Timeline of Shanghai
Appearance
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Shanghai in China.
Prior to 1800
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- 5th-7th c. CE - Fishing village develops where Suzhou Creek enters the Huangpu River.
- 751 CE - Area becomes part of Huating county.
- 976 CE - Longhua Temple rebuilt.
- 12th c. - Market town develops.
- 1216 - Jing'an Temple built.
- 1292 - Town becomes county seat.
- 1294 - Wen Miao (temple) active.[1]
- 1554 - City walls constructed.
- 1732 - Customs office relocated to Shanghai from Songjiang.
- 1780 - Yu Garden opens.
- 1789 - Guyi Garden becomes communal property.
1800-1900
- 1842
- 19 June: Shanghai taken by British forces.[2]
- Shanghai opens to foreigners per Treaty of Nanking.[2]
- 1843 Captain George Balfour appointed British consul.[3]
- 1845
- David Sassoon & Sons in business.
- British settlement established on outskirts of Old City.[3]
- 1846 - Richards' Hotel and Restaurant in business.
- 1849 - French Concession granted.[3]
- 1850
- North-China Herald newspaper begins publication.[4]
- Collège Saint Ignace founded.
- 1851 - Jardine, Matheson & Co. branch built.
- 1853
- Small Swords Society occupies Old City.
- April: Shanghai Volunteer Corps organized.[2]
- 1854
- Imperial Maritime Custom Offices installed.[2]
- Shanghai Municipal Council formed by westerners.
- 1855 - Shanghai Race Club founded.
- 1856 - Wills' Bridge constructed.
- 1857 - Royal Asiatic Society North-China Branch established.
- 1859 - Astor House Hotel in business.
- 1860
- August: Taiping rebels unsuccessfully attempt to take city.[3]
- New Northern Gate built into city wall.
- 1861
- Battle of Shanghai (1861).
- Correspondent's Club formed by British residents.
- 1862
- American settlement established.[3]
- Saint Joseph's Church consecrated.
- 1863 - Hongkou becomes part of American Concession.[5]
- 1865
- Kiangnan Arsenal and Long Men College established.
- Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation branch opens.
- British Supreme Court for China established.[3]
- Gas lighting introduced.[1]
- 1866 - Butterfield & Swire in business.
- 1868 - Musee de Zikawei founded.[6]
- 1869 - Holy Trinity Church consecrated; designed by George Gilbert Scott.[3]
- 1871 - August: Typhoon.[7]
- 1872 - Shen Bao newspaper begins publication.
- 1874
- Rickshaws introduced.[1]
- Natural history museum established by Royal Asiatic Society North-China Branch.[6]
- 1876 - Woosung Railway begins operating.
- 1881 - Population: 302,767.[7]
- 1882
- Jade Buddha Temple founded.
- Electricity introduced.[1]
- 1884 - Dianshizhai-huabao (magazine) begins publication.[8]
- 1889 - Ostasiatischer Lloyd newspaper begins publication.
- 1895 - Population: 411,753.[3]
- 1896 - Nanyang Public School and Consulate-General of Russia in Shanghai established.
- 1897 - 22 June: British nationals conduct jubilee events.[9]
- 1898
- Songhu Railway begins operating.
- Bubbling Well cemetery established.[citation needed]
1900-2000
1900s
- 1901 - Hardoon & Company in business.[5]
- 1905 - Kiangnan Shipyard and Fudan College established.
- 1907 - Waibaidu Bridge constructed.
- 1908
- Nanjing-Shanghai Railway, Shanghai South railway station, Palace Hotel, and New Stage built.[10]
- Electric tram begins operating.[1]
- Art exhibit held in Shanghai Mutual Telephone Company building.[6][11]
- Hongkou cinema opens.[12]
- 1909
- Shanghai railway station and Shanghai Industrial College established.
- Shanghai–Hangzhou Railway begins operating.
- New gates built into city wall.
1910s
- 1910
- St. Ignatius Cathedral and Shanghai Club Building constructed.
- Shanghai Oil Painting Institute, and Eastern City Women's Art School founded.[10]
- 1912 - Old City walls dismantled.
- 1913 - Shanghai Art School, Women's Art and Embroidery Institute,[10] and Xinmin Theater Research Society founded.[13]
- 1914 - Trolleybus begins operating along Fokein Road.
- 1916 - Asia Building and Union Building constructed on The Bund.
- 1917
- Millard's Review of the Far East begins publication.
- Sincere Department Store branch in business.
1920s
- 1920 - Shanghai Mint established.
