:Yangzhou

{{Distinguish|text=Yongzhou in Hunan}}

{{other uses}}

{{Infobox settlement

| name = Yangzhou

| official_name =

| other_name = Yangchow

| native_name = 扬州市

| native_name_lang = zh-hans

| settlement_type = Prefecture-level city

| image_skyline = {{multiple image

| border = infobox

| total_width = 290

| image_style = border:1;

| perrow = 1/2/2/1

| image1 = Five Pavilion Bridge and White Pagoda 2017.jpg

| caption1 = Five-Pavilion Bridge and the Slender West Lake

| image2 = 何园船厅2019.jpg

| caption2= He Garden

| image3 = 东关街 - Dongguan Street - 2015.04 - panoramio.jpg

| caption3 = Dongguan Street

| image4 = Yangzhou Wenchangge.jpg

| caption4 = Wenchang Pavilion

| image5 = Aerial view of Yangzhou Xinhua High School.jpg

| caption5 = Hanjiang District

| image6= 扬州镇扬汽渡.jpg

| caption6= Ferry to Zhenjiang in Guazhou

}}

| image_alt =

| image_caption =

| nickname =

| motto =

| image_map = {{maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|type=shape|stroke-width=2|stroke-color=#000000|zoom=7|frame-lat=32.71|frame-long=119.41}}

| image_map1 = Yangzhou locator map in Jiangsu.svg

| map_alt1 =

| map_caption1 = Location of Yangzhou administrative area in Jiangsu

| pushpin_map = China Jiangsu#Eastern China#China

| pushpin_label_position =

| pushpin_map_alt =

| pushpin_map_caption = Location of the city center in Jiangsu

| coordinates = {{coord|32.3944|N|119.4128|E|type:adm2nd_region:CN-32_source:Gaode|format=dms|display=it}}

| coor_pinpoint = Yangzhou municipal government

| coordinates_footnotes =

| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = People's Republic of China

| subdivision_type1 = Province

| subdivision_name1 = Jiangsu

| subdivision_type2 = County-level divisions

| subdivision_name2 = 6 (3 Districts, 2 County-level cities, 1 County)

| established_title =

| established_date =

| founder =

| seat_type = Municipal seat

| seat = Hanjiang District

| government_footnotes =

| leader_party =

| leader_title = Communist Party Chief

| leader_name = Zhang Baojuan ({{lang|zh-hans|张宝娟}}){{cite web|title=Zhang Baojuan assumes the post of Secretary of the Municipal Party Committee|url=http://district.ce.cn/newarea/sddy/202107/20/t20210720_36734011.shtml}}

| leader_title1 = Mayor

| leader_name1 = Wang Jinjian ({{lang|zh-hans|王进健}}) (Acting){{cite web|title=Wang Jinjian appointed acting mayor of Yangzhou, Jiangsu|url=https://www.zaobao.com/realtime/china/story20210802-1176798}}

| unit_pref = Metric

| area_footnotes =

| area_total_km2 = 6,626

| area_land_km2 =

| area_water_km2 =

| area_water_percent =

| area_metro_km2 = 2310

| area_note =

| elevation_footnotes =

| elevation_m =

| area_urban_km2 = 363

| area_urban_footnotes =  (2018){{Cite book|url=http://www.demographia.com/db-worldua.pdf|title=Demographia World Urban Areas. 14th Annual Edition|last=Cox|first=Wendell|publisher=Demographia|year=2018|location=St. Louis|page=22}}

| population_urban = 1665000

| population_urban_footnotes =  (2018)

| population_density_urban_km2 = auto

| population_footnotes =

| population_total = 4,559,797

| population_as_of = 2020 census{{cite web|url=http://www.citypopulation.de/php/china-jiangsu-admin.php|title=China: Jiāngsū (Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map|website=www.citypopulation.de|access-date=2023-06-22}}

| population_metro = 2,635,435

| population_density_km2 = auto

| population_density_metro_km2 = auto

| population_demonym =

| population_note = Includes only those with Hukou permits

| demographics_type2 = GDPYangzhou did not publish revised GDP data for 2023 {{cite press release | url=http://yangzhou.gov.cn/xwzx/zwyw/art/2025/art_488d89ce977d442191abf990fc465fff.html | title=zh:7809.64亿元 去年扬州GDP增长6.0% | publisher=yangzhou.gov.cn| date=January 28, 2025| access-date=February 20, 2025}}.

| demographics2_title1 = Prefecture-level city

| demographics2_info1 = CN¥ 781 trillion
US$ 109.7 billion

| demographics2_title2 = Per capita

| demographics2_info2 = CN¥ 171,264
US$ 24,048

| timezone1 = Beijing Time

| utc_offset1 = +8

| postal_code_type =

| postal_code = 225000

| area_code_type = Telephone

| area_code = (0)514

| iso_code = CN-JS-10

| website = {{URL|yangzhou.gov.cn/english}}

| footnotes =

| blank_name = Licence plate prefixes

| blank_info = {{lang|zh-cn|苏K}}

}}

{{infobox Chinese

|pic=Yangzhou (Chinese characters).svg

|picupright=0.5

|piccap="Yangzhou" in Simplified (top) and Traditional (bottom) Chinese characters

|s={{linktext|扬州}}

|t={{linktext|揚州}}

|w=Yang-chou

|p=Yángzhōu

|mi={{IPAc-cmn|yang|2|.|zh|ou|1}}

|wuu=Yang-tseu

|j=Joeng⁴ Zau¹

|l=[Seat of] Yang Province

|altname=Historical Names
Hancheng

|c2={{linktext|邗城}}

|p2=Hánchéng

|w2=Han-cheng

|l2=Han City

|altname3=Guangling

|t3={{linktext|廣陵}}

|s3={{linktext|广陵}}

|p3=Guǎnglíng

|w3=Kuang-ling

|l3=Expansive Tomb

|altname4=Jiangdu

|c4={{linktext|江都}}

|p4=Jiāngdū

|w4=Chiang-tu

|l4=Capital on the [Yangtze] River

}}

Yangzhou is a prefecture-level city in central Jiangsu Province, East China. Sitting on the north bank of the Yangtze, it borders the provincial capital Nanjing to the southwest, Huai'an to the north, Yancheng to the northeast, Taizhou to the east, and Zhenjiang across the river to the south. Its population was 4,559,797 at the 2020 census and its urban area is home to 2,635,435 inhabitants, including three urban districts, currently in the agglomeration.

