Kunming
Kunming
昆明市 | |
---|---|
Beijing Road Jinma Biji Gate Kunming Dianchi International Convention and Exhibition Center | |
Nickname(s): City of Eternal Spring Tuodong City, Yachi Fu, Yunnanfu | |
Coordinates (Yunnan People's Government): 25°02′47″N 102°42′34″E / 25.0464°N 102.7094°E | |
Country | China |
Province | Yunnan |
County-level divisions | 14 |
Township divisions | 137 |
Settled | c. 279 BC[citation needed] |
City seat | Chenggong |
Admin units | |
Government | |
• Type | Prefecture-level city |
• Body | Kunming Municipal People's Congress |
• CCP Secretary | Liu Hongting |
• Congress Chairman | Yan Zhengxiao |
• Mayor | Liu Jiachen |
• CPPCC Chairman | Xiong Ruili |
Area | |
• Prefecture-level city | 21,473 km2 (8,291 sq mi) |
• Urban | 4,013 km2 (1,549 sq mi) |
• Metro | 2,622 km2 (1,012 sq mi) |
Elevation | 1,892 m (6,207 ft) |
Population (2020 census)[1] | |
• Prefecture-level city | 8,460,088 |
• Density | 390/km2 (1,000/sq mi) |
• Urban | 5,950,578 |
• Urban density | 1,500/km2 (3,800/sq mi) |
• Metro | 5,604,310 |
• Metro density | 2,100/km2 (5,500/sq mi) |
• Rank in China | 16th |
GDP[2] | |
• Prefecture-level city | CN¥ 754.1 billion US$ 111.2 billion |
• Per capita | CN¥ 88,193 US$ 13,008 |
Time zone | UTC+08:00 (China Standard) |
Postal code | 650000 |
Area code | 0871 |
ISO 3166 code | CN-YN-01 |
License plate prefixes | 云A |
Climate | Cwb |
Home to | Karst wonders |
Website | www |
Symbols | |
Flower | Camellia japonica |
Tree | Magnolia denudata |
Kunming | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 昆明 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | (transcription of an ancient tribal name) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Former names | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yunnan-Fu (former name used during imperial dynasties) | |||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 雲南府 | ||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 云南府 | ||||||||||||||
|
Kunming[a] is the capital and largest city of the province of Yunnan in China.[4] The political, economic, communications and cultural centre of the province, Kunming is also the seat of the provincial government. During World War II, Kunming was a Chinese military center and the location of the headquarters for the US Army Forces China-Burma-India (HQ AAF CBI).[5] Wujiaba Airport served as the home of the First American Volunteer Group (AVG) of the Republic of China Air Force, nicknamed the Flying Tigers.[6] Kunming was also a transport terminus for the Burma Road.
Kunming is at an altitude of 1,900 metres (6,234 feet) above sea level and a latitude just north of the Tropic of Cancer, and is situated in the middle of the Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau. Kunming is the fourth most populous city in Western China, after Chongqing, Chengdu, and Xi'an, and the third most populous city in Southwestern China after Chongqing and Chengdu. As of the 2020 census, Kunming had a total population of 8,460,088 inhabitants, of whom 5,604,310 lived in its built-up (or metro) area made of all urban districts but Jinning. It is at the northern edge of Dian Lake, surrounded by temples and lakes and karst topography.[7]
Kunming consists of an old, previously walled city, a modern commercial district, residential zones, and university areas. The city is also one of the major centers for scientific research and education in Southwestern China. As of 2023, it was listed among the top 125 cities in the world by scientific research output.[8] The city has an astronomical observatory, and its institutions of higher learning include Yunnan University, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Yunnan University of Finance and Economics, Kunming Medical University, Yunnan Normal University, Yunnan Agricultural University and Southwest Forestry University. Kunming is home to the Golden Temple, China's largest bronze temple dating from the Ming dynasty.
