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Tianjin, although rich in natural and historical sights, is largely dwarfed by its
titanic neighbor Beijing as a tourist destination. However, Tianjin boasts a history as
long as, if not longer than Beijing. What"s more, with less tourist crowd invasion,
Tianjin can still be viewed as a traditional northern Chinese city because of both the
well kept folklore and the historical sites without too many renovations. Tianjin is nicest for its varied and interesting buildings and makes an ideal long
weekend trip for those bored of the more concrete Beijing. From the thousand-year-old
wooden Temple of Solitary Joy to the
beautiful Grand Mosque, architecture
lovers will relish this trip. Historically the city also has a plentiful supply of
interest, inhabited as it has been for over 2500 years. Most interestingly for Western
tourists, parts of the town were ceded to Westerners in the Treaty of Tientsin in 1858,
and the architecture in a small area of downtown Tianjin, south of the river and centered
around Zhongxin Park still reflects this. The area also holds a lot of religious interest, both Western and Asian. The mosque, as
well as the imposing Notre Dame des
Victoires, are of particular beauty and active significance. For the Chinese, although
not overtly religious as such, the Confucius
Temple is an obvious area of pilgrimage, as, for the Buddhists, Mount Pan is. For those who have not yet become true heroes (Those who do not reach the Great Wall
are not true heroes: Bu dao changcheng, fei hao han), there is also a section of
the Great Wall here, that is normally
quieter than its Beijing cousins. It should be noted that another major reason for coming
to Tianjin is for the shopping here, the Antique Market (Jiuhuo shichang) is a
great place to wander, amongst old Mao badges and apparently genuine Ming vases - worth a
visit even for those not interested in purchase. |
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