- 1921
- July: Chinese Communist Party founded during meeting in Xintiandi.[14]
- Mingxing Film Company founded.[15]
- 1923
- Hongqiao Airport in operation.
- Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation building constructed.
- 1924 - General Post Office Building and North China Daily News Building constructed.
- 1925
- 30 May: Protest quashed; May Thirtieth Movement launched.
- Shanghai East Library opens.[citation needed]
- Tianyi Film Company in business.[16]
- Institute of Chartered Accountants organized.[17]
- 1927
- Shanghai Commune of 1927 active.
- 12 April: Shanghai massacre of 1927.
- 7 July: Huang Fu becomes mayor.
- Shanghai Conservatory of Music founded.
- Customs House, Zhapu Road Bridge,[18] and Ohel Moishe Synagogue built.[1]
- City becomes a special municipality.
- 1928 - Fahua District becomes part of city.[5]
- 1929
- Chang Ch'ün becomes mayor.
- Shanghai Stock Exchange formed.
- Xinmin Po and Shanghai Evening Post & Mercury newspapers begin publication.
- Sassoon House built.
1930s
- 1930 - Nanking Theatre founded.[citation needed]
- 1932
- January 28 Incident
- January: Wu Tiecheng becomes mayor.
- Grand Theatre rebuilt.[19]
- 1933 - Paramount Ballroom opens.[19]
- 1934 - Shanghai Joint Savings Society Building constructed.
- 1935
- EWO Brewery Ltd. in business.
- Sheshan Basilica and Broadway Mansions built.
- 1937
- April: Yu Hung-Chun becomes mayor.
- 13 August - 26 November: Battle of Shanghai; Japanese occupation begins.
- 26 October - 1 November: Defense of Sihang Warehouse.
- Bank of China Building constructed.
- 1938 - Wen Hui Bao newspaper begins publication.
- 1939 - Shanghai Jewish Chronicle begins publication.[20]
1940s
- 1940 - November: Chen Gongbo becomes mayor.
- 1943 - British and American concessions end.[citation needed]
- 1944 - December: Zhou Fohai becomes mayor.
- 1945
- Japanese occupation ends.
- August: K. C. Wu becomes mayor.
- City divided into 30 administrative districts.[5]
- Shanghai Theatre Academy established.
- 1946 - French concession ends.
- 1947 – Constitution of the Republic of China passes.
- 1949
- Rao Shushi becomes Shanghai Party Committee Secretary.
- May: Chen Yi becomes mayor.
- May–June: Shanghai Campaign.
- Jiefang Daily newspaper begins publication.
- Shanghai Film Studio founded.
- October: Proclamation of the People's Republic of China.
- Shanghai residents find refuge on the island of Taiwan with some fleeing to Hong Kong.
1950s
- 1950
- Chen Yi becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Shanghai Women's Federation founded.[21]
- 1951 - Shanghai Shenhua Football Club formed.
- 1952 - Shanghai Museum, Shanghai Banking School, and Shanghai Chinese Orchestra founded.
- 1953 - Population: 6,204,417.[22]
- 1954
- Ke Qingshi becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Shanghai Zoo and Shanghai Teachers Training College established.
- Jing'an Park developed.
- 1955
- Shanghai Exhibition Centre completed
- Hongkou Stadium opens.
- Shanghai Internal Combustion Engine Components Company in business.
- 1956 - Shanghai Natural History Museum established.
- 1958
- Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences founded.
- Ke Qingshi becomes mayor.
- Baoshan, Fengxian, Jiadang, Jinshan, Qingpu, Songjiang districts and Chongming County become part of city.[5]
- 1959 - Drunken Bai Garden opens.
1960s
- 1960 - Shanghai Institute of Foreign Languages established.
- 1961 - Yu Garden opens.
- 1964 - Population: 10,816,500.[23]
- 1965
- Chen Pixian becomes CPC Party chief.
- Cao Diqiu becomes mayor.
- Cucumber Lane renovated.[24]
- 1966 - Cultural Revolution begins.
- 1967
- Shanghai People's Commune active.
- Zhang Chunqiao becomes mayor.
1970s
- 1970
- One Strike-Three Anti Campaign.
- Population: 10,820,000.[25]
- 1971 - Zhang Chunqiao becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- 1972 - Richard Nixon visits city.
- 1974 - Shanghai Botanical Garden established.
- 1976 - Su Zhenhua becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- 1978 - Shanghai Translation Publishing House founded.
