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Beijing: ''Beijing is also the name of an asteroid, see 2045 Peking'' {| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;" |+北京市 Běijīng Shì |- | align="center" colspan=2 style="border-bottom:3px solid gray;" | Abbreviation: 京 (pinyin: Jīng) |- | align="center" colspan=2 | |- | Origin of name | 北 běi - north 京 jīng - capital "northern capital" |- | Administration type | Municipality of China |- | Communist Party of China Beijing Committee Secretary | Liu Qi |- | Mayor | Wang Qishan |- | Area | 16,808 square kilometre (List of China administrative regions by area) |- | Population (2003) - Metropolitan area - Density | 14,560,000 (List of China administrative regions by population) ''approx. 7.5 million'' 866/km² (List of China administrative regions by population density) |- | Gross domestic product (2003) - per capita | Renminbi 366.3 billion (List of China administrative regions by gross domestic product) Renminbi 25200 (List of China administrative regions by GDP per capita) |- | colspan=2 | The rankings given above are in comparison with other province of China-level administrative divisions. |- | Major Nationalities of China (2000) | Han Chinese - 96% Manchu - 2% Hui people - 2% Mongol - 0.3% |- | City trees | Chinese arborvitae (''Platycladus orientalis'') Pagoda tree (''Sophora japonica'') |- | City flowers | Chrysanthemum (''Chrysanthemum morifolium'') Chinese rose (''Rosa chinensis'') |- | Political divisions of China#County level | 18 |- | Political divisions of China#Township level {December 31, 2004) | 273 |- | Postal code of China | 100000 - 102600 |- | China telephone numbering plan | 10 |- | rowspan="4" | Mainland Chinese licence plates prefixes | 京A, C, E, F, H |- | 京B (taxis) |- | 京G (outside urban area) |- | 京O (police and authorities) |- | ISO 3166-2 | CN-11 |- | colspan=2 align=center | Official website: [http://www.beijing.gov.cn www.beijing.gov.cn] (Simplified Chinese) [http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn www.ebeijing.gov.cn] (English language) |} Beijing (; Postal System Pinyin: Peking) is the Capital of China of the People's Republic of China (PRC). Beijing Municipality borders Hebei province to the north, west, south, and for a tiny section to the east. The southwestern part borders Tianjin municipality. Beijing is one of the 4 municipality of China of the PRC, which have political divisions of China-level status, and is under the direct control of the central government. Beijing has been a municipality since the beginning of the PRC. Beijing is the second largest city in China in terms of population, after Shanghai. It is a major transportation hub, with dozens of railways, roads and expressways entering it in all directions. Beijing is recognized as the political, educational, and cultural center of the PRC, while Shanghai predominates in economic fields. ==Names== Beijing (北京) literally means "northern capital", in line with an East Asian tradition to name capital cities as such: other cities similarly named include Nanjing (南京), China, meaning "southern capital"; Tokyo (東京), Japan, and Tonkin (東京; now Hanoi), Vietnam, both meaning "eastern capital"; as well as Kyoto (京都), Japan, and Gyeongseong (京城; now Seoul), Korea, both meaning simply "capital". An older English name for Beijing is Peking. The term originated with French missionaries four hundred years ago, and corresponds to an older, now obsolete pronunciation which predates a subsequent sound change in Mandarin (linguistics) from to . ( is represented in pinyin as j, as in Beijing.) In China, the city has had many names. Between 1928 [http://www.bartleby.com/67/2470.html] and 1949, it was known as Peiping (北平, Pinyin Beiping, Wade-Giles Peip'ing) or "Northern Peace". The name was changed because ''jing'' means "capital" and the Kuomintang government in Nanking (now Nanjing) wanted to emphasize that Peking was not the capital of China, and that Peking's warlord government was not legitimate. The Communist Party of China changed the name to Beijing in 1949 again in part to emphasize that Beijing was the capital of China. The government of the Republic of China on Taiwan has not formally recognized the name change, and during the 1950s and 1960s it was common for Beijing to be called Peiping on Taiwan to imply the illegitimacy of the PRC. Today, almost everyone on Taiwan, including the ROC government, uses the term Beijing, although some maps of China from Taiwan still use the old name along with pre-1949 provincial boundaries. Yanjing is another popular informal name for Beijing, named after the ancient state of Yan that existed here during the Zhou Dynasty. This name is reflected in the locally-brewed Yanjing Beer. Beijing is also the Cambaluc described in Marco Polo's accounts. The history section below outlines other historical names of Beijing. == History == There were cities in the vicinities of Beijing by the 1st millennium BC, and the capital of the State of Yan (燕), one of the powers of the Warring States Period, was established at Ji (T: 薊 / S: 蓟), near modern Beijing. Ji has often been claimed to be the beginning of Beijing; but in reality Ji had been abandoned no later than the 6th century. The exact location of Ji remains unknown despite much effort in recent decades to identify the site. During the Tang Dynasty and Song Dynasty dynasties, only small towns existed in this area. Numerous ancient poets came here to mourn the lost city, as testified by their compositions. The Later Jin Dynasty ceded a large part of its northern frontier, including modern Beijing, to the Khitan Liao Dynasty in the 10th century. Soon the Liao Dynasty had set up a "secondary capital" in the city proper, and called it Nanjing ("the Southern Capital"). The Jurchen Jinn Dynasty that annexed Liao and ruled northern China built its capital there, called Zhongdu (中都), or "the Central Capital". Zhongdu was situated in what is now the area centred around Tianningsi, which is currently slightly off-centre and to the southwest of central Beijing. Mongol forces burned Zhongdu to the ground in 1215 and rebuilt its own "Grand Capital," Dadu (大都, also Ta-tu), to the north of the Jin capital in 1267, which was the true beginning of contemporary Beijing. This site is known as "Cambaluc" in Marco Polo's accounts. Apparently, Kublai Khan, who wanted to become a Chinese emperor, established his capital in Beijing instead of more traditional sites in central China because Beijing was closer to his power base in Mongolia. The decision of the Khan greatly enhanced the status of a city that had been situated on the northern fringe of China proper. Dadu was situated further north; it centred on what is now the northern stretch of the 2nd Ring Road, and even stretched between the 3rd Ring Road and 4th Ring Roads. There are remnants of wall still standing. In 1403, the 3rd Ming emperor Zhu Di (朱棣), who had just seized the throne by killing his nephew after a bloody civil war and moved the