 |
| Taiyuan |
 |
Taiyuan is the capital of Shanxi Province, and a city rich in political,
military, and religious history. Located along the invasion corridors
between the nomadic regions to the north and the agricultural heartland
around the Yellow River, it was the site of repeated invasion and
occupation over the centuries. The central Shanxi region is rich in
Buddhist and Taoist sites, including the famous Mt. Wutai and the
Taoist Palace of Eternal Joy. Taiyuan is now a major industrial city
in northern China, close to major iron and coal reserves.
Settlements in the Taiyuan region date back to Neolithic times.
The town, then known as Jinyang, was founded some 2,400 years ago.
Its location in a valley near the Fen River put it near the invasion
routes from the nomadic regions in the north to the agricultural
heartland near the Yellow River. The city suffered from frequent
occupation by invaders, including the Xiongnu in Han times and the
Toba (Tabgatch) Turkic rulers of the Northern Wei in the 4th-6th
centuries. The founder of the Tang dynasty, Li Yuan, used Taiyuan
as a base for the peasant uprising that overthrew the Sui regime
in the early 7th century. Jinyang was destroyed in 979 by Song dynasty
forces, but rebuilt three years later and renamed Songcheng. Starting
in 1375 in the early Ming dynasty the town became the seat of government
for the Taiyuan region and expanded greatly.
English, French, and Russian communities exploited the region's
mineral resources in the 19th century. Taiyuan was one of the centers
of the nationalistic Boxer Rebellion around 1900, when all the foreign
missionaries and their families were put to death on the order of
the provincial governor. After the end of the Qing imperial system
in 1911, Taiyuan was governed by a regional warlord named Yan Xishan
between 1912 and 1949. Operating under the Kuomintang but largely
an independent ruler, he suppressed opium smoking and foot-binding,
among other reforms, but allowed development of coal resources by
the Japanese in the early 1940's. |
 |