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May 12, 2008

Tattoo needle

Filed under: Tattoo needle, Tattoo Supplies — admin @ 11:51 pm

 

Tattoo needle

Pre-made tattoo needle on bar and Loose tattoo needles;Individual Blister Pack needle, CE0197, Sterilized by E.O. Gas, 50pcs/box

Loose needles:
1) No. 6: 0. 22mm
2) No. 8: 0. 25mm
3) No. 10: 0. 30mm
4) No. 12: 0. 35mm
5) No. 13: 0. 40mm

Piercing needles:
6G-20G 100pcs / box

Disposable Premade Tattoo Needles:

Round liner size:
1RL, 3RL, 4RL, 5RL, 7RL, 8RL, 9RL, 11RL, 13RL, 14RL, 18RL
Round shader size:
3RS, 5RS, 7RS, 8RS, 9RS, 10RS, 11RS, 13RS, 14RS, 15RS, 18RS

Flat shader size:
4F, 5F, 6F, 7F, 8F, 9F, 11F

Magnum shader size:
5M1, 7M1, 9M1, 11M1, 13M1, 15M1, 17M1, 23M1, 25M1, 35M1, 39M1

2-stack magnum shader size:
5M2, 7M2, 9M2, 11M2, 13M2, 15M2, 17M2

Round magnum shader size:
5RM, 7RM, 9RM, 11RM, 13RM, 15RM, 23RM, 25RM, 35RM, 39RM

Suzhou Branch

Boen (HK) Healthcare Co., Limited

Unit 602, Youngor International Center,Shenxu Road,Suzhou Industrial Park,215021,China

Tel: 86 512 62922078 / 62572107

Fax: 86 512 62572107

Email: John.Xu@boenmedical.com

 

ACUPUNCTURE NEEDLES

Filed under: Acupuncture Needles — admin @ 11:13 pm

ACUPUNCTURE NEEDLES

l        The needles are from Φ 0.12 to Φ 0.45, lengths are from 13mm to 125mm.

   

             PACKAGE       ART NO. SPECIFICATION

Package individual
without guide tube
Package individual
with guide tube
Package 5 needles
with 1guide tube

Suzhou Branch

Boen (HK) Healthcare Co., Limited

Unit 602, Youngor International Center,Shenxu Road,Suzhou Industrial Park,215021,China

Tel: 86 512 62922078 / 62572107

Fax: 86 512 62572107

Email: John.Xu@boenmedical.com

April 29, 2008

Yangzhou yixiang Special Vehicle Co., LTD

Filed under: Diesel Genset, Genset — admin @ 11:59 pm
 

Contact Us

Yangzhou yixiang Special Vehicle Co., LTD
Manager:Mr.Huang
Tel:0514-86800223 86822223
Fax:0514-86827223
Phone:13615253443
E_mail:jdhsl888@163.com
  Yangzhou yixiang Special Vehicle Co., LTD

Yangzhou yixiang Special Vehicle Co.,LTD, is located in the historical and cultural city in the eastern outskirts of Yangzhou Jiangdu North Industrial Park, is the diesel generators in research and development, manufacturing, and marketing into a private enterprise, the company has a solid scientific research, advanced production technology strength production technology, sophisticated detection equipment, a sound management system. 24-1300 kW main production specifications ordinary type, four protection, automation, since the switch, low noise, mobile power stations, such as the warehouse-type Diesel Genset. Annual production capacity of more than 2,000 Taiwan, the major cities in the country with a sales network of services, products are widely used in telecommunications, railways, highways, high-rise buildings, industrial and mining enterprises, field operations, and other places.

Cheung Yangzhou billion since its inception, has been insisting market-oriented and customer satisfaction for the purpose, and constantly develop new products in accordance with GB GB2820-90 standards of production and strictly enforced IS09001: 2000 quality management system standards, uphold the high quality of the product Survey lessons actively pursuing advanced technology of advanced products at home and abroad in recent years with the firewood, Weichai, according to Mainz, Germany, the United States Cummins, Daewoo, France Lilley Senma companies have carried out extensive cooperation and a matching OEM factory , thus further improving million units Xiang licensing product grades.

For users with high-quality products, pricing, and excellent service is 100 million Cheung’s business purposes. Quality - we are in pursuit of perfect, as our business life!

 
   

March 11, 2008

Huaxiang Plastics Machinery Commerce Network

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:39 am

    Huaxiang Plastics Machinery Commerce Network is the best e-commerce platform to provide Product Database, the company bankI would like to purchase, I would like to sales, industry information, tendering information, procurement assistant, assistant commerce, convention and exhibition services.Plastics Machinery and enterprises to create favorable conditions for the conduct of e-commerce clients.traditional plastics machinery procurement and trading activities into a highly efficient, high efficiency,New low-cost e-commerce model for the development of central and western China to contribute to the exchange of information to strengthen the east.

    Huaxiang Plastics Machinery Commerce Network operators — Suzhou Huaxiang Business Information Ltd. is committed to information technology,e-commerce software and managing software development is the best development potential of the high-tech enterprises in the world.

