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China Tourist Attractions: Wuxi, Jiangsu Province

China is a huge country, with a seemingly infinite diversity of places and cultures. With that in mind, we at Chinatour.com have prepared this travel guide to help you learn more about the places of China.  


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Wuxi is a city dominated by waterways -- the ring of canals that surround the city, including the main branch of the Grand Canal, and the waters of Lake Taihu, China¡¯s fourth largest lake that extends to the south of the city. In addition to its scenic attractions and role in a regional transport system, the water system supports a flourishing rice agriculture and fisheries. Wuxi was also known in imperial and modern times for its silk textile production, and the nearby town of Yixing is renowned for its ¡°purple-sand¡± tea-ware pottery.

Wuxi was already settled in the Zhou period (11th-3rd c. BC), as the capital of the Wu kingdom, when it was known as Youxi, ¡°a place having tin.¡± The current name, meaning ¡°without tin¡± came into use by the early Han dynasty (2nd-1st c. BC), suggesting the tin deposits used in bronze metallurgy were already played out by that time. The building in the 7th century of the Imperial Grand Canal that passed through the town spurred a revival of its fortunes as a transport center for agricultural products from the surrounding countryside. Silk weaving was another major local industry, and Shanghai industrialists modernized production in the 1930¡¯s. Recent overseas investment has led to a boom in manufacturing. Nearby Lake Tai is the site for a couple of instant tourist attractions: the Tang City and Three Kingdoms outdoor film sets for historical dramas, and a park which holds the world¡¯s tallest Buddha statue (87 m).

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News Links about Wuxi

Diversion of Yangtze River to Tackle Wuxi Water Crisis
Xinhua News, June 1, 2007 - China has stepped up the diversion of the Yangtze River to dilute water polluted by blue-green algae in a lake that provides drinking water for millions of people in the eastern Chinese city of Wuxi, Jiangsu Province. Water from the nation's longest river is flowing into Taihu Lake at a rate of 150 cubic meters per second, up from the earlier 127 cubic meters per second, and the lake has received a total of 190 million cubic meters of Yangtze water since May 11, said the Taihu Valley Administration under the Water Resources Ministry on Thursday. (
Click for full report.)

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