Nanjing, an ancient
metropolis of six different dynasties, is a city of mountains, waters and green
trees. Called Ning for short and Jinling in ancient times, Nanjing is the
capital of Jiangsu Province,
situated in the western part. It is a central city in western part of the lower
reaches of the Yangtze River Delta and has beautiful sceneries. With a downtown
area of 860 square kilometers and a population of more than 3 million people,
Nanjing spans the southern and
northern sides of the Yangtze River.
Nanjing took shape
at the confluence of the Yangtze and Qinhuaihe rivers. Goujian, King of Yue
State, had a city built by the Qinhuaihe and named it Yuecheng 2,500 years ago.
Later the Chu State had a city called Jinling erected at
the foot of Qingliangshan Hill. Yuecheng and Jinling were the embryonic forms of
Nanjing. Later, it successively
became the capital of the Eastern Wu State during the Three Kingdoms Period
(220-280), the Eastern Jin Dynasty (317-420), and the states of Song, Qi, Liang
and Chen during the Southern Dynasty (420-589). In addition, the Southern Tang
and Ming dynasties, the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, and even the Kuomingdang
kaiserdom all set their capitals here.
The Six Dynasties (from the beginning of the
3rd century to the end of the 6th century) were the prime period of Nanjing. After the downfall of Western Jin,
North China was controlled by
chieftains of some nomads. Many aristocrats, men of letters, craftsmen thronged
to the south, promoting the development of culture, economy, and crafts and
technology. And Nanjing, the
biggest city of the time, became a new cultural center in ancient China.
The modern new Nanjing is not only the political, economic
and cultural center in Jiangsu
Province, but also the most
important transportation and communications hub in East
China. Besides, it is an international commercial center
of the Yangtze River Delta, next to Shanghai.