Historically, Yangzhou was one of the wealthiest cities in China, known at various periods for its great merchant families, poets, artists, and scholars. Its name (lit. "Rising Prefecture") refers to its former position as the capital of the ancient Yangzhou prefecture in imperial China. Yangzhou was one of the first cities to benefit from one of the earliest World Bank loans in China, used to construct Yangzhou thermal power station in 1994.{{cite web |title=Project documents and reports – Yangzhou thermal power project |url=http://projects.worldbank.org/P003641/yangzhou-thermal-power-project?lang=en |website=projects.worldbank.org/ |publisher=World Bank |access-date=5 November 2018}}{{cite web |title=Worldbank report – 1994 – Yangzhou thermal power plant loan |url=http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/712531468743979065/pdf/multi0page.pdf |publisher=World Bank |access-date=5 November 2018}}

Administration

{{See also|List of administrative divisions of Jiangsu}}

Currently, the prefecture-level city of Yangzhou administers six county-level divisions, including three districts, two county-level cities and one county. Accordingly, they are further divided into 98 township-level divisions, including 87 towns and townships, and 11 subdistricts.

class="wikitable"

! colspan="6" | Map

colspan="6" |

{{Image label begin|image=Administrative Division Yangzhou.png|width={{{1|415}}}|link=}}

{{Image label|x=580|y=1330|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Gaoyou
Lake
}}

{{Image label|x=890|y=2340|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Guangling}}

{{Image label|x=620|y=2130|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Hanjiang}}

{{Image label|x=1150|y=1970|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Jiangdu}}

{{Image label|x=790|y=470|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Baoying
County
}}

{{Image label|x=250|y=2270|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Yizheng}}

{{Image label|x=1010|y=1240|scale={{{1|415}}}/1660|text=Gaoyou}}

{{Image label end}}

align=left | Subdivision

! align=left | Simplified Chinese

! align=left | Hanyu Pinyin

! align=left | Population {{small|(2020)}}{{Cite web |date=2021-05-26 |title=Seventh National Census Communiqué of Yangzhou |url=http://www.yangzhou.gov.cn/yzszxxgk/tjj/202107/4c6d8f05c4a14a64a1b4038757e0dbcb.shtml|access-date=2022-03-07}}

! align=left | Area {{small|(km2)}}

! align=left | Density {{small|(/km2)}}

style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center; "| City Proper

align=left | Guangling District

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|广陵区}}

| align=right | Guǎnglíng Qū

| align=right| 542,305

| align=right| 423.09

| align=right| 805.92

align=left | Hanjiang District

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|邗江区}}

| align=right | Hánjiāng Qū

| align=right| 726,906

| align=right| 552.68

| align=right| 1,902.23

style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center; "| Suburban

align=left | Jiangdu District

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|江都区}}

| align=right | Jiāngdū Qū

| align=right| 926,577

| align=right| 1,329.90

| align=right| 757.03

style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center; "| Rural

align=left | Baoying County

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|宝应县}}

| align=right | Bǎoyìng Xiàn

| align=right| 682,219

| align=right| 1,461.55

| align=right| 514.57

style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center; "| Satellite cities (County-level cities)

align=left | Yizheng

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|仪征市}}

| align=right | Yízhēng Shì

| align=right| 532,571

| align=right| 902.20

| align=right| 625.08

align=left | Gaoyou

| align=left | {{lang|zh-Hans|高邮市}}

| align=right | Gāoyóu Shì

| align=right| 709,572

| align=right| 1,921.78

| align=right| 387.49

style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| colspan=3 style="text-align:center; "|Total

| align=right|4,559,797

| align=right|6,591.21

| align=right|676.62

colspan=6 style="text-align:center; "| In November 2011, Weiyang District ({{linktext|维|扬|区}}) was merged into Hanjiang District,
while the former county-level Jiangdu City became Jiangdu District.{{cite web

|url = http://news.cntv.cn/china/20111114/106430.shtml

|script-title=zh:江苏扬州行政区划调整 江都市改区维扬区被撤销

|publisher = China Network Television

|language = zh

|date = 14 November 2011

|access-date = 2012-01-10}}

History

=Ancient China=

During the Spring and Autumn period of the Eastern Zhou dynasty, the hegemon Fuchai of Wu constructed the Han or Hangou Canal {{nowrap|(t {{lang|zh|{{linktext|邗溝}}}},}} {{nowrap|s {{lang|zh|{{linktext|邗沟}}}},}} Hángōu) to improve his supply lines from his center of power around present-day Suzhou to the North China Plain, where he was engaged in an ongoing conflict with Qi. Taking advantage of the many streams and lakes of the Jianghuai Plain, the canal connected the Yangtze River within present-day Yangzhou to the Huai River within present-day Huai'an by 486{{nbsp}}BC. The next year, Fuchai established a fortress to protect the southern end of the new canal at Hancheng. Following the Chinese urban design principles of the time, it was constructed as a 3 li by 3 li square{{sfnp|Schinz|1996}} about {{convert|12|m|sp=us|abbr=on}} above the water level on the Yangtze's northern bank, with the Han Canal forming a moat around the southern and eastern sides of the city. The town was intended to stall any possible counterattack from Qi down the canal, giving time to raise reinforcements from Suzhou and Wu's other lands in the Yangtze Delta.

=Imperial China=

Under the Eastern Han dynasty, the area was organized as the Guangling Commandery of Xu Province. Its seat of government{{mdash}}also known as Guangling{{mdash}}was also near the confluence of the Yangtze and the Han Canal, although at a slightly different location than the former Wu fortress.

Under the Sui, Guangling was reorganized as Yang Province (zhou) in the year AD 590.{{cn|date=October 2022}} Its seat of government took the new name as well. Prospering as the Emperor Yang (r.{{nbsp}}604–617) connected the Han Canal to other waterways north and south to form the core of the Grand Canal, Yangzhou became the southern capital of China under the name Jiangdu.{{cn|date=October 2022}} With the failure of his invasions of Korea and a series of natural disasters, Emperor Yang abandoned to north entirely in 616 and made Jiangdu his primary capital until his assassination in 618.{{cn|date=October 2022}}

Restoring the former name Guangling, the Tang made the city a major port for foreign trade and turned it into a leading economic and cultural center. Many foreign merchants lived in the city,{{cite book

| surname = Schafer | given = Edward H.

| title = The golden peaches of Samarkand: a study of T'ang exotics

| publisher = University of California Press | year = 1963

| isbn = 978-0-520-05462-2

| pages = 18–19 }} including many Koreans, Arabs, and Persians. Thousands of Muslim Arab, Persian and other foreign merchants were massacred in 760 by forces under Tian Shengong, sent to suppress the city's rebellion.{{cite book

| title = The earliest Muslim communities in China

| surname = Wan | given = Lei

| location = Riyadh | publisher = King Faisal Center for research and Islamic Studies | year = 2017

| series = Qiraat | volume = 8

| isbn = 978-603-8206-39-3

| url = https://www.kfcris.com/en/view/post/155

| page = 11

}}{{cite book

| surname = Qi | given = Dongfang

| chapter = Gold and Silver Wares on the Belitung Shipwreck

| pages = 221–227

| chapter-url = https://asia.si.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/17Qi.pdf

| title = Shipwrecked: Tang Treasures and Monsoon Winds

| editor1-given = Regina | editor1-surname = Krahl

| editor2-given = John | editor2-surname = Guy

| editor3-given = J. Keith | editor3-surname = Wilson

| editor4-given = Julian | editor4-surname = Raby

| publisher = Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

| location = Washington, DC

| year = 2010

| isbn = 978-1-58834-305-5

| url = https://asia.si.edu/research/exhibition-catalogues/shipwrecked-catalog/

}}

Jiangdu served briefly as the capital of a revived Wu Kingdom during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period.

