Monday, 28 July 2008

Shanghai: Prelude to The Chinese Silk Road

The Shanghai Monorail

The Silk Road starts in Xi’an not Shanghai, but we had to arrive in China somewhere, and there are no direct flights to Xi’an.


Shanghai is a gargantuan city. Until the 1980s it was largely confined to a corner of land between the western bank of the Huangpu River and the broad mouth of the Yangzi. In those days it was merely huge. Then it jumped the river and tower blocks played leapfrog with ring roads until they reached the East China Sea and what is now the site of Pudong International Airport.

We arrived in shanghai on the East China sea, at the start of journey that would take us as far west as China goes
Celebrating a wedding anniversary with an overnight flight to Shanghai may sound romantic but spending the night in over-close proximity to three hundred strangers inside a metal tube is anything but. We emerged, blinking and dozy, into the hot moist air and blinding hazy light of a Pudong morning and, dragging our cases behind us, followed signs to the maglev railway.

The maglev is one of the several wonders of modern Shanghai, but at first sight we could have just entered any metro system in the world. The carriage was new and clean and the seats seemed very blue. An LCD on the bulkhead told us the time, and, perhaps a little unusually, the speed. It read 0 km/hr.

Lynne on the maglev, bleary-eyed but ready to fly
We moved off soundlessly, the acceleration pushing us gently into our seats. At 100 km/hr we were keeping pace with the cars on the urban motorway beneath. At 200 km/hr they appeared to be dawdling. At 300 km/hr we rounded a bend, the tilt of the train sweeping us breathlessly over the roofs of the now apparently stationary cars. At 400 km/hr we passed a train going in the opposite direction. It was gone before we realised it was arriving. At 430 km/hr the numbers stopped changing and we were cruising. Shanghai may be vast, but the maglev goes only half way to the centre so the cruise was brief and soon we were watching the numbers fall back as the rest of Shanghai re-emerged from slow motion.

The Shanghai maglev reaches cruising speed
The terminal is above Long Yang Lu metro station but, burdened with cases, we decided to take a taxi. There was one taxi waiting, no queue and a policeman to marshal it. He asked our destination, scribbled something on a pad and ushered us into the cab. Tearing off the top sheet, he pushed it through the window. He had ringed a section which said, in English, ‘The Bund, pay no more than 40 Yuan’. In our experience Chinese taxi drivers are reliable and generally honest, but it was nice to know the city government was looking after us. 37 Yuan showed on the meter when we arrived, so 37 we paid. It is not customary to tip Chinese taxi drivers.

A Walk Along the Bund

Once checked in and showered there is only one thing a first time visitor to Shanghai should do and that is take a walk along the Bund.

‘Bund’ is derived from the Hindi ‘band’ meaning ‘embankment’. The Huangpu river frontage was the site of the original British Settlement which, by the 19th century, had developed into the International Settlement and become the financial hub of East Asia. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries a series of fine buildings were erected along what is still signed in English as ‘The Bund’ though it is known as Zhongshan Lu in Chinese. These temples to commerce faced a road, some parkland and a vast area of wharfs and jetties. The riverfront has long been cleared and the embankment raised as a flood defence. The widening of Zhongshan Lu to ten lanes in the 1990s, finished the parkland and the high rises of modern Shanghai have rather diminished the Bund, despite height restrictions in the immediate area. Plans are afoot to restore the gardens, and somehow allow for even more traffic, but work is just starting and the area is littered with roadworks and scaffolding.


Lynne on The Bund
The Bund may have lost its former glory, but it is still pleasant to walk along the embankment, dodging the traders offering trinkets and cyclists peddling chilled water, and looking at a waterfront resembling some strangely misplaced Liverpool. It seemed important to several passers-by that we should accompany them to purchase Rolex watches and Gucci handbags, but we preferred to stroll. On the other side of the embankment the river sparkled in the sun and trains of heavily laden barges slipped down or laboured up the broad Huangpu. Beyond the river, where there was once only slums and marshland, the Oriental Pearl TV tower and several more of Shanghai’s, indeed the world’s, tallest buildings dominated the skyline just as the neo-classical Bund had done a century before.

The Oriental Pearl Tower across the Huangpo River
Shanghai

Dinner in Zhapu Street

In the evening, two blocks from our hotel, we found the neon splendour of Zhapu Street, a purple phantasmagoria of a thoroughfare, full of parked cars and even fuller of restaurants. Some were fronted by huge glass aquaria where items from the menu swam backwards and forwards, tempting the diners. Between the restaurants were several ‘hairdressers’ that seemed to have no basins or hairdryers – or any other equipment - but did have a small shoal of scantily clad girls lounging behind the plate glass windows. Like the fish, they too were items on a menu of sorts.