capital from southern China to his own power base in the north, renamed the city Beijing (北京), or "Northern Capital". Beijing, as of the Ming Dynasty, took its current shape, with the city wall forming what is now the exact 2nd Ring Road. The Forbidden City was constructed soon after that (1406-1420), followed by the Temple of Heaven (1420), and numerous other construction projects. Tian'anmen, which has become a state symbol of the PRC in modern times, was burned down twice during the Ming Dynasty and the final reconstruction was carried out in 1651. [[Image:Forbidden_City1.JPG|300px|thumb|The Forbidden City, home to the emperors of the Ming Dynasty and Qing Dynasty Dynasties]] The shape and form of Beijing as seen and as recognised today (in particular within the confines of the current-day 2nd Ring Road) took form after the Ming Dynasty settled in Beijing and made it its capital. While on the mainland, the Republic of China established its capital in Nanjing. During the early days of the Republic, Yuan Shikai seized power in Beijing and declared an empire nation from Beijing (the Beiyang Government). In 1928, Nanjing was officially made the capital of the Republic of China, and Beijing was renamed Beiping to emphasize that it is not the rightful capital. During the second Sino-Japanese War, Beiping fell to Japan on July 29, 1937. During the occupation, Beiping was renamed Beijing, and made the seat of the North China Executive Committee (T: 華北政務委員會 / S: 华北政务委员会), a puppet state that ruled Japanese-occupied North China. This lasted until Japan's surrender in World War II, on August 15, 1945, and Beijing's name was changed back to Beiping. On January 31, 1949, during the Chinese Civil War, communist forces entered Beiping without a fight. On October 1 of the same year, the Communist Party of China, under the leadership of Mao Zedong, announced in Tian'anmen the creation of the People's Republic of China in Beijing. Just a few days earlier, the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference decided that Beiping would be the capital of the PRC, and that its name be changed back to Beijing. At the time of the founding of the People's Republic, Beijing consisted of just its urban area and immediate suburbs. The urban area was divided into many small districts inside the 2nd Ring Road (Beijing), with most of the Beijing city wall still intact until the 1950s. Since then several surrounding county of China have been incorporated into the municipality, enlarging the limits of Beijing by many times and giving it its present shape. Following the Chinese economic reform of Deng Xiaoping, the urban area of Beijing has expanded greatly. Formerly within the confines of the 2nd Ring Road and the 3rd Ring Road, the urban area of Beijing is now pushing at the limits of the recently-constructed 5th Ring Road, with many areas that were formerly farmland now developed residential or commercial neighborhoods. A new commercial area has developed in the Guomao area; Wangfujing and Xidan have developed into flourishing shopping districts, while Zhongguancun has become a major center of electronics in China. As the capital of the nation, Beijing has also been the site of political turmoil in recent years. Tiananmen Square, widely regarded as the spiritual center of China, was the site of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, which ended in a military crackdown that remains highly controversial. Tiananmen Square has also been the site of protests by Falun Gong. In recent years, the expansion of Beijing has also brought to the forefront some problems of urbanization, such as heavy traffic, poor air quality, the loss of historic neighborhoods, and a drastic influx of migrants from poorer regions of the country, especially the countryside. Early 2005 saw the approval by government of a plan to finally stop the "ringing" of Beijing. Development of the Chinese capital would now proceed in two semicircular bands just outside of the city centre (both west and east) instead of being in concentric rings. Beijing has been chosen to host the 2008 Summer Olympics, an event that sparked nationalistic pride across China. == Geography and climate == :''Main article: Geography of Beijing'' [[Image:E Changan Ave.jpg|thumb|300px|Eastern Chang'an Avenue (July 2004 image)]] Hills dominate the north, northwest and west of the municipality. The northwestern part of the municipality, especially Yanqing County and Huairou District, are dominated by the Jundu Mountains; the western part of the municipality is framed by the Xishan Mountains. Mount Dongling on the border with Hebei and in the Xishan ranges, is the municipality's highest point, with an altitude of 2303 meter. Major rivers flowing through the municipality include the Yongding River and the Chaobai River, which are part of the Haihe River system and flow in a southerly direction. Beijing is also the northern terminus of the Grand Canal of China linking Beijing with Hangzhou, and the North Grand Canal flows in a similar southerly direction into the Hai He system. Miyun Reservoir, found on the upper reaches of the Chaobai River, is Beijing's largest reservoir, and crucial to its water supply. The urban area of Beijing, located at 39°55'44" North, 116°23'18" East (39.92889, 116.38833), [http://earth-info.nga.mil/gns/html/cntry_files.html] is situated in the south-central part of the municipality and occupies a small but expanding part of the municipality's area. It spreads out in bands of concentric Ring Roads of Beijing. Tian'anmen is right at the centre of Beijing, and is directly to the south of the well-known Forbidden City. To the west of Tian'anmen is Zhongnanhai, current residence of the paramount leaders of the People's Republic of China. Running through central Beijing from east to west is the well-known Chang'an Avenue. The city's climate is harsh, characterized by hot, humid summers due to the East Asian monsoon, and cold, windy, dry winters that reflect the influence of the vast Siberian anticyclone. Average temperatures in January are at around -7 to -4 °C, while average temperatures in July are at 25 to 26 °C. Annual precipitation (meteorology) is over 600 millimeter, with 75% of that in summer. [http://www.beijing.gov.cn/bjgm/default.htm] Beijing also suffers from heavy pollution and poor air quality from industry and traffic. Dust from erosion of deserts in northern and northwestern China result in seasonal dust storms that plague the city. Efforts have been made of late to clean up Beijing in preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics. [[Image:Wangfujing Nankou.jpg|thumb|300px|Southern end of Wangfujing Road (July 2004 image)]] === Neighbourhoods === Major neighbourhoods in urban Beijing include: *Andingmen *Beiyuan *Chaoyangmen *Dongzhimen *Fangzhuang *Fuchengmen *Fuxingmen *Guomao *Hepingli *Wangjing *Wangfujing *Wudaokou *Xidan *Yayuncun *Zhongguancun === Towns === Towns within the municipality but outside the urban area include: *Changping *Huairou *Miyun *Liangxiang *Liulimiao *Tongzhou *Yizhuang [[Image:Xidan Xinhuashudian.jpg|thumb|300px|Beijing Bookstore at Xidan]][[image:Modern_Beijing_Skyline_Oct2004.jpg|thumb|300px|The Beijing CBD area around Dawangqiao and Dabeiyao, as seen from the Jingtong Expressway.]] ==Administrative divisions== The municipality currently governs 18 Political divisions of China#County level: 16 district of Chinas and 2 county of China. The urban and suburban areas of the city are made up of 8 districts: *Dongcheng District (东城区: Dōngchéng Qū) *Xicheng District (西城区: Xīchéng Qū) *Chongwen District (崇文区: Chóngwén Qū) *Xuanwu District, Beijing (宣武区: Xuānwǔ Qū) *Chaoyang District, Beijing (朝阳区: Cháoyáng Qū) *Haidian District (海淀区: Hǎidiàn Qū) *Fengtai District (丰台区: Fēngtái Qū) *Shijingshan District (石景山区: Shíjǐngshān Qū) The other 8 districts are found further out, and govern distant suburbs, satellite towns, and some rural areas: *Mentougou District (门头沟区: Méntóugōu Qū) *Fangshan District (房山区: Fángshān Qū) — Fangshan County until 1986 *Tongzhou District (通州区: Tōngzhōu Qū) — Tong County until 1997 *Shunyi District (顺义区: Shùnyì Qū) — Shunyi County until 1998 *Changping District (昌平区: Chāngpíng Qū) — Changping County until 1999 *Daxing District (大兴区: Dàxīng Qū) — Daxing County until 2001 *Pinggu District (平谷区: Pínggǔ Qū) — Pinggu County until 2001 *Huairou District (怀柔区: Huáiróu Qū) — Huairou County until 2001 The 2 counties of Beijing govern very distant towns and rural areas: *Miyun County (密云县: Mìyún Xiàn) *Yanqing County (延庆县: Yánqìng Xiàn) The above districts and counties are further subdivided into 273 Political divisions of China#Township level: 119 town of Chinas, 24 township of Chinas, 5 ethnic townships and 125 subdistricts. == Economy == In 2004 Beijing's total gross domestic product was 428.3 billion Renminbi, a real price increase of 13.2% from the previous year. The tertiary sector of industry is the most productive sector of Beijing's economy, contributing 60% of its GDP. Urban disposable income per capita was 15637.8 Renminbi, a real price increase of 11.5% from the previous year. Rural pure income per capita was 7172 Renminbi, a real price increase of 9.2% from the previous year. [http://www.bjstats.gov.cn/tjyl/tjgb/200501210039.htm] Beijing's real estate and automobile sectors continue to boom in recent years. In 2004 a total of 24.72 million square metres of housing real estate was sold, for a total of 108.51 billion Renminbi. The total number of automobiles registered in Beijing in 2004 was 1,871,000, of which 1,298,000 are privately-owned. 447,000 new and old automobiles had been sold in Beijing in the previous year. [http://www.bjstats.gov.cn/tjyl/tjgb/200501210039.htm] The Beijing CBD, centered at the Guomao area, has been identified as the city's new central business district, and is home to a variety of corporate regional headquarters, shopping malls, and high-end housing. The Beijing Financial Street, in the Fuxingmen and Fuchengmen area, is a traditional financial center. The Wangfujing and Xidan areas are major shopping districts. Zhongguancun, dubbed "China's Silicon Valley", continues to be a major center in electronics- and computer-related industries, as well as pharmaceuticals-related research. Meanwhile, Yizhuang, located to the southeast of the urban area, is becoming a new center in pharmaceuticals, IT, and materials engineering. [http://www.beijing.gov.cn/bjgm/jjjs/t20030925_2414.htm] Beijing is also known for being a center of pirated goods and anything from the latest designer clothing to the latest DVDs can be found in markets all over the city. Major industrial areas include Shijingshan, located on the western outskirts of the city. Agriculture is carried out outside the urban area of Beijing, with wheat and maize being the main crops. Vegetables are also grown in the regions closer to the urban area in order to supply the city. == Architecture == There are three predominant styles of architecture in Beijing. First, there's the traditional architecture of imperial China, such as the massive Tian'anmen (Gate of Heavenly Peace), which remains the PRC's trademark building. Next there is what is sometimes referred to as the "Sino-Sov" style, built between the 1950s and the 1970s, which tend to be boxy, bland, and poorly made. Finally, there are much more modern architectural forms — most noticeably in the area of the Beijing CBD. Pictured below are some images of Beijing architecture — blending the old and the new. Source: 2000年人口普查中国民族人口资料,民族出版社,2003/9 (ISBN 7105054255) == Culture == People from urban Beijing speak the Beijing dialect, which belongs to the Mandarin subdivision of Chinese spoken language. Beijing dialect provides the basis for Standard Mandarin, the standard Chinese language used in the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China on Taiwan, and Singapore. Outlying areas of Beijing have their own dialects akin to those of Hebei. Beijing opera, or ''Jingju'', is well-known throughout the national capital. Commonly lauded as one of the highest achievements of Chinese culture, Beijing opera is performed through a combination of singing, spoken dialogue, and codified action sequences, such as gestures, movement, fighting and acrobatics. Much of Beijing opera is carried out in an archaic stage dialect quite different from modern Standard Mandarin and from the Beijing dialect; this makes the dialogue somewhat hard to understand, and the problem is compounded if one is not familiar with Chinese, although modern theaters often have electronic titles in Chinese and English. [[Image:Beijing_Hutongs_Mar2003.jpg|right|thumb|300px|A hutong(胡同) in eastern urban Beijing near Dongsishitiao. When photographed in March 2003, the left side was still standing; it has since given way to a new construction project.]] The ''siheyuan'' (四合院) is a traditional architectural style of Beijing. A siheyuan consists of a square housing compound, with rooms enclosing a central courtyard. This courtyard often contains a pomegranate or other type of tree, as well as potted flowers or a fish tank. Siheyuans line ''hutong''s (胡同), or alleyways, which connect the interior of Beijing's old city. They are usually straight and run east-to-west so that doorways can face north and south for Feng Shui reasons. They vary in width — some are very narrow, enough for only a few pedestrians to pass through at a time. Once ubiquitous in Beijing, siheyuans and hutongs are now rapidly disappearing, as entire city blocks of hutongs are leveled and replaced with high-rise buildings. Residents of the hutongs are entitled to apartments in the new buildings of at least the same size as their former residences. Many complain, however, that the traditional sense of community and street life of the hutongs cannot be replaced. Some particularly historic or picturesque hutongs are being preserved and restored by the government, with the objective that by the 2008 Olympics, at least some hutongs will remain, albeit in a