- 1979
- Peng Chong becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Sister city relationship established with San Francisco, USA.[26]
1980s
- 1980
- Shanghai Bar Association founded.[27]
- Chen Guodong becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- 1981 - Wang Daohan becomes mayor.
- 1982 - Population: 6,292,960 city;[28] 11,859,700 (urban agglomeration).[23]
- 1983 - Shanghai History & Cultural Relics Showroom opens.
- 1984 - Shanghai University of Political Science and Law founded.
- 1985
- Rui Xingwen becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Jiang Zemin becomes mayor.
- Shanghai Daoist Association established.[5]
- Wenhui Book Review begins publication.
- 1987 - Jiang Zemin becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- 1988
- Zhu Rongji becomes mayor.
- Jin Jiang Tower built.
- 1989
- Protests.[29]
- Zhu Rongji becomes Party Committee Secretary.
1990s
- 1990 - Population: 13,341,900.[23]
- 1991
- Nanpu Bridge and Yangpu Bridge open.
- Wu Bangguo becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Huang Ju becomes mayor.
- The Chinese Republic on Taiwan unofficially abandoned the claims to Shanghai after amending the constitution.
- 1992 - Shanghai Star newspaper begins publication.
- 1993
- Pudong Special Economic Zone established.
- Shanghai Metro begins operation.
- Shanghai International Film Festival begins.
- 1994
- Huang Ju becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Oriental Pearl Tower constructed in Lujiazui.
- Australian Chamber of Commerce Shanghai established.[30]
- 1995
- Xu Kuangdi becomes mayor.
- Dajing Ge Pavilion museum opens (approximate date).[citation needed]
- 1996
- Shanghai Library building opens.
- Shanghai Biennale art exhibit begins.
- Yan'an Elevated Road and King Tower built.
- Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai established.
- 1997 - Xupu Bridge opens.
- 1998
- 1999
- Shanghai Pudong International Airport begins operating.
- Shanghai Century Publishing Group established.
- Shanghai Daily newspaper begins publication.
- Shanghai public transport card launched.
- 2000
- International Ocean Shipping Building, World Finance Tower, and Bank of China Tower constructed.
- Fireworks Festival begins.
- Population: 16,407,700.[23]
21st century
2000s
- 2001
- Chen Liangyu becomes mayor.
- Plaza 66 and Pudong International Information Port built.
- Shanghai Film Group Corporation in business.
- Benelux Business Association established.
- 2002
- Chen Liangyu becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Shanghai Ocean Aquarium and Super Brand Mall open.
- Shanghai Fashion Week begins.[31]
- Shanghai Golden Eagles baseball team formed.
- 2003
- Han Zheng becomes mayor.
- Lupu Bridge opens.
- Tomorrow Square, Shanghai Dong Hai Plaza, Aurora Plaza, and Raffles Square built.
- Nanhui New City construction begins.
- 2004
- Shanghai Maglev Train begins operating.
- Shanghai Railway Museum and Shanghai International Circuit open.
- Chinese Grand Prix begins.
- 2005
- Shanghai Institute of Visual Art and Shanghai City Symphonic Orchestra established.
- Donghai Bridge, Shimao International Plaza, Grand Gateway Shanghai, Longemont Shanghai, Citigroup Tower, and Bank of Shanghai Headquarters built.
- Shanghai Oriental Art Center and Qi Zhong Stadium inaugurated.
- 2006
- Han Zheng becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- Shanghai pension scandal.
- Island6 Art Center opens.
- Chenghuang Miao (temple) restored.
- PLA Unit 61398 active (approximate date).[32]
- 2007
- Xi Jinping becomes Party Committee Secretary, succeeded by Yu Zhengsheng.
- Oasis Skyway Garden Hotel built.
- 2008 - Shanghai World Financial Center, One Lujiazui, and Zhongrong Jasper Tower built.
- 2009
- Shanghai Pride begins.
- Shanghai Yangtze River Tunnel and Bridge and Happy Valley (amusement park) open.
- Shanghai Masters tennis tournament held.
2010s
- 2010
- Expo 2010 Shanghai China (world expo) held.
- Shanghai Arena opens.
- Minpu Bridge and Shanghai Wheelock Square built.
- 15 November: Fire on Jiaozhou Road, Jing'an District.
- Population: 23,019,148.[23]
- 2011
- Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway begins operating.
- Huamin King Tower built.
- 2012
- November: Han Zheng becomes Party Committee Secretary.
- December: Yang Xiong becomes mayor.
- Power Station of Art opens.
- Turkish Chamber of Commerce established.