Zhapu Steet, Shanghai
Down a side street we found trestle tables of food laid out on the pavement. We stopped at one and chose a couple of dishes; one of pork, one of eel. A sweating bare-chested man took them to a wok in a lean-to shed while his side-kick set up a table rather too far out in the road – westerners need to be prominently placed as we are considered good advertisements. We dined well, if a little in danger from passing motorcycles.

'Trestle tables of food laid out on the pavement'
Shanghai

The Bund Tourist Tunnel

In the morning we travelled under the river. The bridges crossing the Huangpu carry multiple lanes of traffic, but those without cars must use the metro or, possibly, The Bund Tourist Tunnel. For a fee ten times that of a metro ticket you can be transported under the river in a glass carriage on a horizontal funicular railway. The ten minute trip is accompanied by a 1960s style light show and sonorous declarations in Mandarin and English as the carriage passes through various geological strata. Only in China.....
Inside the Bund Tourist Tunnel
Shanghai
We surfaced on the Pudong side like water voles after a bad trip. Finding the Oriental Pearl TV tower is easy – just look upwards - though finding the Hyatt Hotel, whose Cloud 9 bar reputably offers a great view without the expense of the Oriental Pearl was not so easy.

The Oriental Pearl Tower

The Pudong new development is not built for pedestrians. Barren concrete walkways weave between, around and over building sites, high rises and multi-lane roads; the direct routes are reserved for motor vehicles. After a hot and frustrating half hour, we gave in and bought tickets for the Oriental Pearl Tower.

The long, carefully organised, queue moved steadily – the Chinese love this sort of thing – and soon we were barrelling upwards in a high-speed lift. The views over Shanghai are truly impressive. We wandered round slowly, looking at the bend in the Huangpu, the Suzhou Creek and the roof of our hotel.

Where the Suzhou Creek meets the Huangpo River
as seen from the Oriental Pearl Tower, Shanghai
Round the other side, we were eyeball to eyeball with the 421 metre Jin Mao Tower. Behind it the even taller Shanghai World Financial Centre, its top like a huge bottle opener, is the world’s second highest building, although at 492 metres its roof is the highest in the world (the Taipei 101 cheats by having a spire.) The 632 metre Shanghai Tower will dwarf them all, but is currently a building site between the Financial Centre and the Oriental Pearl. The Hyatt’s Cloud 9 bar is, we learned later, on floor 87 of the Jin Mao Tower. On the ground we had not even spotted a Hyatt sign.

Jin Mao Tower, Shanghai
At the foot of the Oriental Pearl is a small park with a jumble of food kiosks and long wooden tables set out in the shade of some trees. Eighty pence bought us each a bowl of noodles topped with a few slices of meat and drowned in a thin soup. Food is as important to the Chinese as it is to the French, and it is impressive the way even these kiosks take such care with their spicing – you just have to be careful not to crunch up the star anise.

Shanghai Old Town

Back through the Bund Site Seeing Tunnel, some hot, sweaty footslogging brought us to the Old Town.

Shanghai Old Town is either a perfectly preserved Ming city or a grossly over restored Chinese Disneyland, depending on whose opinion you seek. The cleanness of the streets, the perfection of the buildings and the awful tat being sold inside them, inclined us towards the second opinion. The place was heaving with tourists, overwhelmingly Chinese, and sometimes progress could only be made by literally pushing through the crowd whilst keeping a firm grip on your wallet and brushing off the continual suggestions that you urgently needed a Rolex watch or a Gucci bag. 

The Old Town, Shanghai

The Huxinting Teahouse


Everybody who is anybody that has visited Shanghai has supped a cuppa at the Huxinting teahouse. The anybodies include a certain Elizabeth Windsor, and if it is good enough for her Maj, then it must be good enough for us.

Clearly marked on the street map, the teahouse was harder to find than we expected, partly because of the crowds, but mainly because our map had misplaced it by just enough to cause confusion. Advice from a friendly local soon pointed us in the right direction, but before we set off she insisted on becoming the four thousandth person that day to attempt sell us a Rolex/Gucci. Already having our undivided attention, she was a little harder to brush off than most, but eventually we took our leave and, weaving and occasionally heaving our way through the multitude, headed in the direction she had indicated. 

The Huxinting Teahouse, Shanghai
Built as a summerhouse in the garden of a Ming dynasty mandarin, Huxinting was renovated and enlarged by cotton merchants in 1784 to serve as a brokerage hall. It became a teahouse in 1855. Its name means Heart of Lake Pavilion – or Mid-Lake Pavilion to a more prosaic translator. It is usually described as sitting in an ornamental lake and approached by a zigzag bridge, although neither are precisely true. The relative areas of building and water make it more a carp filled moat than a lake and the people-packed bridge has a series of ninety-degree corners rather than true zigzags. Demons, as everyone knows, cannot turn through right angles, so Ming builders took this elementary precaution as a matter of routine. The crowd crossing the bridge was apparently demon free – despite the Western view of the Chinese back in the good old days of the Red Guards and the Little Red Book.

