| 1882 Perron map HANGZHOU / HANGCHOW & WEST LAKE, CHINA, #87 |
Nice small map titled Hangtcheou et le Si Hou, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression, approx. size with margins is 16.5 x 16 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Hangzhou
Wade-Giles romanization Hang-chou , conventional Hangchow
city and capital of Zhejiang sheng (province), China. The city is located in the
northern part of the province on the north bank of the Qiantang River estuary at
the head of Hangzhou Bay. It has water communications with the interior of
Zhejiang to the south, is the southern terminus of the Grand Canal, and is
linked to the network of canals and waterways that cover the Yangtze River
(Chang Jiang) delta area to the north. The city stands at the eastern foot of a
scenic range of hills, the Tianmu (“Eye of Heaven”) Mountains, and on the shore
of the famous Xi (West) Lake, celebrated in poetry and paintings for its beauty
and a favourite imperial retreat. Pop. (2002 est.) city, 2,059,774; (2007 est.)
urban agglom., 3,007,000.
History
The county of Qiantang was first established at this site under the Qin dynasty
(221–207 BCE) but did not start developing until the 4th and 5th centuries CE,
when the Yangtze River delta area began to be settled. A prefecture named
Hangzhou was created there in 589, during the Sui dynasty (581–618), which is
the source of the city's name. It became a major local centre with the
completion of the Jiangnan Canal (then the southern section of the Grand Canal)
in 609. During the Ten Kingdoms (Shiguo) period (907–960), Hangzhou was the
capital of the state of Wu-Yue. In the later Song period (960–1279), northern
China fell to the Jin (Juchen) dynasty (1115–1234); from 1127 the Song rulers
were confined to southern China, and they made Hangzhou (then known as Lin'an)
their capital. A centre of commerce, it was visited in the late 13th century by
the Venetian traveler Marco Polo, who called it Kinsai, or Quinsay; it then had
an estimated population of 1 million to 1.5 million.
Although it never again reached the peak of importance that it had achieved as
capital of the Nan (Southern) Song, Hangzhou remained important. Under the Ming
(1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1911/12) dynasties, it was a superior prefecture, in
addition to being the provincial capital of Zhejiang. It became immensely
wealthy, being at the centre of a fertile rice-growing area as well as being the
site of the most important silk industries in China. It also was famous as a
centre of culture, producing numerous writers, painters, and poets. Its
importance as a port dwindled, however, as Hangzhou Bay gradually silted up and
as its outport, Ganpu, became useless. From the 14th century its trade gradually
shifted to Ningbo to the southeast on the southern shore of the bay and, in the
19th century, to the new city of Shanghai, some 100 miles (160 km) to the
northeast at the mouth of the Yangtze. In 1861, during the Taiping Rebellion
(1850–64), the city fell to the rebels and suffered severe damage.
Subsequently, although no longer a major port, it remained a commercial centre
for domestic trade and was opened to foreign trade in 1896. Its commercial role
was later augmented by the construction of a railway to Shanghai (1909), of
another to Ningbo (1914), and of a main line to Jiangxi and Hunan provinces in
1936–38. Since the construction of railways in Fujian province in the 1950s,
Hangzhou has become the focus of rail traffic from the southeastern provinces to
Shanghai. It was also the focus of the earliest network of modern motor roads,
constructed in the 1930s. Hangzhou was held by the Japanese from 1937 to 1945.