- 2014
- 31 December: 2014 Shanghai stampede
- 2016
- June 16: Shanghai Disneyland Park opened.
- 2017
- 26 April : Shanghai Tower officially opened its sightseeing deck to the public.[33]
- 10 June: Protest against changes to housing regulations by the municipal authorities on Nanjing Road[34]
See also
- History of Shanghai
- List of historic buildings in Shanghai
- List of administrative divisions of Shanghai
- List of township-level divisions of Shanghai
- List of Shanghai Metro stations
- List of universities and colleges in Shanghai
- Major National Historical and Cultural Sites (Shanghai)
- List of economic and technological development zones in Shanghai
- Urbanization in China
References
- ^ a b c d e f "History of Shanghai". China. Lonely Planet. Retrieved March 4, 2013.
- ^ a b c d Madrolle 1912.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Britannica 1910.
- ^ "WorldCat". USA: Online Computer Library Center. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f Encyclopedia of Shanghai 2010.
- ^ a b c Pearce 2011.
- ^ a b Bullock 1884.
- ^ Xiaoqing Ye 2003.
- ^ Celebration of Her Britannic Majesty's Diamond Jubilee at Shanghai, Shanghai: Shanghai Mercury Office, 1897, OL 25295344M
- ^ a b c Zheng 2009.
- ^ A. W. Bahr (1911), Old Chinese porcelain and works of art in China, London: Cassell and Company, OCLC 2271574, OL 6536418M
- ^ Des Forges 2007.
- ^ Richard Abel, ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of Early Cinema. UK: Taylor & Francis.
- ^ Lawrence R. Sullivan (2012). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Communist Party. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7225-7.
- ^ Yingjin Zhang 1999.
- ^ Chung 2007.
- ^ Yin Xu & Xiaoqun Xu 2003.
- ^ Hanchao Lu 2004.
- ^ a b "CinemaTreasures.org". Los Angeles: Cinema Treasures LLC. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
- ^ Kreissler 1989.
- ^ "Shanghai Women's Federation". Retrieved 5 March 2013.
- ^ "Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1955. New York: Statistical Office of the United Nations.
- ^ a b c d e "Basic Statistics on National Population Census". Shanghai Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
- ^ Wing Chung Ho 2006.
- ^ United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistical Office (1976). "Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1975. New York, NY. pp. 253–279.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "San Francisco Sister Cities". USA: City & County of San Francisco. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
- ^ "Shanghai Bar Association to expand membership". Australasian Legal Business. Thomson Reuters. 2010.
- ^ United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistical Office (1987). "Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". 1985 Demographic Yearbook. New York. pp. 247–289.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Turmoil in China; In Shanghai, Protesters Turn Defiant". New York Times. June 10, 1989.
- ^ "About Us". www.austchamshanghai.com. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
- ^ "Shanghai Fashion Week, 10 Years and Counting, Kicks Off". Wall Street Journal. 18 October 2012.
- ^ "Hello, Unit 61398". The Economist. 19 February 2013.
- ^ "Shanghai Tower offers airy city views". China Daily.
- ^ "Rare public protest in China's Shanghai over property rule change". Reuters. Retrieved 2017-06-11.
Bibliography
Published in the 19th century
- S. Wells Williams (1863), "Port of Shanghai", Chinese Commercial Guide (5th ed.), Hongkong: A. Shortrede & Co
- Charles J. Bullock (1884), "Yangtse Kiang: Shanghai", China Sea Directory (2nd ed.), London: Admiralty Hydrographic Office
- J.W. MacLellan (1889), Story of Shanghai, from the Opening of the Port to Foreign Trade, North-China Herald Office, OCLC 16835850, OL 23452930M
Published in the 20th century
- A.M. Murray (1907), "Shanghai and the 'Yellow Peril'", Imperial outposts from a strategical and commercial aspect, London: John Murray
- Arnold Wright, ed. (1908), "Shanghai", Twentieth century impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other treaty ports of China, London: Lloyd's Greater Britain Pub. Co.
- Carlos Augusto Montalto de Jesus (1909), Historic Shanghai, Shanghai: Shanghai Mercury, OCLC 5339784, OL 7016345M
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). 1910. pp. 799–801. .
- Claudius Madrolle (1912), "Shang-hai", Northern China, Paris: Hachette & Company, OCLC 8741409
- Mary Louise Ninde Gamewell (1916), The Gateway to China: Pictures of Shanghai, New York: Fleming H. Revell Company, OCLC 394602, OL 6593310M
- All About Shanghai. Shanghai: University Press. 1934.