We pushed open the wooden door and entered the hushed and panelled interior. For a second it was like an entering an old English pub, then we were accosted by a flunky, ushered up the creaking wooden stairs, installed at a table in an alcove and equipped with a bilingual tea list.

The quiet and calm contrasted dramatically with the frenzy outside, and we did not have to read far into the tea list before realising why. With cuppas starting at motorway service station prices and heading upwards to the Château Lafitte level, it was only the best healed of Shanghai residents who could afford to be there.

We ordered a green tea and a ‘rose scented puer’ from the cheaper end of the list. Every tea, we could see, was presented differently. Some were in small glass teapots where an appropriate flower floated, others in porcelain of greater or lesser size. Our green tea came in a cup with a lid. The ‘rose scented puer’ arrived in a tiny terracotta pot, with an even more minuscule cup for drinking out of. Along with this came a plate of tofu based nibbles.

Lynne in the Huxinting Teahouse, Shanghai
The price may have been reminiscent of a motorway service station, but nothing else was. The puer was delicately scented and amazingly refreshing, the green required skilful use of the lid to avoid a mouthful of leaves which floated as densely as pondweed, though rather more fragrantly. A young man stood by with a hot kettle, ever ready to refill our cup or pot. We watched the milling crowds through the wooden framed window as we sat among a Ming elegance enhanced beyond the dreams of the original owner by modern conveniences like air conditioning and efficient plumbing. We stayed more than an hour, cool, relaxed and, like the Mandarins of the past, detached from the struggles of the common people.

Unlike those Mandarins we decided to leave before the proletariat staged a revolution.


Features of some Shanghai Restaurants


Nearby a restaurant promised dumplings stuffed with ‘the ovaries and digestive organs of a crad’, a dish which may have lost something in translation.

What a treat
Around the corner a large window revealed a bevy of white suited and white hatted chefs stuffing the very dumplings and placing them in steamers. It looked more appetising than it read, but it was not time to eat yet.

Stuff those dumplings
Walking back to our hotel we watched the street vendors preparing ‘squid-on-a-stick’ and promised ourselves we would try it tomorrow. Halfway back, the green uniformed staff of a small restaurant were out on the pavement going through their pre-service warm up. A bored manager was choreographing a series of half-hearted jumps and some apparently random arm waving. There is a lot of this sort of thing in China, but this shower lacked the military precision we have observed outside branches of KFC.

Half-hearted jumps and some random arm waving, Shanghai
Shanghai Hotpot

We dined that night at a ‘hotpot’ restaurant a stone’s throw from the hotel. The hotpot is a circular metal bowl divided ying and yang style and placed on a burner set into the table. One side is filled with a light stock, the other with something richer and darker with chillies floating on top and blocks of tofu lurking below the surface. They also have a few undivided bowls and as the Chinese are convinced that all Europeans hate chillies, our first task was to persuade them we actually wanted one that offered both. Then, as usual, we were sat in the window as an advertisement. The menu was long and, thankfully, bilingual. We chose slices of pork, potatoes, taro, lotus root, a dish of mushrooms and a quantity of noodles, and cooked it in the hot pot, some in the chilli, some in the mild. An over-attentive waitress stood by to ensure the idiot foreigners did not set themselves on fire either from the equipment or the unaccustomed chillies. It was a good meal, though I would have preferred to experiment rather than be continually corrected by a fourteen year old, despite her winning smile. 

Hot pot, Shanghai
After dinner, we strolled through an area of low-rise buildings, several streets of crowded and dilapidated dwellings that represent an old Shanghai – hardly to be confused with the tarted up ‘Old City’ - that is fast disappearing. We did not then realise how fast, but when we returned nearly four weeks later, the demolition men had already moved in.

Near our hotel, we encountered a man sitting on the pavement on one of those tiny chairs which in England are confined to infant schools, but in China are favoured by those old people who spend their day playing cards in the shade. He was holding a hose that snaked back into the workshop behind and wearing nothing but his y-fronts. Work over, he was taking a meticulous if somewhat public bath before going home.

Looking across the Hunagpo River at night
Shanghai

Nanjing Street

Next morning we headed south down Suzhou Street, parallel to the Bund, until it met Nanjing Street where we turned right towards the heart of the city.

The streets here are narrow by Chinese standards and lack the usual grid pattern so a careful watch has to be kept for cars, push bikes and mopeds emerging from side streets and alleys at all sorts of angles. The bikes and mopeds present the greatest danger as they routinely ignore traffic lights and pedestrian crossing, and use either side of the road. Most lethal are the electric mopeds; they drift silently up behind you and can run you down before you know they are there.