After the 1127 Jingkang Incident led to the Jurchen-led Jin conquest of Kaifeng, the Song used Yangzhou as their capital in 1128 and 1129.{{cite book|first=Charles|last=Holcombe|title=A History of East Asia: From the Origins of Civilization to the Twenty-First Century|year=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-51595-5|page=129}} Song troops under Du Chong {{nowrap|({{lang|zh|{{linktext|杜|充}}}},}} Dù Chōng, d.{{nbsp}}1141) breached the southern embankments of the Yellow River in an effort to stop the southward of Jin army, but the resulting avulsion caused the river to swing south of the Shandong Peninsula and capture the Si River and lower Huai. The Grand Canal was truncated for decades and the Southern Song moved to Lin'an (present-day Hangzhou, Zhejiang).{{cite book|first=Frederick W.|last=Mote|title=Imperial China: 900–1800|year=2003|publisher=Harvard University Press|page=293|isbn=978-0-674-01212-7}}{{cite book|first=Herbert|last=Franke|editor=Denis C. Twitchett|editor2=Herbert Franke|editor3=John King Fairbank|title=The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 710–1368|year=1994|publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=229 |isbn=978-0-521-24331-5}}

In 1280, during the Yuan, Yangzhou was the site of a massive gunpowder explosion when the bomb warehouse of the Weiyang arsenal accidentally caught fire. The blast killed over a hundred guards, hurled debris from buildings into the air that landed 10 li away, and could be felt 100 li. Marco Polo claimed to have served Kubilai Khan in Yangzhou shortly thereafter, variously placed at 1282–1285{{Cite book|last=Perkins|first=Dorothy|title=Encyclopedia of China: The Essential Reference to China, Its History and Culture|publisher=Roundtable Press|year=2000|isbn=978-0-8160-4374-3}} or 1282–1287. Although some versions of Polo's memoirs imply that he was the governor of Yangzhou, it is more likely that he was an official in the salt industry if he was employed there at all. Surviving Chinese texts do not mention him at all. It is well documented, however, that Kublai Khan trusted foreigners more than Chinese/Han subjects in internal affairs and the discovery of the 1342 tomb of Katarina Vilioni, member of an Italian trading family in Yangzhou, does, however, suggest the existence of an Italian community in the city in the 14th century. Moreover, both in The Travels of Marco Polo and in the History of Yuan there is documentation about a Nestorian Christian who funded two churches in China during the three years he served as an official of the emperor. This functionary is named "Mar Sarchis" by Marco Polo and "Ma Xuelijisi" in the History of Yuan. This person served as a supervisor in the prefecture of Zhenjiang.Giulio Busi, "Marco Polo. Viaggio ai confini del Medioevo", Collezione Le Scie. Nuova serie, Milano, Mondadori, 2018, {{ISBN|978-88-0470-292-4}}, § "Boluo, il funzionario invisibile Arabic inscriptions during the 13th and 14th centuries similarly indicate a revival of the Muslim community.{{cite book

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=__Q1gOeoJZcC&pg=PA228

|title=Islam: an illustrated history

|year=2006

|author1=Greville Stewart Parker Freeman-Grenville |author2=Stuart C. Munro-Hay |publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group

|edition=illustrated, revised

|isbn=0-8264-1837-6

|page=228

|access-date=17 July 2011}}

During the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) until the 19th century Yangzhou acted as a major trade exchange center for salt (a government regulated commodity), rice, and silk. The Ming were largely responsible for building the city as it now stands and surrounding it with {{Convert|9|km|abbr=on}} of walls, in part as protection against Wokou raids.

There was a Hui or Chinese Muslim community in Yangzhou during the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties with historic mosques like Crane Mosque and the tomb of Sayyid Puhaddin.{{Cite web |title=Puhading Yuan in Yangzhou - Attraction {{!}} Frommer's |url=https://www.frommers.com/destinations/yangzhou/attractions/puhading-yuan |access-date=2023-11-28 |website=www.frommers.com}}{{Cite web |title=Xianhe Mosque in Yangzhou of Jiangsu, Muslim Mosque in Yangzhou |url=https://www.topchinatravel.com/china-attractions/xianhe-mosque.htm |access-date=2023-11-28 |website=www.topchinatravel.com}}{{Cite web |title=Puhading Cemetery, Yangzhou |url=https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g494934-d1864987-Reviews-Puhading_Cemetery-Yangzhou_Jiangsu.html |access-date=2023-11-28 |website=Tripadvisor |language=en}}

File:Yangzhou massacre.jpg.]]

After the fall of Beijing and northern China to the Manchus in 1644, Yangzhou remained under the control of the short-lived Southern Ming based in Nanjing. Qing forces led by Prince Dodo reached Yangzhou in the spring of 1645, and despite the heroic efforts of its chief defender, Shi Kefa, the city fell on May 20, 1645, after a brief siege. The Yangzhou massacre followed; Wang Xiuchu's contemporary account alleged that the number of victims was close to 800,000, but that number is certainly an exaggeration.{{sfnp|Finnane|2004|p=453}}{{lang|zh-Hans|谢国桢,《南明史略》,第72—73页}}{{full citation needed|date=May 2020}} Shi Kefa himself was killed by the Manchus when he refused to switch his allegiance to the Manchurian Qing regime."Horrid beyond description": The massacre of Yangzhou", in Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm: China in Tigers' Jaws, ed. Struve, Lynn A. ale University Press, 1998, {{ISBN|0-300-07553-7}}. Pages 28–48. Han bannermen were responsible for most of the atrocities in Yangzhou but they were nevertheless labelled as Manchus by other Han.{{Cite book |last=Elliott |first=Mark C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_qtgoTIAiKUC&dq=even+though+most+of+the+troops+responsible+for+the+savagery+there+were+Chinese+bannermen&pg=PA224 |title=The Manchu Way: The Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China |date=2001 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn=978-0-8047-4684-7 |language=en}}

The city's rapid recovery from these events and its great prosperity through the early and middle years of the Qing dynasty were due to its role as administrative center of the Lianghuai sector of the government salt monopoly. As early as 1655, the Dutch envoy Johan Nieuhof described the city of Yangzhoufu ({{lang|fr|Jamcefu}} in his transcription):Johan Nieuhof,

[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/DLDecArts/DLDecArts-idx?type=turn&entity=DLDecArts.Nieuhof.p0108 An embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham, emperor of China: delivered by their excellencies Peter de Goyer and Jacob de Keyzer, at his imperial city of Peking wherein the cities, towns, villages, ports, rivers, &c. in their passages from Canton to Peking are ingeniously described by John Nieuhoff; ... Englished and set forth with their several sculptures by John Ogilby], 1673, p.82

{{blockquote|This Trade alone has so very much enrich'd the Inhabitants of this Town, that they have re-built their City since the last destruction by the Tartars, erecting it in as great splendor as it was at first.}}

Famed at that time and since for literature, art, and the gardens of its merchant families, many of which were visited by the Kangxi and Qianlong emperors during their Southern Tours, the Qing-era Yangzhou has been the focus of intensive research by historians.

The Yangzhou riot in 1868 was a pivotal moment of Anglo-Chinese relations during late Qing China that almost led to war.Austin (2007), p. 129 The crisis was fomented by the scholar-officials of the city, who opposed the presence of foreign Christian missionaries there. The riot that resulted was an angry crowd estimated at eight to ten thousand who assaulted the premises of the British China Inland Mission in Yangzhou by looting, burning and attacking the missionaries led by Hudson Taylor. No one was killed, however several of the missionaries were injured as they were forced to flee for their lives. As a result of the report of the riot, the British consul in Shanghai, Sir Walter Henry Medhurst took seventy Royal Marines in a man-of-war and steamed up the Yangtze to Nanjing in a controversial show of force that eventually resulted in an official apology from Viceroy Zeng Guofan and financial restitution made to the injured missionaries.

