(Local Name: Wanli Chang Cheng) ''Nobody can be a true hero unless he has been on the Great Wall'' goes the popular saying, and this clearly demonstrates the great importance which the Chinese attach to this unique monument. The Great Wall (in Chinese Wanli Chang Cheng, or The Wall That Is Ten Thousand Li In Length) today stretches about 6000km/3700mi in all, from the fortress Shanghaiguan in the east to the fortress Jiayuguan in the west. It passes through Hebei, Tientsin, Beijing, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Shaanxi and Gansu. It averages 6-8m (20-26ft) in height, rising to 16m/52ft in places, and is 6-7m (20-23ft) wide at the top with battlements and watch-towers. Because of the poor condition of much of
it only some sections are open to visitors.
Building of the wall began in the Spring and Autumn periods, between the 8th and 5th C BC. In the next few centuries, fearing attacks by neighboring states and by the Huns and other tribes who had settled in north and west China, the individual emperors started building clay walls along their boundaries. Following the unification of the country in 221 BC Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi (221-210 BC) ordered the various defensive walls to be joined up to form one great wall which, however, ran further north than the present Wall.
Under the Western Han dynasty (206 BC-AD 9), the wall was strengthened and extended west beyond Dunhuang up to the fortress Yumen Guan. In the east the wall extended up to the Liaodong peninsula. The work was completed by soldiers and by those doing socage, especially the peasants. During the Sui dynasty (581-618) a new wall was begun, this time south of the old wall. The Ming (1368-1644) wall that is preserved until the present day followed the same course. It was built as a protection against the Mongols after they had been expelled from China (Mongol Yuan dynasty, 1271-1368). In the stretch between the Bohai gulf (fortress Shanhaiguan) and the Yellow River, the Ming wall was built to noticeably more impressive dimensions than its precursor, and especially in the area near Beijing it had multiple graduations, with the most important passes being additionally fortified. Troops were stationed along its entire run; the wall was guarded from the watch towers that had been erected on prominent points - every 200-330m (650-980ft) or so. During the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) which ruled over Mongolia, Manchuria and other territories north of the wall as well as the Chinese mainland, this construction was no longer needed and fell into disrepair. Only after the People's Republic had been formed in 1949, and especially during the 1980s, were some stretches restored as a tourist sight.
Hobbies & Activities category: Historic site; UNESCO World Heritage Site