On Suzhou Street we made a mental note of a restaurant offering Shanghai’s traditional pot-sticker dumplings and declined several offers of Rolex watches and Gucci handbags. Pot stickers are like the ubiquitous Jiaozi (a sort of over-stuffed ravioli) but instead of being steamed they are left to fry in – and indeed stick to - wide shallow pans. Lynne is not a great fan of Jiaozis anyway, and I was to discover that I prefer the steamed version. Not only are they healthier and taste better, but you do not run the risk of carelessly biting into them and spurting hot fat up your arm, into your eye and down your shirt.

Along Nanjing Steet the clamour to sell us watches and bags reached fever pitch but died down a little as we left the pedestrian shopping area and entered Renmin Park, the green, open space, claustrophobically surrounded by tall buildings. On the far side is the Shanghai museum.

The Shanghai Museum

There was a long queue at the museum that moved slowly, too slowly for some tastes so most early progress was made from people dropping out. It was mainly Chinese, but we found ourselves hemmed in by a group of wives and children from the British and American consulates. We learned some gossip, but regrettably few state secrets.

For the Olympics the government had declared that all museums would be free, so the hold-up could not involve tickets. It was, we eventually discovered, a matter of security. Metal detectors and X-ray machines were laboriously discovering that no terrorists wanted to see the exhibits that day. When it was our turn, they examined our water bottles and requested we drink from them. We did so without apparent discomfort and were waved through.

Outside the Shanghai Museum - the queue had gone by the time we left
And was the museum worth the wait? Well, the collection of money, from two thousand year old coins shaped like miniature scimitars, through great perforated weights that could be threaded on string, right up to the modern preference for grubby paper notes, was fascinating; the landscape paintings were somewhat repetitive, as Chinese landscape paintings tend to be; the textiles and pottery were similar to articles we had seen in the Shaanxi provincial museum in Xian some year ago, though the quality and shear antiquity of some of the exhibits could not fail to amaze; and the calligraphy collection was vast. I am never sure if calligraphy is better appreciated when you can or cannot read what is written. There is some historical interest, I suppose, and I can understand the point of Islamic calligraphers who are denied any representational art, but as far as modern calligraphy is concerned I have only three words: buy a computer.

To the Former French Concession on the Shanghai Metro

We escaped and made our way down into the metro system. The Shanghai metro was built by the same company as Hong Kong’s excellent MTR so speed, efficiency and cleanliness were guaranteed. At mid-afternoon it was also as crowded as Hong Kong in the rush hour.

We emerged in the former French Concession, southwest of the old British Settlement. It is generally said that there is nothing very French about the French Concession, and between the wars it was largely populated by impoverished White Russians. This may be true but turning off the main drag, we wandered through streets edged with railings and shaded by mature plane trees. The villas behind the railings might have been substantial but it was architecture on a more human scale than in much of Shanghai. It was almost possible to imagine we were in a well-off residential district of a French provincial town – albeit one with a surprisingly large Chinese community.

The House of Dr Sun Yatsen

Dr Sun Yatsen and Zhou Enlai both had houses here. Sun Yatsen was the first post-imperial president of China and as he died in 1925, long before the civil war between Mao’s communists and Chiang Kaishek’s Guomintang, he is considered a hero by both sides. Dr Sun’s French style house is modest, but comfortable and packed with memorabilia which was studied reverentially by the Chinese visitors. [We visited the Sun Yatsen Mausoluem in Nanjing in 2016]

Me and Dr Sun Yatsen
Shanghai

The House of Zhou Enlai

Zhou Enlai was Mao’s number two for many years and was a calming influence during the madness of the Cultural Revolution. His personal interventions are credited with saving many historical monuments from the frenzy of the Red Guards, including the magnificent Potala Palace in Lhasa. He lived in a substantial pile on the same street as Sun Yatsen.

Lynne outside Zhou Enlai's house
Shanghai

Dim Sum Breakfasts

The next morning we set off for the airport and the real start of the Silk Road, but not before our third splendid breakfast. The American Breakfast Bar in the New Asia Hotel is on the eighth floor, but we long ago realised that Chinese American breakfasts should be avoided. Do not think here of maple syrup and stacks of pancakes, think rather of a skilled Chinese chef cooking unfamiliar cuts of meat and bizarre egg dishes that he neither likes nor understands. Far better to take a Chinese breakfast and let a skilled Chinese chef do what he does best.

On the ground floor was a restaurant serving the best of all Chinese breakfasts, that Cantonese version of all-day lunch known as Dim Sum. It was here we presented ourselves on the first morning. ‘American breakfast eighth floor’ said the maitre d’. ‘We want to eat here,’ we said. ‘You have to pay’, he said, but as we had booked room only that made no difference. ‘No coffee’ he said. We shrugged. ‘Only chopsticks’. We shrugged again, in China you learn to use chopsticks or starve. ‘No western food at all.’ he said despairingly. Seeing he could not make us go away, he resigned himself to the situation, showed us to a seat and organised a minion to bring a pot of tea. On day one, we were unsure whether he resented out attitude or was quietly pleased, but by day three we were being treated like old friends.