Kunming is a major economic centers in Western China. The city's economic importance derives from its geographical position, as it shares a border with various Southeast Asian countries, serving them as a transportation hub in Southwest China, linking by rail to Vietnam and Laos, and by road to Myanmar and Thailand. This positioning also makes the city an important commercial center of trade in the region. The city also acts as a gateway to Southeast Asia and South Asia, the Kunming Changshui International Airport is one of the top 40-busiest airports in the world.[9][10] As of 2024, the city is also home to six consulates from ASEAN countries.[11]
The headquarters of many of Yunnan's biggest corporations are based in the city including Hongta Group, Yunnan Copper Group, Hongyun Group, Yunnan Power Grid Co, and Fudian Bank.[12][13] Kunming also houses some manufacturing, chiefly the processing of copper, as well as various chemicals, machinery, textiles, paper and cement. Kunming has a nearly 2,400-year history, but its modern prosperity dates only to 1910, when the railway from Hanoi was built. The city has continued to develop rapidly under China's modernization efforts. Kunming was designated a special tourism center and, as such, has experienced a proliferation of high-rises and luxury hotels.
Etymology
[edit]The name "Kunming" evolved from an ancient ethnicity named Kunming Yi or Kunming Barbarian (昆明夷), which was a branch of Di-Qiang. The Kunming Yi lived in the neighbouring region of Erhai Lake during the Western Han dynasty. The Han dynasty incorporated the territory of the Dian Kingdom and set a division called Yizhou Commandery in 109 BC; the Han dynasty also incorporated the Kunming Yi into Yizhou Commandery soon after. Therefore, Kunming Yi expanded east to the Lake Dian area later. "Kunming" has acted as a place name since the Three Kingdoms period, but the reference was not clear because this ethnicity occupied a large region. In the Yuan dynasty, the central government set "Kunming County" in modern Kunming; the name "Kunming" has continued to this day.[14]
A 2009 research paper proposes that the name "Kunming" of Kunming Yi is a cognate word of "Khmer" and "Khmu" that originally meant 'people'.[15]
History
[edit]Early history
[edit]Kunming long profited from its position on the caravan rought through to Southeast Asia, India and Tibet. Early townships in the southern edge of Lake Dian (outside the contemporary city perimeter) can be dated back to 279 BC, although they have been long lost to history. Early settlements in the area around Lake Dian date back to Neolithic times. The Dian Kingdom, whose original language likely belonged to the Tibeto-Burman languages, was also established near the area.[16]
Dian was subjugated by the Chinese Han dynasty under the reign of Emperor Wu of Han in 109 BC. The Han dynasty incorporated the territory of the Dian Kingdom into their Yizhou Commandery, but left the King of Dian as the local ruler.[17]
The Han dynasty (205 BC–AD 220), seeking control over the Southern Silk Road running to Burma and India, brought small parts of Yunnan into China's orbit, but subsequent dynasties could do little to tame what was then a remote and wild borderland until the 13th century.[18][contradictory] During the Sui dynasty (581–618), two military expeditions were launched against the area, and it was renamed Kunzhou in Chinese sources.[19]
Medieval China
[edit]Founded in 765, Kunming was known to the Chinese as Tuodong (拓東) city in the Kingdom of Nanzhao (737–902) during the 8th and 9th centuries.[19] Tuodong later became part of the successor Kingdom of Dali (937–1253). The possession of Tuodong changed hands when the city came under the control of the Yuan dynasty invasion of the southwest in 1252–1253. During the reign of provincial governor Ajall Shams al-Din Omar, a "Chinese Style" city named Zhongjing Chen was founded where modern Kunming is today. Shams al-Din ordered the construction of Buddhist temple, a Confucian temple, and two mosques in the city.[20] The Confucian temple, doubling as a school, was the first of its kind in Yunnan, attracting students from minority groups across the province.[21] Coupled with his promotion of Confucian ceremonies and customs, Shams al-Din has been largely credited with the sinicization of the region.[22] The city grew as a trading center between the southwest and the rest of China. It is considered by scholars to have been the city of Yachi Fu (Duck Pond Town) where people had used cowries as cash and ate their meat raw, as described by the 13th-century Venetian traveler Marco Polo.[23]
Ming and Qing dynasties
[edit]In the 14th century, Kunming was retaken from Khan Mongolian control when the Ming dynasty defeated the Yuan dynasty, later building a wall surrounding present-day Kunming. 300 years later, Ming General Wu Sangui defected to Manchu invaders and held the city until his death in 1678, long after the rest of China had fallen under Manchu rule. During the beginning of Qing rule, the entirety of Yunnan and Guizhou were ruled from Kunming and Wu.[24] During the Revolt of the Three Feudatories, the seat of Wu's newly declared Zhou dynasty was moved to Hengzhou, Hunan. Later in 1678 when Wu died, his grandson Wu Shifan resisted the Qing for two more months before committing suicide, thereby reverting control of the city back into Qing hands. During the Ming and Qing dynasties, it was the seat of the superior prefecture of Yunnan.
