China Hakka house attracts foreigners (CRIENGLISH.com ) Updated: 2006-09-05 12:32 Located in Hezhou of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, Jiang Family Hakka House is the largest known and best preserved
Hakka-style house in China. This historical building now attracts a number of
foreign visitors.
According to the Hezhou Tourism Bureau, tourists visiting the Hakka House
reached 2.73 million in 2005, of which about 100,000 were foreigners.

The Hakka House in Guangxi.
Photo: ok591.com
The chief administrator of the Hezhou Tourism Bureau, Kong Ping, said Jiang
Hakka House is extolled as the "Forbidden City" of southern China. It began
construction in the Daoguang period of the Qing Dynasty. It covers 35 mu (about
23.35 thousand square meters) and owns a constructive area of 12.88 thousand
square meters, featuring distinctive Hakka artistic mien.
Hezhou is at the junction of Hunan and Guangdong provinces and Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region. It is an important transit point for visitors from Guangdong,
Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and other southern Asian regions to Guangxi's Guilin,
one of the most famous scenic spots in China.
Hakkas were once a special branch of the Han ethnicity in China. Owning to
natural disasters and military chaos, they formed into a particular community
and gradually immigrated south during the Tang and Song Dynasties. They later
moved further south and overseas. There are millions of Hakkas worldwide in more
than 70 countries or regions worldwide, sharing their own cultural customs and
traditions
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