=Modern China=

From the time of the Taiping Rebellion (1853) to the beginning of the Reform Era (1980) Yangzhou was in decline, due to war damage, neglect of the Grand Canal as railways replaced it in importance, and stagnation in the early decades of the PRC. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, it endured eight years of Japanese occupation and was used by the enemy as a site for internment camps. About 1200 civilians of Allied nationalities (mostly British and Australian) from Shanghai were transported here in 1943, and located in one of three camps (A, B, and C). Camps B and C were closed down in September, 1943, after the second American-Japanese prisoner exchange, and their inhabitants transferred back to Shanghai camps. Camp C, located in the former American Mission in the north-west of the city, was maintained for the duration of the war.Leck, Greg, Captives of Empire: The Japanese Internment of Allied Civilians in China Shandy Press, 2006; Antonia Finnane, Far From Where? Jewish Journeys from Shanghai to Australia (Melbourne University Press, 1999), 106–7.

Among early plans for railways in the late Qing was one for a line that would connect Yangzhou to the north but this was jettisoned in favor of an alternative route. The city's status as a leading economic center in China was never to be restored. Not until the 1990s did it begin to regain some semblance of prosperity, benefitting from national economic growth and a number of targeted development projects.{{cn|date=October 2022}} With the canal now partially restored, and excellent rail and road connections, Yangzhou is once again an important transportation and market center. It also has some industrial output, chiefly in cotton and textiles. In 2004, a railway linked Yangzhou for the first time with Nanjing.{{cn|date=October 2022}}

Geography

File:Yangzhou five pavilion bridge.JPG over the Slender West Lake.]]

Yangzhou is located on a plain north of the Yangtze. The Grand Canal, also known as the Jing-Hang Canal, crosses the prefecture-level from the north to the south; its modern route passes through the eastern outskirts of Yangzhou's main urban area, while its old route runs through the city center. Other major bodies of water within the prefecture-level city include the Baoshe River, Datong River, Beichengzi River, Tongyang Canal, Xintongyang Canal, Baima Lake, Baoying Lake, Gaoyou Lake and Shaobo Lake.

Like much of the entire prefecture-level city, Yangzhou's main urban area (the "city proper") is criss-crossed by an intricate network of canals and small lakes. The historic city center (the former waled city) is surrounded by canals on all sides: the Old Grand Canal forms its eastern and southern boundaries; the City Moat Canal runs along the former walled city's northern edge, connecting the Old Grand Canal with the Slender West Lake; the Erdaohe Canal runs along the old city's western edge, from the Slender West Lake to the Lotus Flower Pond (Hehuachi), which in its turn is connected by the short Erdaogou canal with the Old Grand Canal.{{cite web |url=http://yangzhou.yztm.net/tnewsshow.asp?id=450 |script-title=zh:古运河—荷花池—瘦西湖水上游览线全部贯通] |website=yztm.net |date=2010-09-20 |access-date=2013-01-15 |archive-date=2015-05-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150528224043/http://yangzhou.yztm.net/tnewsshow.asp?id=450 |url-status=dead }} It is possible to sail a small water craft from the Thin West Lake, via the Erdaohe, the Hehua Pond, and the Erdaogou into the Old Grand Canal.{{cite web |url=http://www.yzcn.net/broadcast/pic/2011/0329/124850.shtml |script-title=zh:绿杨城郭水上游4·18亮相 |website=yzcn.net |date=2011-03-29 |access-date=2013-01-15 |archive-date=2015-05-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150528224019/http://www.yzcn.net/broadcast/pic/2011/0329/124850.shtml |url-status=dead }}; see the map in this article

=Climate=

Yangzhou has a subtropical monsoon climate with humid changeable wind; longer winters for about 4 months, summers 4 months and shorter springs and autumns, 2 months respectively; frost-free period of around 240 days and annual average sunshine of around 1,912 hours.

The mean annual temperature is {{convert|16.2|°C|1}} annually, with an annual average daily maximum temperature of {{convert|20.7|°C|1}} and an annual average daily minimum temperature of {{convert|12.4|°C|1}}. The normal monthly mean 24-hour temperature ranges from {{convert|2.8|°C}} in January to {{convert|28.4|°C}} in July.

The annual average precipitation is {{convert|1099.9|mm|abbr=on}}, and about 59.1% of rainfall is concentrated in the summer. The rainy season known as "plum rain season" usually lasts from mid-June to mid-July. During this season, the plums are ripening, hence the name plum rain. Extreme temperatures since 1951 has ranged from {{convert|-17.7|°C|0}} on 6 January 1955{{Cite web |last=网易 |date=2018-12-08 |title=这两天根本不算冷 看看全国各大城市历史极端最低温度是几度? |url=https://www.163.com/dy/article/E2HHPSS305444WQP.html |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=www.163.com}} to {{convert|40.6|°C|0}} on 14 August 2022 during the 2022 China Heatwave.

{{Weather box

| location = Yangzhou, elevation {{convert|10|m|ft|abbr=on}}, (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present)

