slogan seen on a tee-shirt, Beijing
An 18th Century Family House, a 7th Cemtury Temple and a 21st Century Train
People's Republic of China |
Taking our leave of Pingyao we set off towards Beijing, driving the 100km to Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi Province, before taking the bullet train to Beijing.
The Qiao Family Compound
The Qiao Family Compound is 30km north of Pingyao. The Qiaos made their pile during the Qing dynasty and started building the house in 1756.As the family grew and prospered the house grew with them until by the end of the century there were 313 rooms arranged round 6 large and 19 smaller courtyards.
Shanxi and Beijing |
It is one of the finest remaining courtyard homes in
northern China, but although the Qiao family were benevolent landlords and good
employers - at least by the standards of 18th and 19th century China - the family
fortunes did not survive Mao’s revolution and the compound is now a state owned
museum.
It is a popular day out for locals, particularly on a public
holiday. We crossed a forecourt where the basketball courts had been pressed
into service to dry the newly harvested corn crop, and joined the crowd.
Drying corn outside the Qiao Family compound |
The rooms were well laid out with period furniture….
The Qiao Family Compound, near Pingyao |
…and glass cases of porcelain and other objects of interest.
Qiao Family Compound, near Pingyao |
The courtyards, small and large, were richly decorated.
In one of the courtyards, Qiao Family Compound, Pingyao |
In China, like anywhere else, grand houses attract film producers. The house starred in the 2006 television serial Qiao's Grand Courtyard and was the primary location for the 1991 film Raise the Red Lantern directed by Zhang Yimou - best known in the West for House of Flying Daggers and the opening and closing ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. The film, a ‘veiled allegory against authoritarianism' was briefly banned in China despite the script having been passed by the censors. There is an exhibition of memorabilia from the film.
Garden, Qiao Family Courtyard, near Pingyao |
The authorities have yet to grasp the benefit of visitors
leaving via the gift shop, but just beyond the gates a variety of stallholders
have spotted the gap in the market.
Stalls outside the Qiao Family Courtyard, Pingyao |
Shanxi is renowned for its vinegar and between the market and the car park we passed a vinegar factory. The large black jars we have seen in so many shops were here in their hundreds.
Vinegar storage outside the Qiao Family Compound, near Pingyao |
A Problematic Journey to Jinci Temple
We continued north towards Taiyuan, with another intended stop at Jinci temple.
While waiting for some traffic lights to change we heard what
sounded like a volley of gunfire. As usual in China this turned out to be
firecrackers. Setting off a ring of firecrackers round a newly acquired lorry ensures
it is free from demons and has the happy side effect of telling the world how
well the new owners are doing. That is fair enough, but I am not entirely
convinced that igniting hundreds of firecrackers round a truck parked beside a
petrol station is a desperately good idea. We were relieved when the lights
changed and we could move off before the big fireball arrived.
Not, perhaps, the best place for firecrackers, Pingyao - Tiayuan road |
A few kilometres later the traffic ground to a halt.
'Congestion can cause long delays here,' said Jonathan, our guide. Inching
slowly forward we reached a junction and the driver swung into the minor road. Most
Chinese cities are built on a grid, and often country roads follow the same
pattern. The driver’s idea was to take a minor road parallel to the main road,
and the plan worked well - until we encountered a road that was closed. Trying
to get round that we discovered an area where the grid pattern broke down. Soon
we were wandering around the flat, featureless Shanxi countryside and I for one
had entirely lost my sense of direction. It was a frustrating journey; harvest
time meant either we were held up by large slow moving vehicles or zigzagging
round piles of corn dumped in the road.
Piles of corn in the road, somewhere near Taiyuan |
Eventually the driver stopped to ask a group of agricultural
workers for directions, a request which provoked much discussion and a lot of head
scratching. We started to follow their laboriously worked out advice but soon
discovered it involved a rough, unsurfaced lane. The driver had a careful
look and decided - wisely I thought - not to venture down it.
We resumed what felt to us like aimless wandering. Jonathan
had started to look worried, but the driver maintained a confident air – maybe he
was bluffing. Lynne and I were beginning to think we might be wandering this featureless
agricultural landscape for the rest of our lives.
If you drive for long enough you must eventually encounter a main road. When we did the sign said Taiyuan was only 10km away and Jinci Temple even closer. Maybe the driver had everything under control all along or perhaps he was lucky - the Chinese traditionally regard luck as a character trait, so he took the credit either way. Amazingly we were only 15 minutes behind schedule.
Jinci Temple
Jinci, reputedly the most important temple in Shanxi, was founded in the seventh century. Being in continual use for 1400 years it has seen much building and rebuilding so little or nothing of the original temple remains.
The open area in front of the entrance was used as a theatre,
the Ming dynasty Water Mirror Platform (over my left shoulder) being its
centrepiece.
Water Mirror Platform, Jinci Temple, Taiyaun |
The ‘gift shop’ stood nearby.
'Gift Shop', Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
Chinese architectural styles changed little between themedieval period and the middle of the twentieth century, so all temples have a
tendency to look alike, but the Hall of the Goddess Mother, with carved wooden
dragons curling round its eight pillars, does stand out. Originally built in
the Jin Dynasty* (836 to 947) it was rebuilt between 1023 and 1032 during the
rather more durable Song Dynasty (960-1279) and is one of the largest surviving
Song buildings in China.
