
History
Taiyuan is an ancient capital, constructed by Zhaojianzi (ÕÔ¼ò×Ó) in
ca. 500 BC, named Jinyang (½úÑô). It was renamed Taiyuan in the Qin Dynasty. There
are sevral Kings come from this city, so the other name of the city is "Dragon
City".
A new city was built in 562 AD, which was later linked to the old city during
the Tang Dynasty (733 AD).
In 617 AD, Li Yuan and his son Li Shimin rebelled against Sui Dynasty, and
founded the Tang.
The oldest existing building in the city is the Temple of Goddess (ʥĸµî)
inside the Jin Ci Complex; it was originally built in 1023 AD and reconstructed
in 1102 AD.
The city had been deliberately flooded several times: 453 BC, 969 AD, and was
destroyed by war in 1125 AD.
During Ming Dynasty, the city wall was reconstructed in 1568
AD.
Geography
Taiyuan is located between 111¡ã30' East and 113¡ã09' North,
at the northern end of the Loess Plateau. It has a total area of 6,988 km2.
The Fen River, a tribuary of the Yellow River, flows from north to south
through the city, and five bridges, the Yingze Bridge, the Yifen Bridge the
Shengli Bridge, the Nanneihuan Bridge and the Changfeng Bridge, link the eastern
and western parts of the city.
Demographics
Taiyuan has an urban
population of approximately 1.83 million people and a metropolitan area of about
2.93 million people.
Economy
The GDP per capita was 12,821 yuan (US$1,550) in 2003, ranked no.
171 among 659 Chinese cities. In 2005, Taiyuan's nominal GDP was 89.55 billion
yuan, a growth of 14.7% from the previous year. Taiyuan's primary, secondary,
and tertiary industries were worth 2 billion yuan, 43.07 billion yuan, and 44.48
billion yuan respectively. There are several big companies are in City of
Taiyuan. Such as Tai Yuan Steel LTD.
Tourism
Tourist attractions in
Taiyuan include
Chongshan Monastery
Jinci Temple
Twin Pagoda Temple
Mount Wutai
Shuanglin Monastery