The trick with a Dim Sum breakfast is to first attract ‘Congee Lady’. This is the girl who wheels round a trolley bearing vats of Congee, as it is called in Hong Kong, or Zhou, to give it its Mandarin name. Zhou is rice soup, which can be thin and unpalatable, but in Dim Sum comes thickened with gobs of gelatine, strands of green vegetable and lumps of chicken. It is a fine way to start a cold day - or a hot day in an air-conditioned restaurant. Then there are the trolleys of steamers containing dumplings constructed from various sorts of noodles with equally varied fillings; beef, pork, prawn, crab, taro and many more. It is not always possible to know what you are buying, but they are all wonderful, as are the trays of pastries wrapped round fruit, custard, red and yellow beans or a host of things we could not identify. Not every dish is a great success though, the pickled squids’ heads offer remarkably little to eat, their tentacles as edible as pipe cleaners. Lynne plays a vital moderating role. Left to myself I would buy more and yet more until I was surrounded by a hundred plates of good things that I was just too full to eat. I need her to stop me. She would, however, never stop me buying chickens’ feet. Some people sneer at chickens’ feet: ‘the flavour depends on what they’ve been standing in’ as my friend Brian would say, but slow cooked in black bean sauce with ginger, chilli and garlic they are toe-curlingly wonderful. Just suck off the richly flavoured outer skin to get at the unctuous chickeny-ness within, and then spit out the bits of cartilage. There is no better way to prepare for a flight to Xian…


Sunday, 20 July 2008

The Silk Road in China : The What, the When and the Where

This post, and our journey predated President Xi, and his (genocidal?) crack down in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. The western half of our journey we be very different today, if it is even possible

We will shortly be setting out to travel across China following the route of the Silk Road. And that is a statement that needs some explanation so here it is....

China, Rome and Silk

China

Two thousand years ago a trade route was established between China and Rome, the greatest empires of the east and west. This route came to be known as The Silk Road, although Chinese silk may have found its way to Egypt a thousand years earlier.

Xi'an, the Eastern End of the Route

In 221 BCE Qin Shi Huang, he of the Terracotta Warriors, united the core of what is now China, built huge chunks of the ‘Great Wall’ and settled his capital at Chang’an, the modern Xi’an. His dynasty was, however, short lived and in 206 BC the rebel warlord Liu Bang founded the Han dynasty.

The guard at the mausoleum of Qin Shi Huang
(Either these are 21st century re-enactors or I have a time machine. Guess which)

The Han ruled a united China for over four hundred years and defined the national identity to such an extent that China’s main ethnic group still describe themselves as ‘Han Chinese’.

Zhang Qian

The Wall had been built as a defence against harassment from the Huns, a Turkic people who would later turn their attention to ravaging Europe. Hun prisoners told The Han Emperor Wu of their battles against the Yuezhi, a people dwelling in the far west beyond the Taklamakan desert. In 138 BCE, wishing to make common cause against the Huns, Emperor Wu sent a young man called Zhang Qian as his ambassador to the Yuezhi.

Qin Shi Huang's Terracotta Army, Xi'an

Thirteen years later, when all assumed he was dead, Zhang Qian returned. He had failed in his objective, but instead brought back strange tales of far-flung lands. He had visited the kingdoms of Ferghana, Samarkand and Bukhara, in what is now Uzbekistan, and he told stories of the even more distant and fabulous realm of Persia, and beyond that, unimaginably far away, the land of Li-jien – almost certainly Rome.

So the Chinese discovered the existence of Rome, now all that was needed for the Silk Road to come into existence was for the Romans to discover silk and China.

The Battle of Carrhae

Exactly how this came about is unclear, but the battle of Carrhae in Eastern Turkey is reputed to have played an important part in the story. In 53 BC Marcus Licinius Crassus, whose only previous command had been against Spartacus twenty years earlier, was leading an expedition against the Parthians. Feeling his inferiority to the other members of Rome’s ruling triumvirate, Julius Caesar and Pompey, he was out to prove his military virility. Through inexperience, he allowed himself to be lured onto unsuitable terrain by a much smaller Parthian force and when attacked, ordered his troops into inappropriate formations. Already tired and suffering from sunstroke, they found themselves pinned down, often quite literally, by the Parthian’s mounted archers. Whether the Romans finally turned and fled because of the silk banners waved by the charging Parthian cataphracts is a moot point. I am inclined to believe the Parthian victory was the result of superior tactics rather than superior textiles, but according to legend this was the Romans first encounter with silk. Legionaries captured at Carrhae were subsequently pressed into guarding the Parthians’ eastern borders where they bought silk from Chinese traders following in the wake of Zhang Qian.