- Rhoads Murphey (1953), Shanghai: Key to Modern China, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, OCLC 16740238
- Rhoads Murphey (1988). "Shanghai". In Mattei Dogan and John D. Kasarda (ed.). The Metropolis Era. Mega-Cities. Sage. ISBN 0803937903.
- Robert Eng (1989), "Transformation of a Semi-Colonial Port City: Shanghai, 1843-1941", in Frank Broeze (ed.), Brides of the Sea: Port Cities of Asia from the 16th-20th Centuries, Univ of Hawaii Press, ISBN 9780824812669
- Françoise Kreissler (1989). "La presse des refugies allemands a Shanghai". L'action culturelle allemande en Chine de la fin du 19e siècle à la Seconde Guerre mondiale (in French). Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme Paris.
- Tan Chenchang (1994), "Shanghai shi yanjiu sishinian (1949-1989)" [Forty years of historical research on Shanghai (1949-1989)], Jindai Shanghai tansuo lu (A record of explorations of modern Shanghai) (in Chinese), Shanghai
- Takahashi Kosuke and Furuye Tadao, ed. (1995). Shanhai shi (in Japanese). Tokyo. ISBN 4497954471.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Schellinger and Salkin, ed. (1996). "Shanghai". International Dictionary of Historic Places: Asia and Oceania. UK: Routledge. ISBN 9781884964046.
- Christian Henriot and Zheng Zu'an (1999). Altas de Shanghai: Espaces et representations de 1849 a nos jours (in French). Paris.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Yingjin Zhang (1999). Cinema & Urban Culture in Shanghai, 1922-1943. Stanford University Press.
- David Fraser, “Inventing Oasis: Luxury Housing Advertisements and Reconfiguring Domestic Space in Shanghai,” chapter 2 in The Consumer Revolution in Urban China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000) 25-53.
Published in the 21st century
- 2000s
- Bradley Mayhew (2001), Shanghai, Lonely Planet, OL 8314702M
- Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom (2001). "New Approaches to Old Shanghai: A Review Essay". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 32.
- "Shanghai". Understanding Slums: Case Studies for the Global Report 2003. United Nations Human Settlements Programme and University College London. 2003.
- Yin Xu; Xiaoqun Xu (2003). "Becoming Professional: Chinese Accountants in early 20th Century Shanghai". Accounting Historians Journal. 30.
- Xiaoqing Ye (2003), The Dianshizhai Pictorial: Shanghai Urban Life, 1884-1898, Center for Chinese Studies, The University of Michigan, ISBN 9780892641628
- Hanchao Lu (2004), Beyond the Neon Lights: Everyday Shanghai in the Early Twentieth Century, University of California Press, ISBN 9780520243781
- Weiping Wu and Shahid Yusuf (2004). "Shanghai". In Josef Gugler (ed.). World Cities beyond the West: Globalization, Development, and Inequality. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521830036.
- Piper Gaubatz, “Globalization and the Development of New Central Business Districts in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou,” chapter 6 in Restructuring the Chinese City: Changing Society, Economy and Space (New York: Routledge, 2005) 98-121.
- Wing Chung Ho (2006). "From Resistance to Collective Action in a Shanghai Socialist "Model Community": From the Late 1940s to Early 1970s". Journal of Social History. 40.
- Stephanie Po-Yin Chung (2007). "Moguls of the Chinese Cinema: The Story of the Shaw Brothers in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore, 1924-2002". Modern Asian Studies. 41 (4): 665–682. doi:10.1017/s0026749x06002423. S2CID 145666838.
- Alexander Townsend Des Forges (2007). Mediasphere ShangHai: The Aesthetics of Cultural Production. University of Hawaii Press.
- Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom (2007). "Is Global Shanghai "Good to Think"? Thoughts on Comparative History and Post-Socialist Cities". Journal of World History.
- Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom (2008), Global Shanghai, 1850 - 2010, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, ISBN 9780415213271
- Jane Zheng (2009). "Private Tutorial Art Schools in the Shanghai Market Economy: The Shanghai Art School, 1913-1919". Modern China. 35.
- 2010s
- Shanghai, San Francisco: Asian Art Museum, Shanghai Museum, 2010, OL 24338798M
- "Encyclopedia of Shanghai". Shanghai Municipal Government. 2010. Archived from the original on 2015-01-10.
- Nick Pearce (2011). "Shanghai 1908: A. W. Bahr and China's First Art Exhibition". West 86th. 18.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shanghai.
- Items related to Shanghai, various dates (via Digital Public Library of America).