Jiuquan, Gansu Province
J iuquan, or ¡°Wine Spring,¡± is a major
stopover on the "Silk Road" northwestwards from Lanzhou, capital
of Gansu Province. From the second century B.C., commissioners and high-ranking
officers were dispatched by the rulers of Western Han Dynasty (306 B.C.- 34 A.D.) to
develop the region. As the traffic along the "Silk Road" became
busier and more important, the prefecture of Jiuquan was established more than 1,600 years
ago to protect this vital artery. On
a triumphant expedition, as legend has it, Huo Qubing, a celebrated commander of the
Western Han army, visited the town with his troops. Emperor Wudi had decreed that they
feast on wine, but there was not enough to go round.
Commander Huo then poured
his cup of wine into a spring so that it could be shared with his soldiers. That was
how the city got its name.
The city's Drum tower, erected in 343,
used to be called "Night Watchman's Tower" on the east city gate. As the city
expanded, it was edged into the inner city and its name was changed to "Drum
Tower." It is the only remaining structure of the many Marco Polo praised in his
writings.
A few miles away from the city stands
the Jiayuguan Pass, the
western end of the Great Wall. The Great Wall used to end at Yumen (about 50 miles to the
west of Jiayuguan) before the pass was abandoned during the Ming Dynasty. The walls in the
northwest region were originally constructed under the Han, and remains of the Han wall
have been found near Dunhuang, but the portions of the wall standing at Jiayuguan date
from the early Ming, and are about six centuries old. Standing
on the terrace of the gate tower, one can look back at the wall winding its way along the
mountain ridges. To the south are the snow-capped Qilian Mountains, and to the west, the
desert.
In a tomb chamber at Dingjiazha, Jiuquan,
are some of the country's earliest murals, dating back to the East Jin Dynasty (317-430 A.
D.). |