Jump to content

City Wall of Suzhou

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
City Wall of Suzhou
Chang or Changmen Gate (閶門 or 阊门) in Suzhou
Traditional Chinese蘇州城牆
Simplified Chinese苏州城墙
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSūzhōu Chéngqiáng
Wade–GilesSu-chou Ch'eng-ch'iang

The City Wall of Suzhou is the remains of the old protective wall that once surrounded Suzhou in Jiangsu Province in eastern China.

History

[edit]

The state of Wu is recorded fortifying its capital at Wu (modern Suzhou) in 514 BC. The original city wall had only one entrance, the Pan Gate.

Most of the current fortifications date to around 1662, when they were rebuilt under the early Qing dynasty to repair damage from the conquest of the Ming.

Structure

[edit]

Before the wall began to be demolished in 1958, it was 15,204 m (49,882 ft) long. Today, only 2,072 m (6,798 ft) remain.[1]

See also

[edit]
  • Pan Gate, the oldest surviving component of the wall

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "苏州古城墙:一座古城的复兴之源", City.sina.com.cn (in Chinese), 23 August 2011.