| metric first = y

| single line = y

| collapsed = Y

| Jan high C = 7.0

| Feb high C = 9.7

| Mar high C = 14.7

| Apr high C = 21.1

| May high C = 26.4

| Jun high C = 29.2

| Jul high C = 32.3

| Aug high C = 31.7

| Sep high C = 27.7

| Oct high C = 22.6

| Nov high C = 16.3

| Dec high C = 9.6

| Jan mean C = 2.8

| Feb mean C = 5.1

| Mar mean C = 9.8

| Apr mean C = 15.9

| May mean C = 21.4

| Jun mean C = 24.9

| Jul mean C = 28.4

| Aug mean C = 27.8

| Sep mean C = 23.5

| Oct mean C = 17.8

| Nov mean C = 11.4

| Dec mean C = 5.0

| Jan low C = -0.5

| Feb low C = 1.5

| Mar low C = 5.7

| Apr low C = 11.3

| May low C = 17.0

| Jun low C = 21.4

| Jul low C = 25.2

| Aug low C = 24.8

| Sep low C = 20.1

| Oct low C = 13.8

| Nov low C = 7.4

| Dec low C = 1.3

| Jan record high C = 20.6

| Jan record low C = -17.7

| Feb record high C = 26.4

| Feb record low C = -11.8

| Mar record high C = 34.1

| Mar record low C = -5.7

| Apr record high C = 34.1

| Apr record low C = 0.4

| May record high C = 35.8

| May record low C = 7.0

| Jun record high C = 37.6

| Jun record low C = 12.6

| Jul record high C = 39.1

| Jul record low C = 18.3

| Aug record high C = 40.6

| Aug record low C = 17.9

| Sep record high C = 37.5

| Sep record low C = 9.9

| Oct record high C = 32.5

| Oct record low C = 0.1

| Nov record high C = 28.3

| Nov record low C = -5.6

| Dec record high C = 22.6

| Dec record low C = -12.0

| year high C =

| year low C =

| year high F =

| year low F =

| precipitation colour = green

| Jan precipitation mm = 50.5

| Feb precipitation mm = 49.1

| Mar precipitation mm = 75.8

| Apr precipitation mm = 69.6

| May precipitation mm = 86.2

| Jun precipitation mm = 165.2

| Jul precipitation mm = 210.3

| Aug precipitation mm = 174.2

| Sep precipitation mm = 74.3

| Oct precipitation mm = 54.0

| Nov precipitation mm = 54.1

| Dec precipitation mm = 36.6

| Jan humidity = 73

| Feb humidity = 72

| Mar humidity = 69

| Apr humidity = 67

| May humidity = 68

| Jun humidity = 74

| Jul humidity = 78

| Aug humidity = 79

| Sep humidity = 77

| Oct humidity = 75

| Nov humidity = 75

| Dec humidity = 73

| unit precipitation days = 0.1 mm

| Jan precipitation days = 8.7

| Feb precipitation days = 8.9

| Mar precipitation days = 9.9

| Apr precipitation days = 9.1

| May precipitation days = 9.5

| Jun precipitation days = 10.7

| Jul precipitation days = 13.1

| Aug precipitation days = 12.1

| Sep precipitation days = 8.3

| Oct precipitation days = 7.1

| Nov precipitation days = 7.9

| Dec precipitation days = 7.1

| year precipitation days =

| Jan sun = 129.9

| Feb sun = 128.1

| Mar sun = 156.6

| Apr sun = 180.0

| May sun = 189.5

| Jun sun = 149.5

| Jul sun = 173.1

| Aug sun = 184.4

| Sep sun = 164.2

| Oct sun = 168.4

| Nov sun = 146.5

| Dec sun = 141.8

| year sun =

| Jan percentsun = 41

| Feb percentsun = 41

| Mar percentsun = 42

| Apr percentsun = 46

| May percentsun = 44

| Jun percentsun = 35

| Jul percentsun = 40

| Aug percentsun = 45

| Sep percentsun = 45

| Oct percentsun = 48

| Nov percentsun = 47

| Dec percentsun = 46

| year percentsun =

| Jan snow days = 3.9

| Feb snow days = 2.9

| Mar snow days = 1.0

| Apr snow days = 0.1

| May snow days = 0

| Jun snow days = 0

| Jul snow days = 0

| Aug snow days = 0

| Sep snow days = 0

| Oct snow days = 0

| Nov snow days = 0.4

| Dec snow days = 1.4

| year snow days =

| source 1 = China Meteorological Administration{{cite web |url=http://data.cma.cn/data/weatherBk.html |script-title=zh:中国气象数据网 – WeatherBk Data |publisher=China Meteorological Administration |language = zh-hans |access-date=25 June 2023}}

{{cite web|url=https://experience.arcgis.com/template/e724038fda394e9d9b7921f10fd1aa55/page/%E7%BA%AF%E8%A1%A8%E6%A0%BC%E7%BB%9F%E8%AE%A1-(%E5%AF%B9%E6%AF%948110%E5%8F%98%E5%8C%96)/?org=UQmaps |script-title=zh:中国气象数据网|publisher=China Meteorological Administration |language = zh-hans | access-date =25 June 2023 |title=Experience Template }} all-time extreme temperature{{cite web

|url= http://www.mherrera.org/temp.htm

|title= Extreme Temperatures Around the World

|access-date= 2024-09-16

}}{{cite web

|url= https://www.163.com/dy/article/E2HHPSS305444WQP.html

|title= 这两天根本不算冷 看看全国各大城市历史极端最低温度是几度?

|date= 8 December 2018

|access-date= 2024-09-16

}}

| source =

}}

Transportation

=Air=

The Yangzhou Taizhou International Airport, completed in 2012 to serve Yangzhou and neighboring Taizhou, is located in Jiangdu district. The Nanjing Lukou International Airport is over {{convert|100|km|mi|abbr=on}} away; it takes one hour and 40 minutes to get there from central Yangzhou. Prior to the completion of the Yangzhou Taizhou Airport, Lukou Airport in Nanjing was the primary air gateway for passengers destined for Yangzhou. There are over 10 airline ticket offices in Yangzhou, providing convenient service for foreign and domestic tourists. domestic and international fight are available with 10 international airlines and more than 20 domestic ones

=Rail=

Until 2004, Yangzhou was not served by passenger rail. Yangzhou Railway Station began construction in 2003 and was completed a year later. It is located on the western outskirts of the city, and is a major station on the Nanjing–Qidong railway, and provides direct passenger service to the provincial capital as well as a number of major cities to the west, north, and south (such as Xi'an, Wuhan, and Guangzhou), including an overnight Z-series express train to Beijing.[http://www.tielu.org/ tielu.org] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161205115111/http://www.tielu.org/ |date=2016-12-05 }}, schedule search for Yangzhou Later, frequent high-speed (D-series) service has been introduced on this line as well.

In 2020, the new Yangzhoudong Railway Station came into service along with Lianyungang-Zhenjiang High-Speed Railway, an important high-speed railway running through the eastern part of the city that connects Southern and Northern Jiangsu with a design speed of 250kph. The railway connects Yangzhou to many major cities in the country using high-speed trains. The fastest direct train to Shanghai takes only 1 hour 19 minutes.

A new railway with a design speed of 350kph, Shanghai-Nanjing-Hefei High-Speed Railway, is also under construction. It is expected to run through the major existing railway station, Yangzhoudong Railway Station.

Major passenger railway stations in Yangzhou:

class="wikitable"

! Station Name

! Chinese

! Location

Yangzhoudong

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|扬州东}}}}

|Biodiverse and Sci-Tech City

{{stl|CR|Yangzhou}}

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|扬州}}}}

|Hanjiang

{{stl|CR|Jiangdu}}

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|江都}}}}

|Jiangdu

{{stl|CR|Gaoyou}}

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|高邮}}}}

|Gaoyou

Gaoyoubei

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|高邮北}}}}

|Gaoyou

{{stl|CR|Baoying}}

|{{large|{{lang|zh-cn|宝应}}}}

|Baoying

= River transport =

Yangzhou harbor, {{convert|11.5|km|abbr=on}} south from the city center, is located at the junction of the Beijing–Hangzhou Canal and the Yangtze River. The average water depth is 15–20 meters. In 1992, the State Council approved it to become a first-grade open state harbor, and General Secretary Jiang Zemin inscribed its name. Now, it has developed into a comprehensive inland harbor, integrating passenger, freight, container transportation and harbor trade, and has become the main distribution center of northern Jiangsu province, eastern Anhui Province and southeast Shandong Province. There are several dozen categories of goods including iron and steel, timber, minerals, coal, grain, cotton, container, products of light industry and machinery. The passenger routes reach Nanjing, Wuhu, Jiujiang, Huangshi and Wuhan in the west, and Nantong and Shanghai in the east. Some well-known luxury international liners also anchor here. The harbor has greatly promoted the development of exports and the overall local economy.

