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THE
GREAT WALL OF CHINA
6000 kilometres of Wonderful Wall By Jennifer Iveson
Building
of the Wall began over 9,000 years ago and was initially hundreds of miles of
separated fortifications built by various rulers of China's independent states.
But around 220 B.C., Shi Huang Di became the first emperor of a united China and
decided that the various walls needed to be fortified and joined together. He
ordered thousands of watchtowers to be built 12 metres tall and 12 square metres
at their base with 6-metre walls of granite joining them. For the surviving workers, the problem they faced was the ever-changing terrain as they travelled west. There wasn't always rock available, so they used earth and rubble that they pounded until it was hard. In other places the hills were so steep that oxen couldn't pull the carts of rock up to the building site, so the men themselves carried the rocks on their backs. In the desert, the wall was built using sand, pebbles and grass.
Whatever the
emperor's reason, he didn't live long enough to play it out. He died in 210 B.C.
and thanks to a lot of squabbling and deceit, his dynasty, called the Qin
dynasty, collapsed only four years later. The Han dynasty that followed used the
Wall effectively to ward off enemies, but after that dynasty's collapse, enemy
tribes gained power in the north, and held it for some 400 years. It was
refortified, and in the 13th century A.D., the Mongol invader Genghis Khan took
two years to break through it. When the Manchus
took control of China in 1644, the wall ceased to have military significance.
The empire now extended well north of the wall, and China's new enemies were to
come from a different direction - across the sea. Today, although the wall no
longer plays any role in China's defence system it has become a symbol of the
nation and the ingenuity and will of the people. To really appreciate the Great Wall, you must spend more than just one afternoon at it. There are so many sections, all with a different kind of appeal to the avid tourist. But be prepared to walk! There are sections where each step on the top of the wall is three feet high. Or you can be a little more adventurous like Robin and Louella Hanbury-Tenison who rode alongside the wall on horseback for 1,600 km. And if you're really extreme, you can follow in the footsteps of William Lindesay, an Englishman who ran for 2,470 km along the Great Wall and wrote a book, Alone on the Great Wall (Hodder & Stoughton 1989). More Introduction of the great wall of china: Great Wall in Beijing SiMaTai Great Wall SiMaTai Great Wall JianKou Great Wall MuTianYu Great Wall BaDaLing Great Wall Huanghuacheng great wall Juyong Guan Pass GuBeiKou Great wall Jinshanling great wall Underwater Great wall Great wall in North west China Wuwei Great Wall Great Wall at Hushan Dun Hua Great Wall Zhangye Great Wall Jiayu Pass Great Wall Yangguan Great Wall YanmenQuan Great Wall Yanmen Fortress great wall Shizuishan Great Wall Huang YaGuan great wall JiuQuan Great Wall WangXiaoTemple near great wall NiangziGuan pass Great wall in North east China Happy meeting fortress ShanHaiPass Great Wall Zhen Bei Tai Tower shimenzi Great wall Jiu MenKou Great Wall Pianguan pass Zijinguan Pass Great wall stories Why Build the great wall Lady Meng cry great wall Overhanging Great wall Ten brothers and the great wall Yang generals Special custom of Jiayu pass Wu SanHui and ChenYuanYuan wonder of the world beginning of the Great wall Magic of the Great wall Secrets of Great wall Great wall from space change of Great wall foreigner view of Great wall Great wall by radar Great wall Map of Great wall กก |
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