Silk Reaches Rome

However it happened, there is no doubt that when silk ‘as light as a cloud’ and ‘as translucent as ice’ reached Rome it caused considerable excitement. Via the Parthians, and a host of other intermediaries, trade was established with the land of ‘Seres’ where, as Pliny wrote, the inhabitants ‘are famous for the wool of their forests; removing the down from the leaves with water’.

Despite, or perhaps because of, their ignorance of how it was made, the Romans developed an inexhaustible appetite for silk. In AD14, the Emperor Tiberius banned it as an instrument of decadence, but he could not hold back the tide. In 380 the historian Marcellus Ammianus noted that ‘the passion for silk, once confined to the nobility, has spread to all classes’ and was contributing to a balance of payments problem.

Spinning silk, Hotan

The Silk Road Becomes a Major Trade Route

If silk had been the only commodity traded then the Silk Road would not have survived the fall of Rome. The traffic, however, was far more diverse and far from one way. Westward came furs, ceramics, iron, lacquer, cinnamon, bronze objects and, believe it or not, rhubarb. Eastwards went gold, woollen and linen textiles, ivory, coral, amber, asbestos and also glass. The Chinese may have had paper and gun powder before Europe had even dreamed of these things, but the Romans were way ahead in glass making, a technology which did not reach China until the fifth century. And it was not just goods that travelled, but ideas too. Buddhism swept into China in the seventh century along the Silk Road, followed three centuries later by Islam.

It was the goods rather than the traders that did the bulk of the moving. A merchant bought supplies, transported them a couple of hundred kilometres and sold them on. No Romans manned stalls in the markets of Xi’an, no Chinese traders were seen in the forum, although the historian Florus reports that Chinese ambassadors were received in Rome as early as the reign of Augustus (27 BCE to 14 CE).

There were cities, particularly around the oases of the Taklamakan desert, that owed not just their prosperity but their entire existence to the trade passing through them. Those who controlled the routes controlled the taxes and this motivated the Chinese to push west across the Gobi and around the Taklamakan to incorporate what is now the Xinjiang Uigur Autonomous Region into their empire. Chinese control here has often been tenuous and frequently been disputed, indeed it still is.

The remains of the silk road city of Jaiohe, Turpan Oasis

By 1278 Kublai Khan controlled an empire that stretched way beyond China’s borders. The country was open to travellers, traders and missionaries. Arabs and Venetians could be found in Chinese ports and Marco Polo described the lifestyle and treasures of the imperial court.

The Decline of the Silk Road

But the secret of sericulture had already been smuggled west, and this climate of openness encouraged the development of new sea routes for other goods. It was the beginning of the end for the Silk Road. In 1368 the Kublai Khan’s Yuan dynasty, gave way to the Ming dynasty and China entered a period of isolation that was to last over six hundred years. Overland trade ground to a halt. Whole cities around the Taklamakan were evacuated and the desert slowly re-assimilated their mud bricks. Great centres of art and civilization disappeared and were forgotten until European explorers arrived at the end of the nineteenth century.

Surprisingly, the name 'Silk Road' - more precisely Der Seidenstrasse – was only coined in 1877 by the German geographer Ferdinand von Richthofen, uncle of the Red Baron. The title, though both handy and romantic, is doubly misleading; silk was not the only commodity traded, and it was also not one road, but a series of routes across the Asian landmass.


Our Forthcoming Journey

Our self-imposed task in July/August 2008 was to travel the Chinese section of the Silk Road. We would fly from Shanghai to Xi’an and from there pass through the Hexi corridor by train to Jiayuguan and continue by car to Dunhuang in the Gobi desert, where there was a major bifurcation. The Gobi is benign, as deserts go; water is easy to find and the climate is merely extreme. Beyond that are the arid wastes of the Taklamakan, where there is no water and the summer heat and winter cold make ‘extreme’ seem temperate. The northern road round the Taklamakan was easier, though more troubled by bandits, as it hopped from oasis to oasis along the northern edge of the desert below the Tian Shan Mountains. The southern Silk Road was more rugged but safer, plotting a course between the desert and the Kunlun Shan, the northern rim of the Tibetan plateau.

The Dunhuang Oasis

In an age without bandits, although the authorities live in constant fear of terrorists, we travelled the northern route by train from Dunhuang to Turpan and then to Kashgar (Kashi), where the two roads rejoin at the western tip of China. We then returned some five hundred kilometres along the southern route to (K)hotan before flying north across the desert to the regional capital at Urumqi and thence home. We wanted to see what has become of the glories of the Silk Road, and learn something about the lives of the people who live there now.

China with the stopping points on our journey ringed in red

Peter Hopkirk’s Foreign Devils on the Silk Road describes in detail the effect 18th century European explorer/merchants/plunderers had on the what remained of the Silk Road Culture. While I would recommend the book, I must take issue with his final comments ‘In 1979' he wrote, 'when the first party of British tourists stepped down from their coach at the Caves of the Thousand Buddhas …. the last shred of mystery and romance had finally gone from the Silk Road.

