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Luoyang
Luoyang is a small city in Henan Province
25 km to the south of the Yellow River. It is
well known in China as "the Capital of Nine
Dynasties" since it was on and off its place
from the Eastern Zhou (770 BC) to the Tang Dynasty
(923-936 AD). The city as you see today is not
quite what it was in the heyday of its youth and
the majority of the best sights now are those
that the past has left behind. It is, however,
not over plagued by tourists at the moment, so
that many sights here can still be enjoyed in
peace and quiet.
The reason for Luoyang's popularity
in ancient times is mostly liked to the geographical
and climatic factors of Henan. Many times the
imperial entourage had to move from the chosen
favouite, Xi'an, due to the frequent droughts
that plagued this part of China. Strategically
as well, Luoyang is a very useful city, with hills
on three sides making it close to impregnable.
Located almost in the centre of Henan, the city
was easy to control. Nowadays, frequent reports
surface of the discovery of ancient weapons unearthed
in various parts of the city.
The history of Luoyang as a town and
later as a city goes back much longer than that
of it as a capital. Documents and cultural relics
are continually being found here, allowing archaeologists
to slowly piece together the past and allowing
the Luoyangese the comfort of swelled pride. But
the interpretation of history is never the easiest
thing and the ancient discoveries are always somewhat
tinted by this pride. Recent evidence, discovered
in the Neolithic site found in the west of the
city, has dated a population here as far back
as 7,000 years ago. Buddhism was apparently introduced
here as early as 68 AD from Nepal. The revered
Chinese scholar, Confucius, is also said to have
spent some time here, perfecting his philosophical
thought. The biggest claim, however, that the
people of Luoyang make is that, contrary to common
belief, the Silk Road's true starting point was
Luoyang.
The city's glorious position
began to dwindle after the last of the capitals
collapsed. In recent years the city has been making
a come-back economically, although this comes
somewhat at the cost of losing the glamour of
a small city. Concrete buildings and skyscrapers
are rapidly entering the city, so that most of
the sights worth visiting here are situated outside
the city proper, most notably the Longmen Caves
16 km out of town.
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