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¡¡ Guangzhou,
Guangdong Province Special Link: 2007 Canton Fair Guangzhou, often known as Canton, is the capital of southern China¡¯s Guangdong Province. Long a major port
city and commercial gateway to southern China, it has an extensive history of foreign
contact, reaching back to Arab traders of the Tang period, through British merchants of
the 19th century and on to today¡¯s multinational participants in the famous biannual Trade Fairs. In turn,
Guangzhou and surrounding regions sent the bulk of overseas emigrants in the 19th century
to found the Chinatowns of major cities around the world. Cantonese culture has maintained
strong distinctions from the rest of China not only in its cosmopolitanism and
entrepreneurial spirit, but in its formidably complex dialect and world-famous cuisine.
Guangzhou is nicknamed the
¡°City of Five Rams,¡± which derives
from a legend that it was founded when Five Immortals riding five rams descended to each
plan a sheaf of grain there, symbolizing its never-ending prosperity. On firmer historical
ground, an administrative city then called Panyu occupied this site by the 3rd century
BC, serving as the capital of the Nanyue Kingdom founded in the region by a breakaway
commander from the Qin Empire. The recently discovered Nanyue royal tomb of his grandson
have yielded some of the most exquisite jade carvings ever produced in China¡¯s 5,000 year long history of jade working.
Already by the earlier centuries AD Guangzhou was an important international port and
trading center, with merchants and traders from Southeast Asia and as far away as Rome
came to buy silk or to sell spices and incense. Guangzhou was part of the ¡°Maritime Silk Road¡± that linked
southern China with Southeast Asia, India, the Middle East, and the east coast of Africa.
Arab traders introduced Islam into Guangzhou in the 7th century, making it the site of
China¡¯s first mosque and
founding a Muslim community that survived down to the present day. Guangzhou¡¯s long-standing commercial and entrepreneurial spirit reemerged after the economic liberalization policies of the 1980¡¯s were put into effect. Along with nearby Special Economic Zones like Shenzhen, Guangzhou took advantage of the financial might and international experience of nearby Hong Kong, along with an inexpensive, migrant labor force from the countryside, to become a leading industrial and manufacturing center for southern China. |