The Cave of a Thousand Buddhas, Mogao, Dunhuang

No Pdeter. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

Any person who walks among the ruins of Melikawat or Gaochang and does not feel their feet rummaging among the bones of long dead civilizations has little brain and no imagination. Any European who can stand in Kashgar’s Id Kah Square and not feel the thrill of being somewhere totally foreign and utterly remote should probably have stayed at home. Yes, we travelled in air-conditioned cars and by railway trains not camel trains; maybe we did not go without water or food when we became lost in the desert, but we did visit places that see few other foreigners, and we did eat and travel with the descendants of those who made The Silk Road the greatest trade route on earth. True, no physical privations were involved, but no mystery? no romance? Pull the other one, Peter.

The Chinese Silk Road
Prelude: Shanghai
1 Xi'an
2 Jiayuguan: A Total Eclipse and the Last Fortress under Heaven
3 Dunhuang: Dunes in the Gobi
4 Turpan: Ruined Cities of the Silk Road
5 Kashgar (1):  The Sunday Market and the Former British Consulate
6 Kashgar (2): Upal, Abakh Hoja and the Old Town
7 Hotan (or Khotan or Hetian): City in the Desert
8 Urumqi: A By-word for Remoteness
Postscript

Saturday, 31 May 2008

Cardingmill Valley to Great Whitley: The South West Odyssey Days 1 to 3

The South West Odyssey was a long distance walk.
Five like-minded people started in 2008 from the Cardingmill Valley in Shropshire and by walking three days a year finished at Start Bay on the South Devon Coast in May 2019
.

The First Three Days of an Epic Walk that would take 12 Years to Complete

29-May-2008

Shropshire

Day 1: The South West Odyssey Starts by Heading East across the Stretton Gap, over Caer Caradoc and along Wenlock Edge

The South West Odyssey started on the 29th of May 2008 from the Cardingmill Valley car park on the edge of the Long Mynd\in Shropshire.

David, Francis, Alison, Mike & Brian ready to Odyss

Most walkers ascend the valley onto the Long Mynd but, being perverse, we descended towards and then across the Stretton Gap before climbing Caer Caradoc.

Walking down the Cardingmill Valley

At 459 metres Caer Caradoc is not the biggest hill in the world. If it was twice as high it would be classified as a Munro, but its 270 metre prominence is more than enough for it to qualify as one of England's 176 Marilyns. It is also more than enough to raise the heart rate and to provide a fine view from the top. According to legend the Iron (or late Bronze) Age hill fort on the summit is the site of the last stand of Caractacus (or Caradoc) against the invading Romans; hence the name of the hill. Nice story, but probably untrue.

Alison atop Caer Caradoc with the Stretton Gap and Long Mynd as a backdrop

Dropping down from Caer Caradoc we skirted Cardington Hill and made our way to Longville in the Dale, where the Longville Arms provided a welcome and much needed pint or two of lunch. Revived, we continued west to Wenlock Edge. A coral reef on the ocean floor in Silurian times, Wenlock Edge is now a hump of limestone running across 25 kilometres of Shropshire countryside. Although it has inspired a poem by A.E. Houseman (On Wenlock Edge) and a song cycle by Vaughan Williams, the word I associate with Wenlock Edge is 'mud' which is neither poetic nor musical. The footpaths on the top double as bridle ways and during a wet spring horses had churned the surface to a considerable depth. We wallowed rather than walked along Wenlock Edge.

Climbing onto Wenlock Edge

Leaving Wenlock Edge, field paths took us to Brocton and the end of the day's walk, some 18 km east of our starting point. We spent the night at the Fox Inn at Much Wenlock.

30-May-2008

Day 2: An Amphibian Surprise and Mislaid Binoculars on the Way to Cleobury Mortimer


Brocton - has Alison noticed we've gone?

Setting off again from Brocton we crossed field paths through Skimblescott and Great Oxenbold, villages that are actually smaller than their names.

The path to Great Oxenbold

We then crossed parkland to the larger village of Burwarton where the Boyne Arms provided us with a glass of lunch and an Amphibian Surprise.

Brian is unfazed by the Amphibian Surprise

We left Burwarton and survived the heroic crossing of the Cressell Brook.

The Crossing of Cresell Brook

Our journey continued along a grassy bank that had once been a railway line. At some point we stepped carefully from one OS map to the next. Francis put his binoculars down on the bank, changed the map in his map case and strode off, leaving 800 pounds worth of optical equipment lying in the grass.

Along the disused railway

Half an hour later he spotted an interesting bird and was startled to find he had nothing to look at it through. We phoned the cavalry (Lynne, Hilary and Alison T) and arranged that Mike and Francis would walk back, retrieve the binoculars and make their way to the nearest tarmac road where they could be picked up. Meanwhile Brian, Alison and I would continue to a point where our path crossed an appropriate road and wait there until Mike and Francis were delivered. There were plenty of opportunities for the plan to go wrong, starting with the assumption that it would be easy to find a pair of binoculars sitting quietly in the long grass.

Brian, Alison and I reached the rendezvous point, waited for five minutes and then a car appeared and Mike and Francis were back with us, Francis clutching his precious binoculars. The plan had been perfectly executed. [You might think Francis would learn from his experience, but on April Fool's Day 2010 he left them outside a pub in Telford. Fortune - and the pub landlord - saw to it that Francis and binoculars were again reunited.]

I was probably not the only one feeling footsore and weary by the time we reached Cleobury Mortimer where we spent the night in the Kings Arms.

The King's Arm, Cleobury Mortimer

31-May-2008

Day 3: Meadows, Skylarks and the Abberley Clock Tower

Cleobury Mortimer is, with 2000 residents, the second smallest town in Shropshire. Among its many charms is a church with a twisted spire.....

St Mary's, Cleobury Mortimer with its twisted spire.

....but it's not half as twisted as Chesterfield.

We spent the morning walking through rolling woodland and crossing several small rivers....

Crossing the River Rea

...and then across field paths and wildflower meadows.

Skylarks are still a common feature of Shropshire farm land. They fluttered above us, singing their hearts out and trying to lead us away from their nests. It is very pretty, but a waste of time and energy as humans do not eat skylark eggs- you would need too many to make an omelette! Nor do we ever find their nests - except hawk-eyed Mike did, spotting one half-hidden in the long grass at a field edge. An adult sat on a clutch of eggs, eyeing us nervously. In an ideal world you would now scroll down to a picture of a skylark on its nest. I did not want to disturb the bird by using flash, so I photographed it without. The results were dark, very dark indeed, so instead I will show you a picture of a wild flower meadow.

Meadow near Clows Top

Worcestershire
At some point we crossed into into Worcestershire and the final afternoon was brief stroll across more fields and through a wood and across the Abberley estate. There has been a manor house of some sort at Abberley since the early fourteenth century, or even longer. The current Abberley Hall was built in Italianate style for Birmingham banker John Lewis Moilliet who acquired the estate in 1836. In 1867 the house was sold to Joseph Jones, an Oldham cotton magnate. His son, John Joseph Jones, built the remarkable clock tower in 1885. He boasted that none of his farm workers would knock off early as the all knew what the time was. Perhaps it might have been better if he paid his workers enough to own a watch each rather than spending his money on vanity projects.

Abberley Clock Tower

Abberley Hall now houses a preparatory school, and Saturday afternoon games were in full swing as we walked past. We emerged on the A443 and made our way to Great Whitley and the conclusion of the first part of the Odyssey.

Relieved to have reached the end
from Left to right: Alison, Mike, Alison T, Brian, Francis, Lynne and me
(so Hilary must have taken the picture)

The South West Odyssey (English Branch)
Introduction
Day 1 to 3 (2008) Cardingmill Valley to Great Whitley
Day 4 to 6 (2009) Great Whitely to Upton-on-Severn via the Malvern Ridge
Day 7 to 9 (2010) Upton-on-Severn to Andoversford
Day 10 (2011) Andoversford to Perrott's Brook
Day 11 (2011) Perrott's Brook to the Round Elm Crossroads
Day 12 (2011) Walking Round Stroud
Day 13 (2012) Stroud to North Nibley
Day 14 (2012) North Nibley to Old Sodbury
Day 15 (2012) Old Sodbury to Swineford
Day 16 (2013) Along the Chew Valley
Day 17 (2013) Over the Mendips to Wells
Day 18 (2013) Wells to Glastonbury 'The Mountain Route'
Day 19 (2014) Glastonbury to Langport
Day 20 (2014) Along the Parrett and over the Tone
Day 21 (2014) Into the Quantocks
Day 22 (2015) From the Quantocks to the Sea
Day 23 (2015) Watchet, Dunster and Dunkery Hill
Day 24 (2015) Dunkery Beacon to Withypool
Day 25 (2016) Entering Devon and Leaving Exmoor
Day 26 (2016) Knowstone to Black Dog on the Two Moors Way
Day 27 (2016) Morchard Bishop to Copplestone
Day 28 (2017) Down St Mary to Drewsteignton
Day 29 (2017) Drewsteignton to Bennett's Cross
Day 30 (2017) Bennett's Cross to Lustleigh
Day 31 (2018) Southwest Across the Moor from Lustleigh
Day 32 (2018) South to Ugborough
Day 33 (2018) Ugborough to Ringmore
Day 34 (2019) Around the Avon Estuary to Hope Cove
Day 35 (2019):  Hope Cove to Prawle Point
Day 36 (2019) Prawle Point to Start Bay: The End
+
The Last Post

That's All Folks - The Odyssey is done.