Hall of the Mother Goddess, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
Inside is a statue of the Goddess Mother. She was the mother
of Prince Shuyu who founded the Jin Dynasty and was attributed with
supernatural powers.
The Mother Goddess, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
She is attended by a group of Song dynasty female figures in coloured clay, the best of the temple’s collection of over 100 statues.
The Mother Goddess' Song Dynasty handmaidens, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
There is also a large classical garden with some pleasing corners...
Formal Garden, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
…. and a pagoda whose origins I have been unable to find.
Pagoda, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
The Song figures, some ancient Cypresses (which we managed
to miss) and The Eternal Spring are the ‘Three Great Things of Jinci Temple.’ The
spring, protected by a small pavilion, has been gushing water at a steady 17º
since the temple was built, or at least it did until 1998 when one of Shanxi’s many
coal mines unwittingly diverted the underground stream that fed the Eternal Spring. Undaunted,
the authorities pipe in water to replicate the natural gush. Neither the
authorities nor the great mass of Chinese tourists (nor, indeed, Jonathan) see
any irony in this. We encountered something very similar at the Crescent Moon
Lake in the Gobi desert at Dunhuang.
The Pavilion of the (not very) Eternal Spring, Jinci Temple, Taiyuan |
To Taiyuan for Lunch
It was only a short drive to Taiyuan. Founded in 500BC thecapital of Shanxi Province is now a huge modern city and home to over 3 million people, although it is virtually unknown outside China. It became infamous in 1900 for the Taiyuan Massacre where 45 foreign Christian missionaries and their Chinese converts, some of them children, were murdered in the mayhem surrounding the Boxer Rebellion.
We left the car within sight of the station. 'The driver is
going back to Pingyao now,' Jonathan told us.' 'And you?' we asked as Jonathan
showed no sign of getting back in the car. 'After you have had lunch and I've
seen you onto the train I'll get the bus back.' This seemed silly so we
suggested he go with the driver, but he had his instructions and fully intended
to carry them out.
To prove he was necessary he took us to a huge shiny noodle
shop with an unnecessarily complex system involving peering at food behind a
glass screen and telling the server what you wanted so she could write it down.
I then took this document to the cash desk where I paid and got it stamped before
returning to claim my food. I could probably have just about managed without
Jonathan - or gone somewhere more normal, but he was a help.
I returned in triumph to our table bearing the spoils only
to see Jonathan advancing with two huge bowls of noodle soup. This was a noodle
restaurant after all, and everything I had bought was, I now discovered, in
addition to the default noodles.
As we set about making some impression on the huge quantity of food Jonathan sat outside on the pavement smoking.
The High Speed Train to Beijing
Lunch over he walked with us to the station. 'You need to go to waiting room 6,' he said which we could see for ourselves as the sign alternated between Chinese and pinyin. 'I can't come in as there are no platform tickets for the bullet trains.' Again we wondered why he had not gone back with the driver. We took our leave and psyched ourselves up for the inevitable security checks the Chinese authorities believe are necessary for train travel.
We had taken eight hours travelling from Beijing to Datong
and a further eight to Pingyao. From Pingyao we had driven 100Km back towards
Beijing, but even so the scheduled three hours on the bullet train was a
statement about how fast the bullet train is - and how slow the regular trains
are.
The second class carriage was, if my memory of our trip to Brussels in 1995
serves me well, less comfortable than the Eurostar. The seats were laid out like on
an aeroplane even to the extent of fold down tables. There was much more leg
room, but the luggage racks were far too small for our two suitcases. After a
mimed discussion with the carriage attendant we were allowed to store them in
the area set aside for wheelchairs. Had any wheelchair users boarded the train a
rethink would have been necessary, but that situation did not arise.
We stopped three times, as we made our way through the flat
countryside. Before the first stop the speedometer stayed below 200kph, but
afterwards it gradually built up to 300. The ride was smooth and quiet, unlike
the regular trains at 60kph.
The Bullet Train near top speed, Taiyuan to Beijing |
We arrived on time at Beijing’s western station and had to
make our way to our hotel beside the central station - a rush hour metro journey requiring
three changes. The last was onto one of the old lines which have neither
escalators nor lifts. Lynne was tired and our cases were heavy. I carried one
down a flight of concrete steps while Lynne waited at the top with the other. I
turned to fetch the other case only to find a middle aged Chinese man putting
it down beside me with Lynne just behind him. It was the third act of random
kindness visited upon us in the Beijing metro on this trip.
*China has enjoyed five ‘Jin’ Dynasties. This one is the ‘Later
Jin’ from the ‘Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period’ or 10th century as we
would call it.
Part 6 Panmunjom and the DMZ
Part 7 Sariwon and Nampho
Part 8 The Nampho Barrage and back to Pyongyang
Part 9 Last Day in Pyongyang (1), Gifts and the Metro
Part 10 Last Day in Pyongyang (2) Serious Study and Juche Thought
Part 11 By Train out of the DPRK
Part 12 Datong
Part 13 Pingyao, Preserved Ming City
Part 14 Pingyao to Taiyuan and the Bullet Train back to Beijing
Part 15 Beijing (3): A Duck and a Rant