    Huaxiang business to the most advanced and mature technology, the best quality service to customers.Technology companies have long been engaged in multi-media or members of experience in database design, Internet applications and rich experience.the use of relevant technologies mature.Huaxiang developed by the business.Huaxiang Plastics Machinery Commerce Network operating independently of the plastics machinery industry is the nation’s largest e-commerce website,committed to providing professional, personalized, humanized service, domestic and foreign enterprises,trade companies to explore the domestic market trading platform.Huaxiang uphold solid business and development, seek truth and the spirit of innovationallow users to enjoy the latest achievements in the development of information technology to gain maximum benefit,To promote the development of China’s information industry, and promote the rise of the knowledge-based economy will make its greatest contribution!

    • as long as the goal is to use plastic machinery enterprises in China Plastics Machinery

    • Huaxiang Plastics Machinery Commerce Network industry the best business platform for Internet companies

    advantages that many businesses have not?

    Through our investigation, some domestic enterprises Plastics Machinery spent a great deal of human and material resources,taking the lead in establishing a business website on the Internet, but has not received much to the regret of the desired effect.The reasons are as follows : — sitting on the situation.Several billions of websites on the Internet, many people see it simply is messy.By simply build a website for people to be passive, natural effect of the poor.• service providers to the poor.Plastics Machinery is not a website, I do not know about plastics machinery industry, no relevant experience and channelsYou can not provide suitable for the plastics machinery industry, targeted outreach services.Unable to find your target customers.– The potential targets in Internet customers unable to visit the website.Procurement professionals who are usually in the relevant product search portal.Difficult to target a single enterprise independent websites to find customers.Many of China’s plastics machinery business customers in other network service providers to join the service under poor plastic machinery business networkand achieved very good results.Numerous facts have proved one thing : enterprises to the Internet, but also want to get into the Internet!Wild multitude network, the web site of the home where your business?No one is interested in the lonely station is buried, or businessmen to join the professional website?Quickly choose quickly!

February 2, 2008

Classical Gardens in Suzhou

Filed under: Classical Gardens in Suzhou, Travel — admin @ 2:13 am
The beginning of the history of the Suzhou classical gardens can be traced back to the 6th century BC,when the king of Wu of the Spring and Autumn Period built a royal garden;among the priyate gardens,then first recorded in historical texts is the Pijiang(Territory-Expander’s) Garden of Eastern Jin times(4th century AD).From then on, gardening thrived in successive periods,and famous gardens increased.In the Ming and Qing periods,Suzhou became one of the busiest areas in China,with private gardens spread all over the city and its suburbs.Especially from the 16th to the 18th century,the golden period of garden building,its gardens exceeded two hundred, of which dozens have been preserved in a good condition up to the present.Therefore,Suzhou has consistently been praised as the¨paradise on earth.¨
As typical examples of Suzhou classical gardening,the Zhuozheng(Humble Resident’s),Liu(Everlasting) and Wangshi(Master-of-net’s)gardens and Huanxiu(BeautyEmbraced)Mountain Villa,all built in the period of the prosperous development of private gardens,are noted for their imagination-inspiring atmosphere,exquisite workmanship,superb artistry and rich cultural contens,which earned them the position of model and representative
buildings among the numerous classical gardens of Suzhou.
The Freehand Style of Landscape Painting as the Guiding Principle of Gardening
Chinese gardening struck root deeply in Chinese literature and painting, and, in particular,accepted strong influence from Tang, Song and later scholars’freehand style of landscape painting, producing a good many excellent three-di-mensional imitations of their works.In the developmental course of Chinese gardening, two categories of gardens,i.e the imperial garden and the private one,were evolved,the former in BeJing and the latter in Suzhou.Because of their diversity in political, economic, cultural, climatic and geographic circumstances, the two categories are distinctly different from each other in scale, layout, dimension,style and color. The imperial gardens excel for their grandeur,neatness, sumptuousness and deep colors, while the Suzhou gardens impress people with their small but elegant looks,light but graceful colors, and bold but richly expressive style.As the latter were built with special attention added to harmony between culture and artistry,the imperial garden greatly absorbed in the late stage of its development the bold style of Suzhou gardens as a means of improving and enriching its general tone,designing ideas, building techniques and cultural contents.
Comfortable Dwelling Conditions and Excellent Liying Enyironn1ents
Combining the garden and the residence into a whole,thec1assical gardens of Suzhou provide places suitable not only for sightseeing,but also for dwelling. This sonofbuilding is a clever creation for solving the problem that, on one hand, the city is dense with population but scant of natural scenery and, on the other,man inclines to nature,pursues harmony with it and likes to beautify and perfect his living environments.The Zhuozheng,Liu and Wangshi gardens and Huanxiu Mountain Villa,covering all types of Suzhou classical gardens and being kept intact,display systematically and completely the characteristic features of Suzhou classical gardening in layout, structure, shape, style, color, decoration and furniture.As representatives of South China folk architecture in the Ming and Qing periods(l4th~early 20th centuries), they demonstrated highly-developed resident culture in the regions south of the Yangtze River, exened influence upon the urban architectural style all over South China, inclined folk architecture to draw close to them in design, layout, aesthetics and building technique,and embodied the scientific and technical level and artistic attainments in the then urban construction.
Rich Contents of Social Culture
An imponant feature of the Suzhou classical gardens is that, as products of historical culture,they carry information on Chinese traditional ideology and culture.The garden hall names, inscribed horizontal boards, pillar couplets,stone in scriptions, carvings, decorations and tree-,nower-androckery-implied meanings all not only serve as exquisite art works for embellishing gardens, but also contain extensive and deep historical, cultural, ideological and scientific deposits in both material and spiritual aspects. Of them some renect and propagate the philosophical views of the Confucian, Buddhist and Taoist schools;some tell about philosophy of life for molding lofty sentiments;and some are classical poems or essays, which, while embellishing, enhancing or creating the beauty of garden scenes,trigger off extensive imagination, produce a congenial atmosphere and bring mental satisfaction to the dweller and visitor.Moreover,the manuscripts in the handwriting of celebrated calligraphers collected in the Suzhou gardens constitute a treasure trove of art works and cultural relics. In addition, the architectural rules of the Suzhou classical gardens as gardenized mansions renect the life and recreation style and customs of ancient China’s southerners,and provide material data for understanding and studying folklore in olden South China.
Model Works of Gardening
Built in the prime of Suzhou gardening,the Zhuozheng,Liu and Wangshi gardens and Huanxiu Mountain Villa embody fully the national features and artistic attainments of ancient Chinese gardening. Within the limited spaces they took up,their builders applied ingeniously various skills and means, such as contrast, mil, size alteration, structural gradation, Juxtapose, scene-bonowing, representing rich contents in a small form and making the less excel the more,and combined halls, towers,pavilions and terraces with springs, rockeries, trees and flowers in imitation of natural landscapes,creatlng an ideal worldwith”urban mounts and forests”and “natural beauty amid the bustle of city life.”Thereby,these gardens integrate harmoniously natural,architectural and cultural beauty, furnish people with comfortable living envlronments,represent a historical height in garden construction, and maintain irreplaceably a prominent position in the developmental history of Chinese and even wor1d gardening.

A Brief History of the Palace Museum

Filed under: The Palace Museum, Travel — admin @ 1:45 am

The Palace Museum, historically and artistically one of the most comprehensive Chinese museums, was established on the foundation of the palace that was the ritual center of two dynasties, the Ming and the Qing, and their collections of treasures. Designated by the State Council as one of China’s foremost protected monuments in 1961, the Palace Museum was also made a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987.

Situated at the heart of Beijing, the Palace Museum is approached through Tiananmen Gate. Immediately to the north of the Palace Museum is Prospect Hill (also called Coal Hill), while on the east and west are Wangfujing and Zhongnanhai neighborhoods. It is a location endowed with cosmic significance by ancient China’s astronomers. Correlating the emperor’s abode, which they considered the pivot of the terrestrial world, with the Pole Star (Ziweiyuan), which they believed to be at the center of the heavens, they called the palace The Purple Forbidden City. The Forbidden City was built from 1406 to 1420 by the third Ming emperor Yongle who, upon usurping the throne, determined to move his capital north from Nanjing to Beijing. In 1911 the Qing dynasty fell to the republican revolutionaries. The last emperor, Puyi, continued to live in the palace after his abdication until he was expelled in 1924. Twenty-four emperors lived and ruled from this palace during this 500-year span.

The Forbidden City is surrounded by 10-metre high walls and a 52-metre wide moat. Measuring 961 meters from north to south and 753 meters from east to west, it covers an area of 720,000 square meters. Each of the four sides is pierced by a gate, the Meridian Gate (Wu men) on the south and the Gate of Spiritual Valor (Shenwu men) on the north being used as the entrance and exit by tourists today. Once inside, visitors will see a succession of halls and palaces spreading out on either side of an invisible central axis. It is a magnificent sight, the buildings’ glowing yellow roofs against vermilion walls, not to mention their painted ridges and carved beams, all contributing to the sumptuous effect.

Known as the Outer Court, the southern portion of the Forbidden City centers on the halls of Supreme Harmony, Central Harmony, and Preserving Harmony. These are flanked by the halls of Literary Glory and Military Eminence. It was here that the emperor held court and conducted his grand audiences.

Mirroring this arrangement is the Inner Court at the northern end of the Forbidden City, with the Palace of Heavenly Purity, the Hall of Union, and the Palace of Earthly Tranquility straddling the central axis, surrounded by the Six Palaces of the East and West and the Imperial Garden to the north. Other major buildings include the halls for Worshipping Ancestors and of Imperial Splendor on the east, and the Hall of Mental Cultivation, the Pavilion of the Rain of Flowers and the Palace of Benevolent Tranquility on the west. These contain not only the residences of the emperor and his empress, consorts and concubines but also the venues for religious rites and administrative activities.

In total, the buildings of the two courts account for an area of some 163,000 square meters. These were laid out precisely in accordance with a code of architectural hierarchy, which designated specific features to reflect the paramount authority and status of the emperor. No ordinary mortal would have been allowed or even dared to come within close proximity of these buildings.

After the republican revolution, this Palace as a whole would have been sequestered by the Nationalist government were it not for the “Articles of Favorable Treatment of the Qing House” which allowed Puyi to live on in the Inner Court after his abdication. Meanwhile, all of the imperial treasures from palaces in Rehe (today’s Chengde) and Mukden (today’s Shenyang) were moved to the Forbidden City for public display in History Museum established at the Outer Court in 1914. While confined to the Inner Court, Puyi continuously used such vestiges of influence as still remained to plot his own restoration. He also systematically stole or pawned a huge number of cultural relics under the pretext of granting them as rewards to his courtiers and minions or taking them out for repair.

In 1924, during a coup launched by the warlord Feng Yuxiang, Puyi was expelled from the Forbidden City and the management of the palace fell to the charge of a committee set up to deal with the concerns of the deposed imperial family. The committee began a sorting and counting of the imperial treasures. A year of intense preparations later, its members arranged a grand ceremony on 10 October 1925 in front of the Palace of Heavenly Purity to mark the inception of the Palace Museum. News of the opening flashed across the nation, and such was the scramble of visitors on the first day that traffic jams around Beijing brought the city almost to a standstill.

According to a 28-volume inventory published in 1925, the treasure trove left by the Qing numbered more than 1,170,000 items including sacrificial vessels and ancient jade artifacts from the earliest dynasties; paintings and calligraphy from the Tang, Song, Yuan and Ming dynasties; porcelain from the Song and Yuan; a variety of enamelware and lacquer ware; gold and silver ornaments; relics in bamboo, wood, horn and gourds; religious statues in gold and bronze; as well as numerous imperial robes and ornaments; textiles; and furniture. In addition, there were countless books, literary works and ancient records. All these were divided into separate collections of antiquities, library materials and historical documents and placed under teams of staff to sort and collate. Exhibition halls were opened to display some of the treasures, while writers and editors worked away at publishing in book or journal form all the new areas of research and academic inquiry that the establishment of the museum had ushered in. The Palace Museum was soon a hive of activity.

Shortly before the outbreak of World War II, the Japanese, having annexed territory in China’s northeast, proceeded to march on Beijing. With this looming threat, the museum authorities decided to evacuate its collection rather than let it fall into enemy hands or risk destruction in battle. For four frantic months between February and May 1933, the most important pieces in the collection were packed into 13,427 crates and 64 bundles and sent to Shanghai in five batches. From there they were dispatched to Nanjing where a depository was built and a branch of the Palace Museum established.

On 7 July 1937 shots fired around Marco Polo Bridge west of Beijing heralded the eruption of the Sino-Japanese War. Within a year, the Japanese had penetrated to most of eastern China. Now the treasures stored in Nanjing had to be moved again, this time by three routes to Sichuan, where they were secreted in three locations, Baxian, Emei and Leshan. Only at the end of the war were they consolidated in Chongqing, whence they were returned to Nanjing in 1947. By then the Nationalists were considerably weakened, and with the imminent takeover by the Communist armies of areas south of the Yangtze, they began their retreat to Taiwan. Between the end of 1948 and the dawn of 1949, the Nationalists picked relics to fill 2,972 crates for shipping across the Strait. A rival Palace Museum was set up in Taipei to display these antiquities. Most of what were left were gradually returned to Beijing, although to this day 2,221 crates remain in safe-keeping in storag in Nanjing.

During this tumultuous decade of war and revolution, not one item of the treasures was lost or damaged even though the volume involved was enormous. This was largely due to the dedicated energy of the Palace Museum staff, whose achievement in preserving these treasures was nothing short of heroic. But it was also as a result of this long period of upheaval that the treasures have been dispersed. Yet the rationale for keeping the collection together, representative as it is of the motherland’s traditional culture, seems so incontestable that most people believe the treasures will be re-united one day.

In the early 1950s, shortly after the establishment of the People’s Republic, the Palace Museum staff worked with a new will and enthusiasm to return the Forbidden City to its former glory. Where previously the dirty and dilapidated halls and courts lay under weeds and piles of rubbish, some 250,000 cubic meters of accumulated debris were now cleared out, giving the place a sparkling fresh look. A policy of comprehensive rehabilitation was also launched, and in time the crumbling palace buildings, repaired, and redecorated, looked resplendent once more. All the tall buildings were equipped with lightning conductors, while modern systems of fire protection and security were installed. It has been a priority of the People’s Government, particularly since the beginning of the reform era in the early 1980s, to keep the surrounding moat dredged and clean.

As for the collection of antiquities, a systematic inventory was completed during the 1950s and 1960s, redressing the legacy of inaccurate cataloguing. The collection was moreover augmented, for example by the salvage of a number of precious artifacts from a jumble of apparently worthless objects. After more than a decade of painstaking efforts, some 710,000 relics from the Qing palace were retrieved. At the same time, through national allocations, requisitions and private donations, more than 220,000 additional pieces of cultural significance were added, making up for such omissions from the original Qing collection as colored earthenware from the Stone Age, bronzes and jades from the Shang and Zhou Dynasties, pottery tomb figurines from the Han Dynasty, stone sculpture from the Northern and Southern Dynasties, and tri-color glazed pottery from the Tang Dynasty. The ancient paintings, scrolls and calligraphy added to the collection were particularly spectacular. These included, from the Jin Dynasty, Lu Ji’s cursive calligraphy “A consoling letter” (Ping fu tie), Wang Xun’s ” Letter to Boyuan (Bo yuan tie) and Gu Kaizhi’s “Goddess of the Luo River” (Luo shen fu tu); from the Sui Dynasty, Zhan Ziqian’s landscape handscroll “Spring Outing” (You chun tu) ; from the Tang Dynasty, Han Huang’s “Five Oxen” (Wu niu tu ), Du Mu’s running-cursive script handscroll “Song of the Courtesan Zhan Haohao” (Zhang haohao shi) ; from the Five Dynasties, Gu Hongzhong’s “The Night Revels of Han Xizai” (Han Xizai yeyan tu) “; from the Song Dynasty, Li Gonglin’s “Painting after Wei Yan’s Pasturing Horses” (Lin Wei Yan mu fang tu) Guo Xi’s “Dry tree and rock, level distance landscape” (Ke shi pingyuan tu), and Zhang Zeduan’s “Going up River on Spring Festival” (Qingming shang he tu)–all masterpieces without exception.

Unremitting though this attempt at recovery has been, however, there have been further exertions in recent years to acquire such works as Zhang Xian’s “Landscape with Poems (Shi yong tu)” (Song Dynasty), Nai Xian’s calligraphy “Ancient poem on south of the city” (Cheng nan yong gu shi) (Yuan Dynasty), Shen Zhou’s landscape handscroll “After Huang Gongwang’s ‘Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains’” (Fang Huang Gongwang fuchun shan ju tu) (Ming Dynasty), Shi Tao’s ink bamboo “Calling Wen Yuke” (Gao hu Yu ke tu) (Qing Dynasty). The first two were spirited out of the palace by the last emperor Puyi on the excuse of bestowing them on his brother Pu Jie; they fell into the hands of others and only now have been returned to their rightful place in the Palace Museum collection.

From the 1950s onwards, the museum’s existing storehouses were completely overhauled to provide a damp-proof and insect-proof environment for the treasures. In the 1990s a new storehouse with a capacity of over 600,000 items was built, equipped with controls for maintaining constant temperature and humidity, as well as safeguards against fire and theft. A workshop was established in the 1950s and expanded in the 1980s to encompass a scientific Conservation Department. These not only continued traditions of craftsmanship, but also drew upon scientific discoveries to facilitate the restoration of damaged relics. In the past few decades the Conservation Department has treated as many as 110,000 objects from the Palace Museum and other public collections. Besides its continuous refurbishment of the main courts and halls, the museum has opened galleries to display bronzes, porcelain, crafts, paintings and calligraphy, jewelry, and clocks to expand the scope of its exhibitions. A number of thematic shows have been held in galleries devoted to temporary exhibitions; in recent years these have included such acclaimed ones as “A Comparison of Authentic and Counterfeit Paintings and Calligraphy”, “Genuine and Imitation Examples of Ancient Porcelain and Materials from Ancient Kilns”, “The Art of Packaging at the Qing Court” and “Selections from the Finest Acquisitions of the Last Fifty Years”. Traveling exhibitions have also graced various provincial museums and museums abroad. In fact, since the beginning of the economic-reform era, an increasing number of exhibitions have been mounted in countries such as Britain, the USA, France, the former Soviet Union, Germany, Austria, Spain, Australia, Japan and Singapore, among others. All of them have aroused great interest and admiration and played a key part in the promotion of international understanding and cultural exchange.

The number of visitors to the Palace Museum has risen along with the growth of tourism, in the last decade reaching six to eight million a year.

General interest has been further stimulated by the Palace Museum’s range of publications touching on both the architecture of its buildings and its vast cultural holdings. Published works include Famous Historical Paintings in the Palace Museum Collection, Selected Porcelain from the Palace Museum Collection, National Treasures, Palaces of the Forbidden City, Daily Life in the Forbidden City, A Collection of National Treasures, and The Complete Palace Museum Collection (in 60 volumes, of which 18 have been published so far). There are also two periodicals, The Palace Museum and The Forbidden City.

Since 1997, the Palace Museum’s administration has been significantly reorganized. Where previously there were three departments covering conservation, exhibition and research, these have now been split into the departments of Antiquities; of Painting and Calligraphy; of Palace Arts; and the Exhibition, Promotion and Education Department. With substantial investment, the latest technology has been deployed by the newly established Resources and Information Center to set up the Palace Museum website. The website you are now browsing enables all, even those in distant places, to enjoy a sightseeing tour of this mysterious palace and feast their eyes on its splendid treasures.

The creation of a state-of-the-art virtual Imperial Palace is no longer just a dream.
                                                By Yang Xin

http://www.dpm.org.cn/

The History of Badaling Great Wall

Filed under: Great Wall, Travel — admin @ 12:39 am

The Badaling Great Wall locates the northwest of the Beijing, its position is longitude 116 degrees 65 cents east and latitude 40 degrees 25 cents north, it’s a pass of Jundu mountain. It extends in all directions which is the reason it be called Badaling.
 The name of Badaling, can be read in the oldest poem “Visit Badaling in the Night” that wrote by Jin dynasty poet LiuYing and “Come out Badaling”. In the Yuan Dynasty, it was called as “North mountain pass”, which is comparative to the “South mountain pass”. The South mountain pass locates in the Changping county, between them is a gorge which extends 20 kilomitres and be called “Juyong Gate”, this gorge is called “GuanGou”. The Badaling Great Wall locates on the ridge of the northern part of the GuanGou. Here, Two peaks face to face, there is a alley between them two, it’s a very strategic place. Look down the JuYong Gate from the Badaling, it looks like a well. The ancients said “The risk of The JuYong Gate is not the Guan city, but the Badaling”. Because of the importance of the Badaling, it has being the place that the military fight against for. The Badaling became the martial strongpoint from the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. According to the “Shi Ji” and the work of the archaeologists, we can prove that there is The Great Wall in the Warring States Period in the Badaling. It also consistent with what we can see today. The “Shui Jing Zhu” of North Wei records:”JuYong Gate locates in the JuYong place, there a vertical gorge in the south of it ……” So, the experts Badaling is just the Guan Zhi. The name of “JuYong” comes from a story, Long time ago, the Qin Shi Huang force a group of farmers build The Great Wall, and these farmers dwelled in a country, later the country was named Ju Yong country by the Han Wu Di.

1500 years ago, North Wei built a strap of Great Wall in the Badaling. According to the “Wei Shu Shi Zhu Ben Ji”, in the 446 year, at Datong, the emperor built the Great Wall whose name is “Sai Wei”, The eastern part be in the Badaling and the western part be in bank of The Yellow River. Since to the 555 year, the Great was extended to the sea.
 The Badaling Great Wall was rebuilt in the Ming Dynasty.
 The Ming Tai Zhu Zhuyuan Zhang understood the importance of the Great Wall, after his ascending the throng, he repaired or rebuilt the Great Wall. Zhuyuan Zhang commanded the general XuDa and FengSheng lead the army to guard on the Great Wall to guard against the force of the Yuan.
 1403 year, the 3th emperor of Ming Dynasty ZhuLi ascent the throng. 1420 year, he move the capital from the Nanjing to Beijing. He decided to unify the whole China. 1488 year, he began the vast project of building the Great Wall. Pass through 270 years, The Great Wall was linked one chain. It begins from the Yalu River and end on the Bulongji in the Ganshu province, that is The Great Wall we now refer to. The Ming Great Wall extends more then 7300 kilomitres, passages 7 provinces,citys and municipalitys. Its level of project and recovery extent are both best with the old Great Wall. Now we can say,The Great Wall was built in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period; linked in the Qin Dynasty; perfected in the Ming Dynasty.
 The Ming Great Wall, is no longer a simple high wall, but a rigorous recovery system. Ningxia, Shanxi, Shangxi, Heibei all have the parts of the Great Wall. Many Guan citys and short walls were built in this important place,for instance Yanmen Gate etc.
 The Badaling is the testimony of the fatal historical events. The first emperor Qinshihuang came back to Xianyang, Xiao queen mother went on a tour of inspection, Yuantaizhu enter the Chian etc. The poems and articles are without number. The great historical dramas about the disputes between nations are also without number. Now these things have been become the history. Age endow The Great Wall with the new meaning and mission. It is a historical monument, which stands tall and upright in mountains, materialize the Chinese civilization and sapiential. It has become the bridge between us and foreign people.It is the Oriental culture inheritance belongs to the whole human being.
 After the People’s Republic of China coming into existence, 1952 year, Guomoruo associate premier suggested rehab the Great Wall to welcome the visitor that come from domestic and fremdness

Since the Qing Dynasty, the Badaling Great Wall has been becoming deserted. The city towers to west of Guan city had been destroied severity, the body of the city wall, buttress, wall, fight building etc had been destroied severity too. After the State Department decided to repair it, The Great Wall had been rehabilitated several times.
 1961 year, the State Department confirmed the Badaling Great Wall was the significant cultural relic unit to be protected in China. 1984 year, Dengxiaoping called people “Loving our China,repairing our Great Wall”. Now The Great Wall is becoming more and more beautiful and gallant. 1986 years, the Great Wall was choosed one scene of the sixteen scenes in Beijing. 1987 year, the U.N. accept it as the “Oriental culture inheritance of the whole world”. 1991 year, 1992 year,etc.
 The Badaling Great Wall resound in the whole world, it is the first part which open to tourist of the Great Wall. Heretofore. It has welcome tourists more than 130000000. Nixon, Riken, Sarchel, Mikhail Gorbachev, Yilizabor etc, 372 mugwumps visited the Great Wall.
 The Badaling Great Wall is the soul of the whole Great Wall, it is welcoming the tourist come from the whole world. The man who has visited The Great Wall are all acclaimed as the peak of perfection.

http://badaling.gov.cn/

The History of The Great Wall

Filed under: Great Wall, Travel — admin @ 12:35 am

The Great Wall is well-known because of its magnificent majestic appearance.Now,in the call of “Loving our China, repairing our Great Wall”, many places of The Great Wall have be repaired, which make it more boundless. The Great Wall has become the head key point of interest in China. more and more foreign people was attracted by it. The people who visited it are all acclaim as the peak of perfection

The Great Wall convolves on the ridges of mountains and desert.It’s maked up of city gates,circumvallations, enemy towers,signal beacon towers and so on, it was the martial recovery engineering system of the different place and nations in China Long time ago.It was built through several thousands years by Chinese people, it’s the embodiment of the Great power and strong purpose of Chinese people. It has become the irradiant treasure of our Chinese archaic civilization. Many move one to praises and tears stories have taken place between the people bide inside and outside of The Great Wall in the long time traffics, it has been attracting many bookmen indited or paint for it, which added so many cantos and paints to our artistic thesaurus.
 B.c. Eleven Century, Xi-Zhou, Our country had the recordation that is “The city wall set down in the north”. From B.c. Seven Century to B.c. Three Century that is called the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, The princes of many little states began to fight and swallow up each other. They all built the long city wall for self-defence, for instance, Chu state built its wall in the Nanyang district firstly, Qi state built its wall in the Shandong province, Zhongshan state, Wei state, Han state, Yan state, Zhao state, Qin state and so on all began to build their city wall. The total of the city wall’s length was more than five thousand kilometre, but they were distracted from each other.
 B.c. 221 Year, QinShiHuang consolidated all six states, He pulled down the wall between the states one side, the other side he built the new city wall in the north to defense the Hun. He command MengTian general and thousands upon thousands people to build the new city wall, it stretch more than five thousand kilometre in an unbroken chain, which is the oldest Great Wall.
 During the West Han state period, The Hun in the north bacame more and more stronger, So the Han state had to build new city wall, and strengthen the old Qin Great Wall. From the eastern parts of Liaoning province to the YuMen gate, The Great Wall is longer then ten thousand kilometre. Its scale had beyond the Qin Great Wall’s by far. During the East Han state period, people built new wall inside of the West Han Great Wall to defense the Serbi and the Qiang nationality, The length of it is more then five kilomitres also. The Great Wall which was built in the two Han period, is the biggest project in our history

After this, the nations in the north began to come into the north of China, city gate and backland. They built the new North Dynasty kaiserdom, standed face to the North Dynasty kaiserdom. The West Wei state, East Wei state, West Qi state,West Zhou state in the North Dynasty kaiserdom, all built the mulriple Great Wall in the northern parts of Yellow River. The Shui Dynasty unified the whole nation, then built the new city wall from the middle-head reaches of the Yellow River to the western parts of Ganshu province, its length is three kilomitres, and it forms a new system with the eastern Great Wall

During the Tang Dynasty, the power of country is so strong that the all nantion in the north have to submit to the authority of Tang, So the archon haven’t built any new Great Wall, only built three city to accept surrenders.Here, the eastern Gaoli built more the one thousand kilomitres Great wall from the northeast of China to the Datong River estuary to defense Tang.
 In the Zhu,Liao,Jin Dynasty Period, the north parts of Chian was occupied by the Khitan, the west parts of the Yellow River was occupied by West Xia, The North Song Dynasty only repaired the Yan Gate. Since this, Liao and Jin state became more and mire stronger, and occupied the whole parts in the north of the Yellow River, so the South Song has no ability to build any new Great Wall.But the Liao-Jin kaiserdom built the new Great Wall in the northeastern parts of Neimenggu province to fight against the other nantion in the northern parts. People often call it as “Genghis khan City Wall”.
 After the Ming Dynasty was founded, the archons began to build new Great Wall in the northern parts of China to defense the Yuan state come back and Dadan, Waci, Nvzhen etc.And they also built many Great Wall in southeast of China near to the sea to oppugn the foreign enemy. The count of the Ming Great Wall is the best large in our history. The main part of it begins from the the Yalu River to the JiaYu Gate, its length is more than seven thousand kilomitres. Thereinto, The part which from ShanHai Gate to the JiaYu Gate is kept most well.
 At the beginning of Qing Dynasty, in the Liaoning,Jilin Province people built the ShengJing city wall, it extends 2600 kilomitres. And the people also repaired the ShanHai, JuYong, YanMen, JiaYu Gate etc. But from the metaphase of Qing Dynasty, the Great have not been repaired more.
 Now, Under the years run out and the man-made destroy, Many parts of The Great Wall have become very slipshod, even includes the Ming Great Wall. But The Great Wall whose length is more than a hundred thousand kilomitres is the huge Chinese dragon, is the best greatness and grandest work in the history of the whole human being. It also materializes the architectural skill. Now the people who bide inside and outside of The Great Wall, through the long time traffics, have unified one big family. The Great Wall is the symbolize of our China and is our pride. It will also contribute to promotion the friendship between people who come from the different countries.

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High tech features Water Cube

Filed under: Beijing Olympic Games — admin @ 12:06 am

As one of the main venues for the Beijing Olympic Games, the National Aquatics Center blends innovative concepts with the latest high-tech features. In today’s feature, we follow the chief architect behind the gigantic “water cube” to find out how it went from a blueprint to reality.

This is the National Stadium, better known as the “Bird’s Nest”.

And this is the National Aquatics Center, nicknamed the “Water Cube”.

These two structures constitute the centerpieces for the Beijing Olympic Games. They are a combination of machismo and elegance. In their designers’ eyes, they are the lead actor and actress for an upcoming blockbuster.

Zhao Xiaojun, Chief Architect of National Aquatics Center said “We had to interpret the harmony, gentleness, calmness behind the National Aquatics Center, so we eventually came up with an extreme design, a steady blue “cubic box”.

The idea behind “water cube” was created by an international team, made up jointly of China’s State Construction Engineering Corporation and Britain’s Arup Engineering Group and PTW Architects.

The team met in Sydney and brainstormed various designs, which were all very different.

Zhao Xiaojun said “The designs by our counterparts were shaped in curves or waves, which look very dynamic. But we insisted the design must fit in with the unity and harmony of the whole Olympic Green.”

Opinions were widely divided but a compromise had to be made. The “water cube” idea finally emerged.

Zhao Xiaojun said “We initially decided on a design with a wave-shaped roof. The whole structure had a strong shape that was visually impressive. But we thought it was too much in terms of beauty. Then we modified the design with a “cubic box” shape, which became the final design. Eventually, it became the winning design. Everyone was excited at that time.”

More than three years later, the “blue box” has risen up from the ground and is near the end of completion. A blueprint was finally turned into reality.

Gentle and elegant as it is, the “Water Cube” promises to be an architectural highlight of the Beijing Olympics.

The square box is 177 meters wide on each side and 31 meters high, and can seat 17,000 spectators.

Behind the gentle appearance, the “water cube” is supported by a strong and unique steel structure. The entire piece of architecture plays on the geometry of water bubbles in an irregular polygon form.

The blue bubbles that form the external structure are made from state-of-the-art lightweight translucent materials known as ETFE cushions, the first time they have been used in China.

Zhao Xiaojun said”Before using ETFE membranes, we had settled on the principle of external materials. Swimming centers with so much water must be made according to an energy consumption system. The system consumes different amounts of energy in different seasons. Under the climate conditions in Beijing, the translucent materials can help the “water cube” reduce energy consumption by as much as 30 percent by heating water in the pools.”

But many materials, like glass, can also be translucent. Why not use that instead?

Zhao Xiaojun said “ETFE membranes were actually invented to replace glass. They are cheap and convenient to use.”

Thanks to its advantages, ETFE is the material of choice when it comes to covering stadiums.

The main venue for 2006 World Cup, the Allianze Arena is a good example.

The stadium is wrapped in rhomboid ETFE membranes. More amazingly, the stadium can take on different colors when membranes are illuminated with different lights.

With the advancement of lighting technology, the Water Cube will be even more impressive. The stadium can display colorful bubbles, and can even serve as a screen. Spectators will be surprised when they see a fish swimming along the stadium.

Beijing Olympic Theme Slogan embodies wisdom of all

Filed under: Beijing Olympic Games — admin @ 12:04 am

An official with the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) today made a comment on a lawsuit filed by Fang Shouwei at an intermediate court in Beijing’s Haidian District. Fang has claimed the credit for the event’s official slogan “One World One Dream.”

According to the official, BOCOG launched a global appeal for the theme slogan for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad on January 1, 2005. The campaign lasted for 31 days and received over 210,000 entries. Having reviewed all the entries one by one, the BOCOG staff picked out no satisfactory proposals from the English and Chinese entries.

BOCOG then organized several seminars, attended by a number of well-known domestic experts and foreign friends living in China, to hear their opinions. Many Olympic experts in the world also contributed their suggestions to BOCOG.

The official slogan “One World One Dream” was finally confirmed based on careful studies and debates. The Executive Board of BOCOG listened to and the International Olympic Committee approved the theme slogan subsequently. On June 26, 2005, BOCOG publicized the slogan. BOCOG is sincerely grateful to all participants in the solicitation campaign, holding that the brilliant theme slogan embodies the painstaking efforts and wisdom of all.

The official said BOCOG had carefully combed all the submissions one by one and found neither proposals under the name of Fang Shouwei, nor any emails or registered paper submissions of “One World One Dream” to BOCOG’s designated email account or mailing address during the campaign.

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