Monthly Archives: August 2013
satellite map of Guiyang city center
Guiyang city map
Guiyang city map (in English,not detailed), from www.china-tour.cn/images/Guiyang/Guiyang-Ciyt-Map-s.jpg
Guiyang city center,Guizhou Normal University 贵州师范大学 in upper right
old map of Guiyang,18th century,French
History of Guiyang
The city was first constructed as early as 1283 AD during the Yuan Dynasty. It was originally called Shunyuan (順元), meaning obeying the Yuan (the Mongol rulers).
Originally the area was populated by non-Chinese. The Sui Dynasty (AD 581–618) had a commandery there, and the Tang dynasty (618–907) a prefecture. They were, however, no more than military outposts, and it was not until the Yuan (Mongol) invasion of southwest China in 1279 that the area was made the seat of an army and a “pacification office.” Chinese settlement in the area also began at that time, and, under the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1911) dynasties, the town became the seat of a superior prefecture named Guiyang.
Locally Guiyang was an important administrative and commercial center with two distinct merchant communities, consisting of the Sichuanese, who lived in the “new” northern part of the city, and those from Hunan, Guangdong, and Guangxi province, who lived in the “old” southern part. Nevertheless, until the Sino-Japanese War (1937–45), Guiyang was no more than the capital of one of China’s least-developed provinces. As elsewhere in the southwest, considerable economic progress was made under the special circumstances of wartime. Road transport infrastructure with Kunming in Yunnan province and with Chongqing in Sichuan (China’s wartime provisional capital) and into Hunan were established. Work was begun on a railway from Liuzhou in Guangxi, and after 1949 this development was accelerated. Guiyang has subsequently become a major provincial city and industrial base. In 1959 the rail network in Guangxi was completed, allowing seamless connection from Guizhou to Chongqing to the north, to Kunming to the west, and Changsha to the east.
(from Wikipedia, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiyang )
Guiyang’s planned subway (light rail)
Guiyang’s planned subway (light rail) , from www.86wiki.com/view/4341237.htm
Back to the old routine
I am falling back into my old routine with a new semester coming up. I am sorry that I couldn’t meet with so many of my old friends in Traverse City, but I just didn’t have time. I spent five weeks in Traverse City, but when I landed, I found that my old appraisal business was still generating work and I ended up doing five appraisals while I was there.
I am happy to be out of appraisal and back in China. The rules in appraisals have changed drastically since I was active three years ago. Also, I tried new software, which had a learning curve. Finally I bought a new laptop with Windows 8 on it. I hate Windows 8. I am still looking for the Start Key.
Anyway, appraising took four of the five weeks and I had to get a few golf games in. This left very little time for catching up with old friends. I spent one evening with my sister in Detroit and one evening with my step-brother in Manistee. Stay tuned for my Manistee Hummies video, which will be online soon.
I am back safely.
After five weeks in the USA I am back to my home in Guiyang. It’s still here and it looks like things are good for the coming year. I immediately turned on the English CCTV News upon my return. I was relieved to discover that everything is good still in China. There are no scandals of significance and although there are problems, there seems to be nothing that the government isn’t up to handling. The news is very different than in the US.
My plants have prospered in my absence. The weather is about 64 degrees. The taxi driver said that the weather was in the middle 70’s earlier today. In Shanghai it was about 96 or 97.Even though we are much further south, the mountains and prevailing winds help Guiyang stay comfortable in the summer.