improving its transportation.
Soon later, merchants set out from Chengdu to embark on the long
journey for silk trade known as the Silk Road. Chengdu has been
proud of its great contribution to the culture of China as well
as the world.
With a long history, the education in Chengdu is well developed.
Early in 141 B.C, Wen Weng built schools to promote education,
which was the first attempt in China for public education. Till
the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279), the school had grown into
a college with an enrollment totaling 1,000 members. This may
explain why Sichuan has been the birthplace of so many talents
with the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 23) and the Eastern Han
Dynasty (AD25-220 BC) as its prime time. Chengdu was a leading
city in paper making in the Sui Dynasty (581-618 ) and in the
Tang Dynasty (618-907) and he hemp paper made in Chengdu was officially
prescribed for decree writing and the Central library of China
at that time. Later, the wood block printing technology was another
great contribution made by the Chinese people to the civilization
of the whole world. Once again, Chengdu was among the first to
introduce and adopt this technology. In the Song Dynasty (960
BC-1279 BC), Chengdu was one of the three printing centers, and
its printing technology was honored as?¡ã the most advanced in
China.?¡À
Chengdu is also known for its handicrafts. From the Warring States
(770 BC-476 BC) to the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), lacquer wares
enjoyed a high popularity abroad. Hometown of the famous Shu brocade,
Chengdu has been an important city for brocade weaving and the
silk culture in China. In the Han Dynasty (220 BC- AD 206) and
the Jin Dynasty (265-420), the colored silk from Sichuan was extremely
popular in China. For a long period of time between the Six Kingdms
and the Tang Dynasty (618-907), most of the silks exported to
the Middle Asia were made in Chengdu. In 1909, the Shu colored
silk won the first prize in the Southeast Asian Fair. In the Han
Dynasty, the hemp cloth was the first-grade cloth, finding a ready
market in countries as far as Afghanistan (known then as Daxia).
In the Tang Dynasty and the Song Dynasty, Sichuan Opera, with
a large variety, dwarfed all other operas in China. Musical instrument
was also famed. With a long history in making musical instruments,
a family known as Lei amazed the world with their masterpiece.
Also, wall paintings in Daci Temple (Temple of Great Mercy) were
honored as ?¡ãthe Best Wall Painting in China.?¡À
Tea cooking and tea culture originated in Sichuan, China . And
Xinjin, a town of Chengdu, was the first to begin tea trade. Even
in poetry, the earliest description about tea drinking was found
in Chengdu. In the Tang Dynasty and the Song Dynasty, Chengdu
remained an important base for tea production, and it was also
an important center for tea trade, either for retailing or in
wholesale. Since the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), teahouses here
gradually developed their own unique style which could be found
today. Besides, Chengdu has the largest number of teahouses in
the world.
Chengdu has been an open place gathering talented minds. In the
Han Dynasty when Fu, a genre of literary creation, was extremely
popular, there were four acknowledged masters in composing Fu,
two of which were people of Chengdu, namely, Sima Xiangru and
Yang Xiong. Later in the Tang Dynasty, Huan Quan and his son,
Huan Juchai, were master painters. In the Song Dynasty, among
the prestigious historians are two Chengdu people, namely Fan
Zhen and Fan Zuyu.
Moreover, Chengdu was also the love of many personages, such
as Zhuge Liang, an outstanding statesman, and other poets including
Li Bai, Du Fu, Cen Shen, Xue Tao, Wei Zhuang, Lu You and Fang
Cheng. Understandably, it was believed that Sichuan was of irresistible
attraction to poets. Many other figures spent their schooling
years in Chengdu, among which were Zhu De and Chen Yi, the great
proletarian revolutionists, Guo Moruo, Ba Jin, Li Jieren, and
Li Yimang, writers of modern China, and Zhou Taixuan, the scientist.
The city has been characterized in cultural traits by non-exclusiveness,
absorptiveness, enterprising and openness. The coming of Kai Ming
people into Sichuan brought with themselves the Jing and Chu culture.
Soon later, the unification of China by the Qin Kingdom introduced
another new culture, added later by a new wave of immigration
of merchants from all other six kingdoms, bringing in knowledge
of business management and industry. On the other hand, Wen Weng,
a great advocator and patron of education then, sent many of his
students to the capital city for study. Later in the Sui Dynasty,
Yang Xiou, when designated to be governor of Sichuan, brought
with him a group of master monks from China, thus making Sichuan
an important center for Buddhist studies. Emperor Xuan Zhong and
Emperor Xi Zhong of the Tang Dynasty made two imperial visits
to Sichuan. Coming together with them were large groups of poets,
painters, artists and talented minds of many other trades. In
the Qing Dynasty, a large number of people from Hubei Province
and Guangxi Province moved into Sichuan Province, which helped
to promote the communication in economy, culture, and customs.
By either assimilating or learning from other people and places,
Chengdu gradually developed its own opera, namely Sichuan Opera,
painting, Sichuan cuisine and snacks, all of which contributed
to the formation of Chengdu culture. During the Eight-year Anti-Japanese
War (1937-1945), many associations, societies and celebrities
moved to Chengdu, added later by another 27 colleges and Universities,
thus making Chengdu a cultural center at that time. Between 1945
and 1949, with the liberation in Southwest China, many cadres
came to Sichuan from all over China. After the founding of the
People?¡¥s Republic of China in 1949, when three important railways
were under construction in Southwest China, a large number of
professionals and other technicians were transferred into Chengdu
to offer help.
In all, over two thousand years, Chengdu has been constantly
learning and absorbing the new and the advanced culturally and
intellectually. This explains why Chengdu has remained prosperous
politically, culturally and economically all through the history.
Chengdu is also a city of rebellious and revolutionary tradition.
In history, it was the center of a couple of peasant?¡¥s uprisings
and revolutions. In the early Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127),
Wang Xiaobo and Li Shun, the rebel chiefs, started their uprising
in Qingcheng City and soon later established their government
in Chengdu. In the late Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Zhang Xianzhong,
rebel chief of the peasants uprising, also chose Chengdu as the
capital city for his kingdom. In the Revolution of 1911, people
in Chengdu launched an intensive campaign to protect the railways
against government nationalization, and was followed by a wave
of revolutions throughout Sichuan province. And it also pioneered
another greater revolution in October 10, which was known to the
Chinese people as the Wuchang Uprising, an important event in
modern China. Mr. Sun Yat-Sen, Father of China?¡¥s democratic revolution,
spoke highly of Chengdu people in the revolution. After the May
4th Movement in 1919, Chengdu was among the first to send students
to France for further study while working part time. Many revolutionary
pioneers, including Wang Youmu, Zhao Shiyan, Wu Yuzhang, and Che
Yaoxian, lived and worked in Chengdu. In December 1949, to liberate
Chengdu, many soldiers sacrificed their lives to create a new
world in this old city.
Chengdu has also been famous for its rich cultural heritages.
Within its jurisdiction are Qionglai city, Chongzhou city and
Pengzhou city, all of which are listed as Cities of Rich Cultural
and Historical Heritage by the government of Sichuan province.
In November 2000, Dujiangyan Irrigation System and Qingcheng Mountain
(the Taoist Mountain) were ranked as Cities of the World Cultural
Heritage by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO).