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Zhangjiakou

Coordinates: 40°49′N 114°53′E / 40.817°N 114.883°E / 40.817; 114.883
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张家口
Kalgan
General view of Zhangjiakou
General view of Zhangjiakou
Location in Hebei
Location in Hebei
CountryChina
ProvinceHebei
Government
 • MayorZheng Xuebi (郑雪碧)
Area
 • Total36,947 km2 (14,265 sq mi)
Population
 • Estimate 
()
4,300,000

Zhangjiakou (traditional Chinese: 張家口; simplified Chinese: 张家口; pinyin: Zhāng jiā kǒu; also known also by several other names) is a prefecture-level city in Hebei Province of North China. It has a population of 4.3 million, and covers 36,947 square kilometers. Zhangjiakou's mayor is Zheng Xuebi (郑雪碧).

Names

Zhangjiakou is written 张家口 in simplified Chinese characters and 張家口 in traditional Chinese. It is Zhāngjiākǒu in pinyin and means "Zhang family gate." Older names for the town in Chinese include Zhāngyuán (張垣), used in the Republican era, and Zhāngjiābǎo (張家堡).

Zhangjiakou was historically known to the Europeans as Kalgan until the mid 20th century. This name derives from the Mongolian name of the city, (Čiɣulaltu qaɣalɣa) or, shorter, [1][2] (Qaɣalɣan)[3], where the Qaɣalɣa[n] means "gate" (in the Great Wall). In Manchu, the city is known as (Imiyangga jase).

Zhangjiakou has been nicknamed "Beijing's Northern Door" due to its strategic location.

Geography

The entire jurisdiction of Zhangjiakou City extends beyond just central Zhangjiakou (divided into Qiaoxi District and Qiaodong District), but extends also into other outlying areas such as Zhangbei, Yangyuan, Xuanhua and even Huailai County, which is less than 20 km away from Beijing.


Transportation

History

View of Zhangjiakou (Kalgan) in 1698.

The water-scarce city was historically the chief northern gate in the Great Wall to China for Europeans travelling along the Tea Road (such as Nicolae Milescu).

In August 1211, there raised the Badger's Mount Campaign, Genghis Khan command 90,000 Mongols destroyed 450,000 Jin Dynasty army.

In the 19th century, the town was the seat of a very extensive transit trade. In early autumn long lines of camels would come in from all quarters for the conveyance of the tea chests from Zhangjiakou, the Kalgan, to Kyakhta; and each caravan usually made three journeys in the winter. Some Russian merchants had permanent residences and warehouses just outside the gate.

In October 1909, Kalgan was connected by railway with Peking. The 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica noted that, in Kalgan, "the ordinary houses have an unusual appearance, from the fact that they are mostly roofed with earth and become covered with green-sward" and that "on the way to Peking the road passes over a beautiful bridge of seven arches, ornamented with marble figures of animals".

In the early 1960s at the height of Sino-Soviet tensions, Zhangjiakou was considered one of the most important cities in China for military strategy reasons. Zhangjiakou was aptly nicknamed, "Beijing's Northern Door", because whoever controlled Zhangjiakou was in a good position to either attack (in the case of the Soviets) or defend (in the case of the Chinese) Beijing.

Economy and education

A corner in downtown Zhangjiakou.

The vicinity of Zhangjiakou is rich in coal and iron ore, making it an ideal location for developing iron and steel industry. Apart from metallurgy, the city is home to one of China's most important grape wine industries, with the Great Wall Wine Company being located in Shacheng (沙城镇), Huailai County.[1]

Zhangjiakou is home to Hebei North University. The university has been prevailing its netwok internationally and many foreign students are now studying there.

Friendship Agreements

Zhangjiakou in fiction

Notes

  1. ^ KNAB, the Place Names Database of EKI query
  2. ^ LinguaMongolia query
  3. ^ cyrillic spelling is Хаалган (Khaalgan) and Чуулалт Хаалга (Chuulalt Khaalga"), respectively. There are some more naming variants, like Chuulgany Khaalga, Khaalga Khot ect.

External links

Template:Jing-Jin-Ji

40°49′N 114°53′E / 40.817°N 114.883°E / 40.817; 114.883