tidy, gleaming, showcase fashion. One such example can be seen at Nanchizi. Mandarin cuisine is the local style of cooking in Beijing. Peking duck is perhaps the most well-known dish. The Manhan Quanxi ("Manchu-Han Chinese full banquet") is a traditional banquet originally intended for the ethnic-Manchu emperors of the Qing Dynasty; it remains very prestigious and very expensive. Teahouses are also common in Beijing. Chinese tea comes in many varieties and some rather expensive types of Chinese tea are said to cure an ailing body extraordinarily well. The Jingtailan is a cloisonné metalworking technique and tradition originating from Beijing, and one of the most revered traditional crafts in China. Beijing lacquerware is well known for the patterns and images carved into its surface. The Fuling Jiabing is a traditional Beijingese snack, resembling a flat disk with filling, made from ''fuling'' (''Poria cocos (Schw.) Wolf'', or "tuckahoe"), an ingredient common in traditional Chinese medicine. === Stereotypes === Beijingers are stereotypically held to be open, confident, humorous, majestic in manner, concerned with politics or other "grand" matters, unconcerned with thrift or careful calculation, and happy to take center stage. They are also very enthusiastic about arts. They are however also stereotypically aristocratic, arrogant, laid back, blindly nationalistic, disdainful of "provincials", always "lording it over others", and strongly conscious of social class. These stereotypes may have originated from Beijing's status as China's capital for most of the past 800 years, and the high concentration of officials and other notables in Beijing that has resulted. == Transportation == :''Main article: Transportation of Beijing'' With the growth of the city following economic reforms, Beijing has evolved as an important transportation hub. Encircling the city are five ring roads, nine expressways and city express routes, eleven China National Highways, several railway routes, and an international airport. === Rail === Beijing has two major railway stations: Beijing Railway Station (or the central station) and Beijing West Railway Station. Five other railway stations in Metropolitan Beijing handle regular passenger traffic: Beijing East Railway Station, Beijing North Railway Station, Beijing South Railway Station, Fengtai Railway Station, and Guanganmen Railway Station. Beijing is a railway hub for China. Railways of China to Guangzhou, Shanghai, Harbin, Baotou, Taiyuan, Chengde and Qinhuangdao radiate out of Beijing. International trains, including lines to cities in Russia and Pyongyang, North Korea (DPRK), all run through Beijing. Direct trains to Kowloon, in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region also leave Beijing. === Roads and expressways === :''See: Ring Roads of Beijing, Expressways of Beijing and China National Highways of Beijing for more related information.'' [[Image:BadalingExpwyNov02.jpg|thumb|300px|The Badaling Expressway near the intersection with the Northern 6th Ring Road (November 2002 image)]] Beijing is connected via road links from all parts of China. Nine expressways of China (with six wholly new expressways under projection or construction) connect with Beijing, as do eleven China National Highways. Within Beijing itself, an elaborate network of five ring roads has developed, but they appear more rectangular than ring-shaped. Roads in Beijing often are in one of the four compass directions (unlike, for example, Tianjin). One of the biggest concerns with traffic in Beijing deals with its apparently ubiquitous traffic jams. Traffic in the city centre is often gridlocked, especially around rush hour. Even outside of rush hour, several roads still remain clogged up with traffic. Urban area ring roads and major through routes, especially near the Chang'an Avenue area, are often clogged up during rush hour. Recently, however, expressways have been extended (in some cases reconstructed as express routes) into the territories within the 3rd Ring Road (Beijing). As they are either expressways or express routes, no traffic lights will lie in its trajectory. This may finally attempt to solve the question of "hopping between one ring and the other". One big problem is that public transportation is underdeveloped (the underground system is presently minimal) and that even buses are jam-packed with people around rush hour. Beijing was poorly designed in terms of zoning and in terms of transportation system [http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2003-10/06/content_269518.htm], [http://www.bjreview.com.cn/200410/Nation-200410(C).htm]. Compounding the problem is problematic enforcement of road regulations and road rage. Beijing authorities claim that traffic jams may be a thing of a past come the 2008 Olympics. The authorities have introduced several bus lanes where, during rush hour, all vehicles except for public buses must keep clear of the special lanes. Chang'an Avenue runs through the centre of Beijing, past Tian'anmen. It is a major through route and is often called the "First Street in China" by authorities. === Air === Beijing's main airport is the Beijing Capital International Airport near Shunyi District, which is about 20 km northeast of Beijing proper. Most domestic and nearly all international flights arrive and depart at Capital Airport. Capital Airport is the main hub for Air China. It is linked into central Beijing the Airport Expressway and is a roughly 40-minute drive from the city centre during good traffic hours. Other airports in the city include Liangxiang Airport, Nanyuan Airport, Xijiao Airport, Shahe Airport and Badaling Airport. However, these are primary for militry use and less well-known to the public. === Public transit === The evolving Beijing Subway has four lines (two above ground, two underground), with several more being built in preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics. There were 599 bus and trolleybus routes in Beijing as of 2004. [http://www.bjstats.gov.cn/tjyl/tjgb/200501210039.htm] Taxis are nearly ubiquitous, and some can accept Yikatong cards for payment. Buses and trolleybus fares cost 1 Renminbi for shorter trips, and more for longer trips. Subway tickets range from 2 to 5 Renminbi. Taxi fares depend on vehicle type: these start at 10 Renminbi for the first 3 to 4 kilometers, and go up by 1.20, 1.60, 2.00, or 2.50 Renminbi per extra kilometer, depending on the relative "quality" of the taxi. Some, too, can accept Yikatong cards for payment. == Tourism == ===Tourist attractions=== :''Main article: Tourist attractions of Beijing'' Despite the damage caused by the Cultural Revolution and the more recent incessant urbanisation, including the demolition of Hutongs, Beijing still maintains tourist attractions which are rich in history. Although more known for its political significance, Tian'anmen (The Gate of Heavenly Peace) remains the spiritual center of China and the most important tourist site of Beijing, both by