=Expressways=

The Ningyang (Nanjing–Yangzhou) Expressway crosses the southern part of Yangzhou's metropolitan area while the Ningtong (Nanjing–Nantong) Expressway is connected to Yangzhou at Liaojiagou. In recent years, local government have attached great importance to the development of the tourism, in conjunction with a greater effort dedicated to the improvement of the local road transport system. With a total investment of 680 million yuan, the Yangzhou section of the Ningyang Expressway was completed on December 18, 1998, and opened to traffic in June 1999. Stretching nearly {{convert|18|km|abbr=on}}, the section of the expressway starts from the Bazi Flyover as the entry/exit, via the Yanggua Highway, the Tonggang Highway, an ancient canal, the Yangwei Highway, the Beijing–Hangzhou Grand Canal and the Yangling Highway, to Liqojiagou Entry/Exit of Yangjiang Highway. It then passes the Jiangdu Flyover to directly link up with the Huaijiang Expressway. In addition, the section of Huaijiang Expressway within the territory of Yangzhou began construction on March 22, 1997, which will be commonly used by the state planned Tongjiang–Sanya and Beijing–Shanghai trunk lines. The section of Huaijiang Expressway in Yangzhou totals {{convert|112.04|km|abbr=on}}in length, starting from Jinghe Town of Baoying in the north to the entry/exist of Zhuanqiaozhen Flyover of Jiangdu in the south. It then links with Ningtong Expressway, passing by three counties (cities) such as Baoying, Gaoyou and Jiangdu and 26 towns, at a total cost of 3.7 billion yuan. It is expected to be open to traffic by the year 2000.{{cn|date=October 2022}}

File:Yangzhou-Modern-Grand-Canal-barge-caravan-3342.JPG passes within a few kilometers east of the city's main urban area.]]

=Intercity bus service=

During the daytime, frequent bus service operates between Yangzhou and nearby cities. There are several bus stations on the city's outskirts; most of the buses from Nanjing (Nanjing West Bus Station) and Zhenjiang (where the bus station is adjacent to the Zhenjiang Railway Station) arrive to Yangzhou South Bus Station, located a few kilometers southwest from downtown. Most of the intercity bus service stops in the early evening.

=Transportation in the urban area=

The city is served by an extensive network of public bus routes.

Yangzhou's taxi industry began in 1982, and has developed rapidly since 1993. the city has over 40 taxi companies of various ownership structures, with a total of 1,571 vehicles. Parking lots were established at key stations and hotels, and eight taxi companies have opened round-the-clock telephone service. The construction department of the municipal government has strengthened the management of taxi services, providing education in the relevant laws, professional ethics and safety aspects.

In 2014, Yangzhou's government approved plans for the construction of a subway system, which will initially include two lines. Line 1 will run in the general east–west direction, from Yangzhou Railway Station in the west to the historic central city to the future high-speed railway station (east of the Grand Canal) to Jiangdu District. Line 2 will run in the general north–south direction.{{cite news |url=http://www.yznews.com.cn/09zjyz/jr/2014-06/06/content_5228300.htm |script-title=zh:扬州地 1、2号线走向初定 |script-work=zh:扬州网 |date=2014-06-06}}

=Tourist transportation=

To develop tourism in Yangzhou, sightseeing buses have been introduced in the city run by the Tianma travel agency under the Yangzhou Tourist Bureau. There is a tour guide on each bus. The route, starting from Yangzhou station, has eight stops, and passes by such scenic spots of the Slender West Lake, Daming Temple, Imperial Dock, Siwang Pagoda, Wenchang Pagoda, and Shita Temple. Yangzhou Public Transit also operates No. 1, No. 2, and No. 5 special tourist lines. The No. 1 bus departs from the bus station and goes by the Slender West Lake, Shigong Temple, Ge Garden, and He Garden; the No. 5 bus starts from the bus station and goes by the Crane Temple, Wenchang Pagoda, Slender West Lake, Five-Pavilion Bridge, and Pingshan Hall. A sight-seeing route on Slender West Lake has opened, connecting Imperial Dock, Yichun Garden, Hong Garden, Dahong Bridge, Xiaojinshan, Diaoyutai, Five-Pavilion Bridge, and the 24 Bridge, finally reaching Daming Temple and Pingshan Hall.{{cite web | url=http://www.tourochina.com/guide/Yangzhou/transportation-index.html | title=雅昂管業 }}

Industries and shipyards

Yangzhou is the site of Chengxi shipyard, large shipyard where bulk carriers and other types of large ships are built.{{cite web |title=CSSC Official website |url=http://www.cssc.net.cn/en/ |website=cssc.net.cn |publisher=CSSC |access-date=6 December 2018}}{{cite web |title=Shipyards in Jiangsu China |url=https://www.shipyards.gr/shipyards/search-by/state?value=Jiangsu |website=shipyards.gr |publisher=Shipyard directory |access-date=6 December 2018}} Owned partly by the state owned CSSC holdings, through Jiangsu Xinrong shipyard, Chengxi Yangzhou shipyard builds ships from 25,000 dwt to 170,000 dwt in size.{{cite web |title=Chengxi Xinrong shipyard |url=https://www.shipyards.gr/shipyards/ship-repair-shipyards/Shiprepairs-fareast-pacific-ocean/Shiprepairs-fareast-china-sea/chengxi-shipyard-xinrong-china |website=shipyards.gr |publisher=Shipyard directory |access-date=6 December 2018}}{{cite web |title=Jiangsu Chengxi shipyard |url=http://www.cccme.org.cn/shop/cccme2164/introduction.aspx |website=cccme.org.cn |publisher=Official website CCCME |access-date=6 December 2018}}{{cite web |title=Chengxi shipyard Jiangsu |url=https://ecmarine.com/jiangyin.html |website=ecmarine.com |publisher=East coast marine alliance |access-date=6 December 2018}}{{cite news |title=China's white listed shipyards |url=https://www.tradewindsnews.com/incoming/article362564.ece5 |access-date=6 December 2018 |publisher=Trade Winds}}{{cite web |title=Our Experience |url=http://tymvios.digital/projects/shipyard-experience/ |website=tymvios.digital |publisher=Shulte marine concepts |access-date=6 December 2018 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206102428if_/http://tymvios.digital/projects/shipyard-experience/ |archive-date=6 December 2018 }}

Culture

File:Yangzhou-childrens-library-scooter-parking-3411.jpg

The Yangzhou dialect ({{zh|c=扬州话|links=no}}, {{ipa|/iaŋ ʦɤɯ xua/}}) of Chinese is representative of Lower Yangtze Mandarin, and is particularly close to the official language of the Ming and Qing courts, which was based on the Nanjing dialect. However, it does differ considerably from modern Standard Chinese, although they are still moderately mutually intelligible.

Dialect has also been used as a tool for regional identity and politics in the Jiangbei and Jiangnan regions. While the city of Yangzhou was the center of trade, flourishing and prosperous, it was considered part of Jiangnan, which was known to be wealthy, even though Yangzhou was north of the Yangzi river. Once Yangzhou's wealth and prosperity were gone, it was then considered to be part of Jiangbei, the "backwater". After Yangzhou was removed from Jiangnan, its residents decided{{dubious|date=January 2016}} to replace Jianghuai Mandarin, which was the dialect of Yangzhou, with Taihu Wu dialects. In Jiangnan itself, multiple subdialects of Wu fought for the position of prestige dialect.{{cite book

| url=https://archive.org/details/teachersofinnerc00kodo

| url-access=registration

| title=Teachers of the inner chambers: women and culture in seventeenth-century China

| year=1994

| author=Dorothy Ko

| publisher=Stanford University Press

| edition=illustrated, annotated

| isbn=0-8047-2359-1

| page=[https://archive.org/details/teachersofinnerc00kodo/page/21 21]

| quote=With the exclusion of Yangzhou came the denigration of its dialect, a variant of Jianghuai "Mandarin" (guanhua). The various Wu dialects from the Lake Tai area became the spoken language of choice, to the point of replacing guanhua...

| access-date=23 September 2011}}

During a period of prosperity and imperial favor, the arts of storytelling and painting flourished in Yangzhou. The innovative painter-calligrapher Shitao lived in Yangzhou during the 1680s and again from 1697 until his death in 1707. A later group of painters from that time called the Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou are famous throughout China.

Former General secretary of CPC, President of China Jiang Zemin was born and raised in Yangzhou. His middle school is located right across from the public notary's office in Yangzhou.

Yangzhou is famous for its carved lacquerware and jade.

Some of China's most creative and eye catching dishes come from the Yangzhou school of cuisine called Huaiyang (also commonly known as the Weiyang school). Along with Sichuan cuisine, Cantonese cuisine, and Shandong cuisine, Huaiyang cuisine ({{lang|zh-hans|淮扬菜}}) is a distinctive and masterful skill that locals are quite proud of.

The city is famous for its public bath houses, lacquerware, jadeware, embroidery, and paper-cut arts and crafts.

The city was awarded Habitat Scroll of Honor in 2006.

Yangzhou is also very famous for its toy industry (especially stuffed animals). Many tourists from neighboring cities travel to the city for its good-quality and low-priced toys.

It is worth mentioning that the city is also famous for an ancient folk art called Yangzhou storytelling ({{lang|zh-hans|扬州评话}}), which is like Xiangsheng—the traditional Chinese comedic performance. It rose as a performing act during the Ming dynasty. In the performance, the artist details an interesting historical story to audiences, using Yangzhou dialect. These stories have been edited by artists, so they sound very soul-stirring and funny. The best known artist of Yangzhou storytelling was Wang shaotang. His most famous works are The 10 chapters of Wu Song ({{lang|zh-hans|武十回}}), The 10 chapters of Song Jiang ({{lang|zh-hans|宋十回}}), The 10 chapters of Lu Junyi ({{lang|zh-hans|卢十回}}), and The 10 chapters of Shi Xiu ({{lang|zh-hans|石十回}}).Vibeke Børdahl, The Oral Tradition of Yangzhou Storytelling, London: Routledge, 1996; Vibeke Børdahl and Jette Ross, Chinese Storytellers: Life and Art in the Yangzhou Tradition, Cheng and Tsui 2002.

File:Chinese snowball.jpg

=Literary references=

Yangzhou was frequently referenced in Chinese literature. Poet Li Bai (c. 700–762) wrote in Seeing Meng Haoran off to Yangzhou from Yellow Crane Pavilion:

:At Yellow Crane Pavilion in the west

:My old friend says farewell;

:In the mist and flowers of spring

:He goes down to Yangzhou;

:Lonely sail, distant shadow,

:Vanish in blue emptiness;

:All I see is the great river

:Flowing into the far horizon.

Du Mu wrote the famous lines on Yangzhou:{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h8fWf7pYOIUC&pg=PA218 |title=How to Read Chinese Poetry: A Guided Anthology|author= Zong-qi Cai |page= Columbia University Press|date=30 November 2007 |publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=9780231511889 }}

:After ten years, I awoke from my Yangzhou dream,

:All I gained was a fickle reputation in the green mansions.

The "green mansions" or "green/black lofts" (qinglou) refers to the pleasure districts for which Yangzhou became known.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dvFJQ6WE1agC&pg=PA287|title=Lifestyle and Entertainment in Yangzhou|author1=Lucie B. Olivová|author2=Vibeke Børdah|pages=287–288|publisher=NIAS Press|date=1 October 2009|isbn=978-8776940355}}

In the Qing dynasty novel Dream of the Red Chamber, the character of Lin Daiyu is from Yangzhou.

Tourism

Tourist sights include Slender West Lake and old residences in the moated town, such as the Wang Residence and the Daming temple. Yangzhou is famous for its many well preserved Yangzhou style gardens. Most of the Historic city is in the Guangling District.

=Slender West Lake=

{{main|Slender West Lake}}

Named after Hangzhou's famous West Lake, this long, narrow stretch of water which meanders through Yangzhou's western limits is a well-known scenic spot. A long bank planted with weeping willows spans the lake. At its midpoint stands the Five-Pavilion Bridge with five covered terraces, one at each of the corners and one in the center. Around the lake is a park in which are found several attractions: Xu Garden, the White Dagoba of Lianxing Temple, copied from the similar tower in Beijing's Beihai Park; Small Gold Mountain (Xiao Jinshan); and the Fishing Platform (Diaoyutai), a favorite retreat of the Qing emperor Qian Long. The emperor was so gratified by his luck in fishing at this spot that he ordered additional stipends for the town. As it turns out, his success had been augmented by local swimmers who lurked in the lake busily attaching fish to his hook.

Image:Serene and Fragrant Study.JPG|Study hall

Image:Si Qiao Yan Yu Building.jpg|Four Bridges in Rain and Mist

Image:The Sunny Spring Stage.jpg|Imperial birthday celebration stage

Image:Du Mu 24 bridge poem.JPG|Mao Zedong's calligraphy of the Tang dynasty poet Du Mu poem

Image:Twenty four bridge.JPG|24 ancient beauties played flute on this bridge

Image:White pagoda clear sky and cloud garden.JPG|White Dagoba against Oncoming Clouds, part of Lianxing Temple

Image:Jinjingge copy.JPG|The Jinjingge bridge

Image:Xu Garden.jpg|Xu Garden

=Daming Temple=

{{main|Daming Temple}}

Located on Shugang Hill, in the city's northwest, is Fajing Temple, formerly known as DaMing Temple. The original temple was built in Liu Song dynasty (420–479). A nine-story pagoda, the Qilingta, was built on the temple grounds in the year of Sui dynasty (589–618) . A recent addition to the temple complex is the Jianzhen Memorial Hall, built according to Tang dynasty methods and financed with contributions raised by Buddhist groups in Japan.

When Qing Emperor Qian Long visited Yangzhou in 1765, he was troubled by The temple's name DaMing (which literally means "Great Ming') fearing that it might revive nostalgia for the Ming dynasty, which was overthrown by his Manchu predecessors. He had it renamed Fajing Temple.

The temple was seriously damaged during the Taiping Rebellion at the beginning of the 20th century. The present structure is a reconstruction dating from the 1930s.

Image:Daming temple.JPG|Da Ming Temple

Image:Jianzhen memorial hall.jpg|Memorial Hall of monk Jianzhen

Image:QilingP.jpg|Da Ming temple pagoda

=Flat Hills (Ping Shan) Hall=

Built by the Song dynasty writer Ouyang Xiu when he served as prefect of the city, this hall stands just west of Fajing Temple. Looking out from this hall, the mountains to the south of the Yangtze River appear as a line at the viewer's eye level, hence the name Flat Hills Hall. When Ouyang Xiu's student Su Dongpo moved to Yangzhou, he too served as prefect of the city. He had a hall built directly behind the one erected by his master, and called it Guling Hall.

=Pavilion of Flourishing Culture=

File:Yangzhou-WenchangGe-traffic-3417.jpg

The Pavilion of Flourishing Culture {{nowrap|(t {{lang|zh|{{linktext|文|昌|閣}}}},}} {{nowrap|s {{lang|zh|{{linktext|文|昌|阁}}}},}} Wénchāng Gé) is a round, three-story pavilion in Yangzhou's eastern sector, built in 1585 and celebrating the city's rich cultural traditions. It is also the de facto center of the city.

Built during Ming dynasty, it is located on the cross of Wenchang Road and Wenhe Road. The whole building is about 79-foot high, and looks like Temple of Heaven in Beijing. Today, bordered by many shopping stores, Wenchange had been a symbol of commercial center to residents.

=Stone Pagoda =

The Stone Pagoda {{nowrap|({{lang|zh|{{linktext|石|塔}}}},}} Shítǎ) is a five-story Tang-era pagoda west of the Pavilion of Flourishing Culture. First built in 837, it is the oldest pagoda still standing in Yangzhou.

=Tomb of Puhaddin=

File:Yangzhou-Minaret-3284.jpg

{{main|Tomb of Puhaddin}}

This is essentially a Ming dynasty graveyard that includes the tomb of Puhaddin. According to information at the tomb, he was a 16th generation descendant of Muhammad, the prophet. The tomb is on the eastern bank of the (Old) Grand Canal in the eastern sector of the city and is adjacent to a mosque which houses a collection of valuable materials documenting China's relations with Muslim countries.{{cite web|url=http://www.fodors.com/world/asia/china/beijing-to-shanghai/review-434792.html|title=Garden Tomb of Puhaddin Beijing to Shanghai Review|website=fodors.com}}

=Ge Garden=

{{main|Geyuan}}

Ge Garden or Geyuan is a Jiangnan estate and garden, reckoned among the most refined and beautiful in China. Erected off Dongguan Road over a previous estate, the present design was established and named by the prosperous salt merchant Huang Zhiyun, who named it in honor of the virtues of the bamboo that appear in his name and throughout the garden.{{sfnp|Finnane|2004|p=209}} It is particularly famed for its four rockeries intended to represent the seasons.

=He Garden=

{{main|He Garden}}

He Garden or Heyuan, also known as the Jixiao Shanzhuang, was built by the 19th-century Qing official He Zhidao. The garden is famed for its winding {{convert|430|m|ft|abbr=on|sp=us}} 2 story corridor, the walls of which are lined with stone tablets carved with lines of classical poetry. The garden also has an open-air theater set on an island in the middle of a fish pond.

=Yechun Garden=

{{main|Yechun Garden}}

Yechun Garden or Yechunyuan lies on the banks of the Xiading River at the city's northern limits. Under the Qing, the poet Wang Yuyang and his circle of friends used to gather in the garden to recite their works. The thatched roofs of the pavilions in this garden give it a quaint rustic air.

=Yangzhou Museum=

File:Yangzhou-Double-Museum-2869.jpg

{{main|Yangzhou Museum}}

The Yangzhou Museum is on the west shore of Bright Moon Lake, its architecture intended to embody the harmony of man and nature. The museum proper{{mdash}}covering the history of Yangzhou and the surrounding areas of China{{mdash}}occupies only a portion of the third floor, the other floors technically organized and operated as separate museums including the Chinese Block Printing Museum ({{lang|zh-hans|扬州中国雕版印刷博物馆}}) established by the State Council in August 2003 to house 300,000 printing blocks collected by Yangzhou's Guangling Press. All together, the museums cover an area of {{convert|50,000|sqm|sp=us}} with the exhibition area occupying a fifth of the total.

=Jiangdu Hydro Project=

{{main|South–North Water Transfer Project}}

The Jiangdu Hydro Project is the southern beginning of the eastern route of the South–North Water Transfer Project, intended to divert massive amounts of freshwater from the mouth of the Yangtze to China's drier northern regions along the route of the Grand Canal. Construction of the pumping facilities involved began in 1961 and was completed in 1975.{{cn|date=October 2022}} The project includes facilities for irrigation, drainage, navigation, and power generation including 4 large electric pumping stations, 6 medium-sized check gates, 3 navigation locks, and 2 trunk waterways.

Education

= Universities and colleges =

= Primary and secondary education =

Sister cities and twin towns

{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in China}}

  • {{flagdeco|Russia}} Balashikha, Moscow Oblast, Russia
  • {{flagdeco|US}} Kent, Washington, US{{cite web |url=http://kentwa.gov/SisterCity-YangzhouChina.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140520113717/http://www.kentwa.gov/SisterCity-YangzhouChina.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2014-05-20 |title=Yangzhou, China |website=City of Kent, Washington}}
  • {{flagdeco|Malaysia}} Malacca City, Malaysia
  • {{flagdeco|Germany}} Neubrandenburg, Germany{{cite web |url=http://www.neubrandenburg.de/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=192:partnerste&catid=34:partnerste&Itemid=184 |title=Yangzhou, China – sister city|website=Neubrandenburg, Germany website}}
  • {{flagdeco|Germany}} Offenbach am Main, Germany (since 1997){{cite web|title=Offenbach und seine Partnerstädte|url=http://www.offenbach.de/rathaus/stadtinfo/staedtepartnerschaften/staedtepartnerschaften-intro.php|publisher=City of Offenbach|access-date=25 September 2016|date=21 April 2010|archive-date=6 November 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211106215458/https://www.offenbach.de/rathaus/stadtinfo/staedtepartnerschaften/staedtepartnerschaften-intro.php|url-status=dead}}
  • {{flagdeco|France}} Orléans, France
  • {{flagdeco|Japan}} Nara, Japan
  • {{flagdeco|New Zealand}} Porirua, New Zealand{{cite web |url=http://sistercities.org.nz/index.php?s=cities | title=About Sister Cities | website=Sister Cities New Zealand| date=22 December 2017 }}
  • {{flagdeco|Canada}} Vaughan, Ontario, Canada
  • {{flagdeco|US}} Westport, Connecticut, US{{cite web |url=http://www.westportct.gov/index.aspx?page=190 |title=Sister Cities Committee |website=Westport, Connecticut |access-date=2015-07-09 |archive-date=2016-01-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160123172425/http://www.westportct.gov/index.aspx?page=190 |url-status=dead }}
  • {{flagicon|UK}} Colchester, UK{{cite web | url=https://www.essexlive.news/news/essex-news/essex-twin-towns-europe-world-4440396 | title=Essex's twin towns across the world and how similar they are to each other | date=30 May 2021 }}{{cite web | url=https://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/13638695.colchester-set-to-twin-with-yangzhou/ | title=Town set to twin with Chinese City | date=2 September 2015 }}

See also

References

{{reflist}}

=Sources=

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  • {{cite book | first = Tobie | last = Meyer-Fong | year = 2003 | title = Building Culture in Early Qing Yangzhou| publisher = Stanford University Press| location = Stanford, California | isbn =0-8047-4485-8}}
  • {{cite book | first = Lucie, and Vibeke Børdahl| last = Olivová | year = 2009 | title = Lifestyle and entertainment in Yangzhou| publisher = NIAS Press| location = Copenhagen| isbn =978-87-7694-035-5}}
  • "Yangzhou." Encyclopedia of China. ed. Dorothy Perkins. Chicago: Roundtable Press. 1999. {{ISBN|1-57958-110-2}}
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| first = Alfred

| title = The magic square: cities in ancient China

| publisher = Edition Axel Menges

| year = 1996

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=qhcRYkz-I3YC

| isbn = 3-930698-02-1}}

  • {{citation|last=Yule|first=Henry|title=The Travels of Friar Odoric|year=2002}}