itself and as the main entrance to the Forbidden City. Other well known sites include the Badaling stretch of the Great Wall of China, The Summer Palace and The Temple of Heaven. Famous landmarks within the Beijing metropolitan area: *Forbidden City (World Heritage Site) *Tiananmen Square, site of the Tiananmen Square protests of Tiananmen Square protests of 1919, Tiananmen Incident, and Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 **Tiananmen (Gate) **Great Hall of the People **National Museum of Chinese History **Monument to the People's Heroes **Mausoleum of Mao Zedong *The Temple of Heaven (World Heritage Site) *The Summer Palace (World Heritage Site) * Ruins of the Old Summer Palace * Beihai Park * Jingshan Park * Tanzhe Temple * Jietai Temple * Yunju Temple * Beijing Zoo * The Fragrant Hills * Beijing's Hutongs & Siheyuans *Beijing World Park *Beijing Drum Tower *Yonghegong (Lama Temple) *China Military Museum *Shichahai *Daguanyuan *Peking University and Tsinghua University campuses Famous landmarks outside the metropolitan area, but within the municipality: *Sections of Great Wall of China (World Heritage Site) at: ** Badaling ** Juyongguan ** Mutianyu ** Simatai ** Jinshanling ** Jiankou * The Ming Tombs (World Heritage Site) * Shidu * Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian (World Heritage Site) Famous Theatres of Beijing include: *Zheng Yici Peking Opera Theatre ===Hotels and lodging=== In the 1950s and 1960s, Beijing had virtually no hotels (at least none by Western standards). What Beijing did have were the ''zhaodaisuo''s, which meant "Accommodation Centres". Every ''zhaodaisuo'' was subordinate to a state organisation or state organ, and had communal public conveniences and amenities. ''Zhaodaisuo''s still exist today. In the late 1970s, Beijing opened its door to the outside world and built hotels. Now, plenty of exquisite hotels exist. The most well-known hotel is the Beijing Hotel, which is state-owned. Other noticeable hotels are the Great Wall Sheraton Hotel, the Jianguo Hotel, the China World Hotel, Grand Hyatt at Oriental Plaza and the [http://beijing.peninsula.com Peninsula Palace Hotel], which is now run by the Hong Kong-based [http://www.peninsula.com Peninsula Group] and is centrally-located in the Wangfujing district, a few minutes' walk from Tiananmen Square, and next to shops and businesses. There exist youth hostels but they are few in number. There is one near the centre of town, but accommodation is provided four floors below ground level. ==Education== :''Main article: Colleges and Universities of Beijing'' Beijing is home to plenty of well-known colleges and universities. The most famous ones (known even internationally) include Peking University ("Beida"), Tsinghua University, Beijing Normal University, Communication University of China (well known in the Chinese Mass media circle), Beijing Foreign Studies University, and Renmin University of China. The following are under the Ministry of Education: *Peking University (北京大学) (founded in 1898) **Beijing University Health Science Center (formally Beijing Medical University) (北京大学医学部, 原北京医科大学) *Renmin University of China (中国人民大学) *Tsinghua University (清华大学) (founded in 1911) *Beijing Jiaotong University (北京交通大学) *University of Science and Technology Beijing (北京科技大学) *Beijing University of Petroleum (石油大学) *Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications (北京邮电大学) *Beijing University of Chemical Technology (北京化工大学) *Beijing Institute of Technology (北京理工大学) *China Agricultural University (中国农业大学) *Beijing Forestry University (北京林业大学) *Beijing University of Chinese Medicine (北京中医药大学) *Beijing Normal University (北京师范大学) (founded 1902) *Beijing Foreign Studies University (北京外国语大学) *Beijing Language and Culture University (北京语言大学) *University of International Business and Economics (对外经济贸易大学) *Central University of Finance and Economics (中央财经大学) *China University of Political Science and Law (中国政法大学) *Communication University of China (北京广播学院) *University of International Relations (国际关系学院) *Central Institute of Fine Arts (中央美术学院) *Central Academy of Drama (中央戏剧学院) *Central Conservatory of Music (中央音乐学院) ==Media== [[image:Large_Beijing_Landsat.jpg|thumb|300px|A simulated-color image of Beijing, taken by NASA's Landsat 7.]] ===TV and radio=== Beijing Television (BTV) has nine TV programmes, numbered channels 1 through 9. Unlike China Central Television, there is at present no exclusive English-language TV channel on a citywide level in Beijing. The TV programmes are run by Beijing TV. There are three radio stations which feature programmes in English. They are ''Hit FM'' on FM 88.7, ''Easy FM'' by CRI on FM 91.5, and the newly launched ''Radio 774'' on AM 774. ===Press=== The well-known ''Beijing Evening News'' newspaper appears without delay every Beijing afternoon, covering news in Chinese about Beijing. Other newspapers are the ''Beijing Star Daily'', the ''Beijing Morning News'', the ''Beijing Youth Daily'' and the English-language weeklies ''Beijing Weekend'' and ''Beijing Today'' (the English edition of the ''Youth Daily''). Nationwide newspapers are also available in Beijing. Publications catering to the expat community include ''City Weekend'', ''Beijing This Month'', ''Beijing Talk'', ''that's Beijing'' and ''MetroZine'', among others. International newspapers in most languages, including English and Japanese, are available in hotels and Friendship Stores, and content often appears complete. == Sports == Beijing will host the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2008 Summer Paralympics. Sports teams based in Beijing include: Chinese Football Association Super League * Beijing Xiandai Chinese Basketball Association * Beijing Ducks See also: * Mandarin cuisine * Mandarin (linguistics) * List of mayors of Beijing ==City partnerships == {| ! City ! Country ! Sister City since: |- |Tokyo |Japan |March 14, 1979 |- |New York City |USA |February 25, 1980 |- |Belgrade |Serbia and Montenegro |October 14, 1980 |- |Lima |Peru |November 21, 1983 |- |Washington, D.C. |USA |May 15, 1984 |- |Madrid |Spain |September 16, 1985 |- |Rio de Janeiro |Brazil |November 24, 1986 |- |Ile-de-France |France |July 2, 1987 |- |Cologne |Germany |September 14, 1987 |- |Ankara |Turkey |June 20, 1990 |- |Cairo |Egypt |October 28, 1990 |- |Islamabad |Pakistan |October 8, 1992 |- |Jakarta |Indonesia |October 8, 1992 |- |Bangkok |Thailand |May 26, 1993 |- |Buenos Aires |Argentina |July 13, 1993 |- |Seoul |South Korea |October 23, 1993 |- |Kiev |Ukraine |December 13, 1993 |- |Berlin |Germany |April 5, 1994 |- |Brussels |Belgium |September 22, 1994 |- |Hanoi |Vietnam |October 6, 1994 |- |Amsterdam |Netherlands |October 29, 1994 |- |Moscow |Russia |May 16 1995 |- |Paris |France |October 23, 1997 |- |Rome |Italy |May 28, 1998 |- |Gauteng |South Africa |December 6, 1998 |- |Ottawa |Canada |October 18, 1999 |- |Canberra |Australia |September 14, 2000 |} Source: http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/ying/default.htm == Astronomical phenomena == The previous total solar eclipse as seen from Beijing (downtown) was Solar eclipse of 1277-Oct-28 (October 28, 1277). The next total solar eclipse as seen from Beijing (downtown) will be Solar eclipse of 2035-Sep-02 (September 2, 2035). Wikisource has an article about solar eclipses as seen from Beijing from 2001 to 3000. [http://wikisource.org/wiki/Solar_eclipses_as_seen_from_Beijing] == External links == * [http://www.thebeijingguide.com/ The Beijing Guide] * [http://www.beijingservice.com/ Beijing Travel Service] * [http://www.chinahighlights.com/beijing/tours.htm Beijing tours] * [http://www.chinaodysseytours.com/maps/beijing.html Beijing Map - full size, 1560*1547 pixels, 645kb)] * [http://www.mybeijingchina.com/ My Beijing] * [http://www.beijingtrip.com/ Beijing Travel] * [http://www.beijingvirtualcity.com/ Beijing The Virtual City (under construction)] * [http://wikitravel.org/en/article/Beijing Wikitravel: Beijing] * [http://www.asinah.org/weather/ZBAA.html Beijing Weather Forecast] * [http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/ Official site (English version)] * [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov:81/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=15309 Satellite image of Beijing] at NASA Earth Observatory * [http://en.beijing-2008.org/ Official 2008 Summer Olympics Website] - English language, Chinese, French language. Website Version - English. * [http://www.olympicwatch.org/ Human Rights in China and the Beijing 2008 Olympics - OlympicWatch.org] * [http://brucema.topcities.com/beijingtour/index.html Bruce Ma's Beijing Tour] [http://www.brucema.co.nr/], pictures * [http://www.socialcapitalgateway.org/beijing.htm Pictures of Beijing] * [http://www.peking.org Peking.org - Peking Tourist Attractions, Photos and History] BeijingCities in ChinaCapitals in Asia Host cities of the Summer Olympic Games Mandarin terms hi:बेइजिन्ग ms:Beijing na:Beijing simple:Beijing th:ปักกิ่ง Beijing==Pronunciation, k or j?== Article says "It was known to foreigners as Peking before China standardized on Pinyin for transliteration". Isn't it still called Peking (or a variant) in some languages other than English, e.g. French? -- User:SJK :My E-F dictionary says "Beijing", but I'm pretty sure "Pékin" is more common. For instance [http://fr.wikipedia.com/wiki.cgi?Chine this wikipedia article] and [http://www.lemonde.fr/recherche_articleweb/1,9687,288301,00.html this article in Le Monde]. "Běijīng" may be the standard pinyin transcription, but that doesn't obligate the whole world to use it. --User:Brion VIBBER :Yes, "Pékin" is still the most commonly used form in French. "Péking" was used in French until approximately the beginning of the 20th century. Germans still commonly use "Peking". -User:Olivier ==Hakka== Remove statements referring to Hakka. I think that pretty much every Chinese dialect except for Mandarin would use a k for a j sound. -- User:Roadrunner ==Pronunciation in various spoken languages== According to CCDICT: Mandarin (Pinyin), Bei3 Jing1; Cantonese (Jyutping), Baak1 Ging1; Hakka (Lufeng), Pet7 Kin1; Taiwanese (Tongyong), Pak1 Keng1. It's most likely attributed with one of the southern dialects. -User:Taoster ==Mongolian name of Beijing during the Yuan dynasty== What is the Mongolian name for Beijing during the Yuan/Mongolian Empire? --User:Kaihsu 18:29, 24 Nov 2003 (UTC) ?? or Khanbalik == A Little History Unknown to Many == The metropolitan area of Beijing has been settled in the first millennium BC and the capital of Kingdom Yan (燕) was established there, and named it Ji (蓟). Ji has often been claimed as the beginning of Beijing; but in reality the city has been abandoned no later than the 6th century AD. The exact location of Ji is not clear despite numerous claims of its "discoveries" in recent years. During the great Tang and Song dynasties, only townships existed in this area. By the early 10th century, Kingdom Liao set up a "secondary capital" in the city proper, and called it Nanjing ("the Southern Capital"). Jing Dynasty that annexed Liao and ruled the northern China built its capital there, called Zhongdu (中都), or "the Central Capital". The Mongol force burned Zhongdu to the ground in 1215 AD and rebuilt its own "Grand Capital" (大都) to the north of the Jin capital in 1267 AD, which is the true beginning of Beijing. In 1403 AD, the 3rd Ming emperor Zhu Li, who just grabbed the throne by killing his brother after a bloody civil war and moved the capital from southern China to his own power base in the north, renamed the city Beijing (北京), or "Northern Capital". == Oversize at 32K == My recommendation: Like I've created with the Ring Roads of Beijing and other such sub-pages, maybe we could move the Universities into such a section? I could then write something to start with (at the section on the Beijing page), such as a bit on famous universities, keep the "under the Min. of Edu." list, and move the entire list (with other entries) into the sub-pages. As this is a big overhaul and affects stuff I (DF08) did not write, I'd like to gauge consensus before moving the whole thing. If within about a week there is no opposition or if I get a response to the tune of "do it", I'm going ahead; or someone else may take the lead ahead of time. --User:DF08 20:46, Aug 13, 2004 (UTC) Go right ahead. User:Colipon 02:34, 14 Aug 2004 (UTC) == map == I am going to make similar district map of Beijing that I did of Shanghai (see different districts) using several scanned tourist maps as a base. Any comments? if not, maps will appear here sometime. == Architecture -- image problems == Some images appear in such a way that one picture occupies a whole new line, while two others get a new line on its own too. There's like an unneeded line; three pictures that could appear on one line now take up two lines. If anyone could get this sorted I'd appreciate it deeply -- I wish that space was used properly on the page. Thanks. --User:DF08 13:14, 10 Oct 2004 (UTC) == Style Problems== IMO one of the "owners" of this page needs to edit the text with an eye to Wikipedia style. Phrases like "Beijing is a true transportation hub" need to be ditched in favour of neutral, factual statements like "Beijing is one of the major transportation hubs in northern China". The first version is in a style often called "Comglish," (for obvious reasons), which is itself a subset of Chinglish. The last time I attempted to edit the page in this fashion it was summarily reverted, which is why I post these comments here, rather than doing it myself. --User:Shannonr 05:54, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC) :Attempted NPOVisation of Beijing:Tourism and Beijing:Transportation. I did a fair bit of those to start with. I've tried to view the article from different perspectives; however, if something caught your eye without catching mine, "talk" away; they'll hopefully be fixed. --User:DF08 10:17, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC) == History == Actually, the English name "China" is misleading because the chinese zhongguo is a relatively recent term and China comes from the Chin dynasty. The page is to China-centric. For example, Dadu was part of the Mongolian empire, not China at the time. The so called "yuan dynasty" is an ethnocentric concept. Peking is much more natural in English and is not a mistransliteration. Much of China still pronounces it with a hard [k] sound. The US Government decided to adopt the pinyin transcription but that does not mean that all English speaking regions did the same. :It was the Mongol rulers themselves who called their government the "Yuan Dynasty" and themselves the emperors of "Yuan". :Beijing is the overwhelmingly common spelling that is used today by the English language. Google yields 15.7 million results for Beijing and 3 million results for Peking. So it is clear which one is more accepted. :And finally, [k] is not the pronunciation used in Standard Mandarin, nor the Beijing dialect, nor something like 90% of the dialects of Mandarin, Jin, Wu, or Xiang. It is preserved in Cantonese, Hakka, Min, and Gan (some parts). Considering that the [k] in "Peking" is not used by the standard language of China, nor the natives of Beijing, nor everyone else in China (except for something like five or six provinces), it's not precisely "much" of China that pronounces it with a hard [k] sound. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 02:09, Jan 20, 2005 (UTC) == The population of Beijing == Does anyone know where to find out the population of the urban area of Beijing? Most websites I've come across so far, including official statistics sites, seem to give only the population of the municipality. But I doubt that's what people are looking for if they want to compare, say, the populations of the biggest cities in the world. I'm tempted to get the stat off a "city ranking" site, but I don't know where they got ''their'' numbers from in turn, so it seems kinda sketchy to me. The same question can be asked for Shanghai, Tianjin, Chongqing, as well as Guangzhou, Wuhan, Nanjing, etc... -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 05:12, Mar 2, 2005 (UTC) :Is there any statistics for a specific district, a county-level city or a contry of a municipality/prefecture? — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 10:56 Mar 1 2005 (UTC) Yeah, those stats are given, but they aren't very useful... Chaoyang, Haidian, and Fengtian districts are not entirely occupied by the Beijing urban area, which also spills into the periphery of districts like Tongzhou, Daxing, Changping and Shunyi. So it's not as simple as adding up the populations of a few districts. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 01:56, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) On the other hand, I'm tempted to just sum up the urban populations of the inner eight districts and give it as an "estimate" of urban Beijing's population. Not exactly the most accurate way to do it but I can't think of any alternatives. Thoughts? -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 06:17, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) :Hmmm perhaps just a list of the districts by population, and tell people how urbanised each of them is.. :-P — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 12:07 Mar 3 2005 (UTC) How about giving the population of each district in the demographics section, then ''showing'' how an estimated value of, say, about 7.5 million, is arrived at? Then we can put that into the infobox, with an asterisk and a link to the demographics section. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 17:45, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) ==Names== Seoul was also named Gyeongseong during Japanese occupation. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 11:03 Mar 1 2005 (UTC) :... Yeah, and Kaifeng was called Dongjing, and Changchun was called Xinjing, and so forth... but I don't think we can put every example in there :| -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 01:56, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) Perhaps just add Seoul will be fine. It is one of the largest cities in East and Southeast Asia, and is probably as well known as Hanoi. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 12:08 Mar 3 2005 (UTC) :Sure. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 17:44, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) ==Phonological shift== According to the article the /kh/ sound shifted to /ts/ sound during the Qing Dynasty. When did this happen exactly? Did it happen after the French arrived? — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 11:06 Mar 1 2005 (UTC) :I don't know... but it must have happened pretty recently, considering the prevalence of spellings like Peking, Chungking, Nanking, Kiangsu, Fukien, Kirin, etc... these spellings must have been adopted when the standard language of China (be it the Beijing dialect, or Nanjing dialect, or whatever other dialect) still contained the /k/ sound in those words. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 01:56, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) Fukien should be transcripted based on the Min languages. Would it be possible that the names were romanised based on the spoken variations of southern China, but not the local prounication of each of the places? The Europeans who came to China mostly arrived at the southern provinces. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 12:11 Mar 3 2005 (UTC) :''Would it be possible that the names were romanised based on the spoken variations of southern China, but not the local prounication of each of the places? '' -- what do you mean? So we romanize all place names in Guangdong (let's say) according to Cantonese? What about, say, Chaozhou? Would it become Chiuchow (Cantonese), instead of Teochew (the local pronunciation)? And what about places in Zhejiang and Jiangsu? Do we use a Romanization scheme for Wu and move (say) Shanghai to Zanhei? -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 17:14, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) Well I said.. the Europeans who arrived in China via the southern provinces.. and therefore I was suggesting the possibility that they romanised place names based on southern spoken variations, and ended up with a "k" in "Peking". — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 17:34 Mar 3 2005 (UTC) :Oh... I see what you mean... well, but there are also examples like "Nanking". Clearly it has the "k", but in a southern dialect the front part would be "Nam", not "Nan", giving "Namking" instead. And then there's "Foochow", which would be something like "Fookchow" or "Hokchiu" in a southern dialect. (Foo without the -k is quite typically Mandarin.) Similarly there's "Kirin" (Jilin), which would probably be "Katram" or "Kitrim" (with -t and -m) in a southern dialect. :These are just guesses based on what I observe though. Some academic references on how these spellings came about would certainly be welcome. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 17:43, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC) == Audio file == I'm trying out one of the new audio files in Mandarin from Commons in conjunction with the Template:Audio. Lemme know what you think. - User:Karmosin 01:36, Mar 4, 2005 (UTC) :Not bad at all..... thanks for the addition. :) :Just one thing though: the first syllable sounds like it's in the 4th tone rather than the 3rd? -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 02:14, Mar 4, 2005 (UTC) ::Crapola. You're right. I kinda do a 3rd, but the pitch is too high to make it clear enough. Second try, then... - User:Karmosin 03:03, Mar 4, 2005 (UTC) :Much better :) -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 03:17, Mar 4, 2005 (UTC) == Historical usage == Does it make sense to say that the Nationalists changed the name to "Beiping"? Obviously this is the Pinyin transliteration of what they changed the name to. But they themselves, writing in English, would have said they were changing the name to "Peiping," right? When dealing with periods when the Chinese themselves were translating the names of their cities in Postal Pinyin, using the current transliteration exclusively seems awkward. User:John Kenney User_talk:John Kenney 15:38, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC) :A good question... perhaps the only way is to give both pinyin and Wade-Giles. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 16:07, Mar 4, 2005 (UTC) ::The English name used by then should be used. In English the adoption of Hanyu Pinyin by the PRC was in effect a name change. However, names prior to Postal Pinyin would perhaps be best be standardised by Hanyu Pinyin. In other words, the name of Beijing should be written as Dadu for the Yuan Dynasty, Yingtian during the early Ming Dynasty, Peking when Postal Pinyin was introduced, Peiping during the KMT era, and Beijing when Hanyu Pinyin was introduced and adopted by the UN. Is that the rule, and a simple one? :-D — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 16:21 Mar 5 2005 (UTC) Seems a bit complicated. User:John Kenney User_talk:John Kenney 17:07, 5 Mar 2005 (UTC) == Transportation == I corrected a link about railways to say that Beijing had railways to all of China (and obviously there will be provinces and islands that aren't reached by rail travel), rather than just Mainland China. Mainland China is defined as China, without the two SAR. The article does say in the next paragraph that Beijing serves Hong Kong. Instantnood reverted my change. HK travel does require the visitor to go through the rigors of international travel (immigration, customs, etc) but it is still part of China. It makes little sense to exclude a region in one paragraph to then mention it in the other. Is there concensus to revert this correction? User:SchmuckyTheCat 02:31, 15 Mar 2005 (UTC) == Neighbourhoods section == Neighbourhoods section seems unneeded,right?--User:Yongxinstudy 03:52, 12 Apr 2005 (UTC) :...How come? It can certainly use some expansion. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 04:01, Apr 12, 2005 (UTC) == What is the population of Beijing? == I don't mean the entire municipality, I mean the "urban area" of Beijing - what you would call the "city". Unfortunately statistics bureaus in China don't seem to give this figure. -- User:Ran (User talk:Ran) 23:01, Jun 3, 2005 (UTC) BeijingBeijing is the capital of People's Republic of China. Cities in China Municipalities of the People's Republic of China Beijing{| align="center" id="toc" cellspacing="0" |- bgcolor="#FFFFCC" | align="left" | | align="center" | Political divisions of China#County-level of Beijing | align="right"| |- |colspan="3"| {| | align="right" style="font-size: 90%; vertical-align: top;" | District of China: | style=\"font-size: 90%;\" | Dongcheng District | Xicheng District | Chongwen District | Xuanwu District, Beijing | Chaoyang District, Beijing | Haidian District | Fengtai District | Shijingshan District Mentougou District | Fangshan District | Tongzhou District | Shunyi District | Changping District | Daxing District | Huairou District | Pinggu District |- | align=\"right\" style=\"font-size: 90%; vertical-align: top;\" | County of China''': | style="font-size: 90%;" | Miyun County | Yanqing County |} |- | ||align="center"|see also: List of administrative divisions of Beijing |} See other meanings of words starting from letter: BBA | BC | BD | BE | BF | BG | BH | BI | BJ | BK | BL | BM | BN | BO | BP | BR | BS | BT | BU | BW | BX | BY | BZ |Words begining with Beijing: Beijing Beijing Beijing Beijing Beijing's_Imperial_Palace Beijing,_China Beijing_2008 Beijing_Agricultural_University Beijing_Agricultural_University Beijing_Airport Beijing_Aoshen Beijing_Aoshen_Olympians Beijing_Broadcasting_Institute Beijing_Capital_Airport Beijing_Capital_International_Airport Beijing_Capital_International_Airport Beijing_CBD Beijing_City_Commercial_Bank Beijing_Commercial_Bank Beijing_Convention Beijing_cuisine Beijing_dialect Beijing_Ducks Beijing_Electronic_Science_and_Technology_Institute Beijing_Financial_Street Beijing_Foreign_Studies_University Beijing_Forestry_University Beijing_Genomics_Institute Beijing_Hotel Beijing_Hotel Beijing_Institute_of_Civil_Engineering_and_Architecture Beijing_Institute_of_Clothing_Technology Beijing_Institute_of_Machinery Beijing_Institute_of_Technology Beijing_Institute_of_Technology Beijing_institute_of_technology Beijing_International_Airport Beijing_International_Studies_University Beijing_Jiaotong_University Beijing_Jinyu_Ducks Beijing_Language_and_Culture_University Beijing_Man Beijing_man Beijing_Medical_University Beijing_Metro Beijing_Municipality Beijing_Municipal_Administration_and_Communications_Card Beijing_Music_Radio Beijing_National_Stadium Beijing_Normal_University Beijing_North_Railway_Station Beijing_North_railway_station Beijing_Olympian Beijing_Olympians Beijing_Olympician Beijing_Opera Beijing_opera Beijing_operas Beijing_People's_Police_College Beijing_Railway_Station Beijing_railway_station Beijing_Schmidt_CCD_Asteroid_Program Beijing_Shougang Beijing_Shougang_Ducks Beijing_Spring Beijing_Spring Beijing_Subway Beijing_Subway Beijing_Subway Beijing_subway Beijing_Technology_and_Business_University Beijing_Television_Network Beijing_This_Month Beijing_Treaty Beijing_Treaty Beijing_Union_University Beijing_University Beijing_University_of_Aeronautics_and_Astronautics Beijing_University_of_Aeronautics_and_Astronautics Beijing_University_of_Chemical_Technology Beijing_University_of_Chinese_Medicine Beijing_University_of_Petroleum Beijing_University_of_Physical_Education Beijing_University_of_Posts_and_Telecommunications Beijing_University_of_Science_and_Technology Beijing_University_of_Technology Beijing_Wanfeng_Aote Beijing_West_Railway_Station Beijing_West_Railway_Station Beijing_Zoo
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