The area was first dubbed Kunming in the period towards the decline of the Yuan dynasty and later still in 1832, the beginnings of a real city were acknowledged within the city walls and significant structures within their confines. Founding of the city can therefore be said to have been a predominantly 19th century affair. It was also in this century that the city grew to become the major market and transport centre for the region. [citation needed] Many of the city's inhabitants were displaced as a result of the 1833 Kunming earthquake.
The rebel leader Du Wenxiu, the Muslim Han Sultan of Dali, attacked and besieged the city several times between 1858 and 1868. A great part of the city's wealth did not survive the 1856 Panthay Rebellion, when most of the Buddhist sites in the capital were badly damaged, converted to mosques or razed. Decades later, Kunming began to be influenced by the West, especially from the French Empire. In the 1890s, an uprising against working conditions on the Kunming–Haiphong rail line saw many laborers executed after France shipped in weapons to suppress the revolt. The meter-gauge rail line, only completed by around 1911, was designed by the French so that they could tap Yunnan's mineral resources for their colonies in Indochina.
Kunming was a communications center in early times and a junction of two major trading routes, one westward via Dali and Tengchong County into Myanmar, the other southward through Mengzi County to the Red River in Indochina. Eastward, a difficult mountain route led to Guiyang in Guizhou province and thence to Hunan province. To the northeast was a well-established trade trail to Yibin in Sichuan province on the Yangtze River. But these trails were all extremely difficult, passable only by mule trains or pack-carrying porters.
After Qing dynasty
[edit]"In the late 1800s, the French started to build the Kunming-Haiphong railway for trade and shipping of weapons".[25]
Kunming reverted to county status in 1912, under the name Kunming, and became a municipality in 1935. [citation needed] The opening of the Kunming area began in earnest with the completion in 1906–1910 of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway to Haiphong in north Vietnam (part of French Indochina).
Kunming became a treaty port opening to foreign trade in 1908 and soon became a commercial center.[19] A university was set up in 1922. In the 1930s the first highways were built, linking Kunming with Chongqing in Sichuan and Guiyang in Guizhou to the east.
The local warlord General Tang Jiyao established the Wujiaba Aerodrome in 1922; an additional 23 airports would be established in Yunnan from 1922 to 1929.[26]
Second World War (1937–1945)
[edit]Kunming was transformed into a modern city as a result of fighting of the Second Sino-Japanese War/World War II in 1937 with the outbreak of the Battles of Shanghai, Nanking and Taiyuan, forcing a great movement of refugees from the north and eastern coastal regions of China,[28] bringing much commerce and industry into the southwest of China, including Kunming. They carried dismantled industrial plants with them, which were then re-erected beyond the range of Japanese bombers. [citation needed] In addition, a number of universities and institutes of higher education were evacuated there. The increased trade and expertise quickly established Kunming as an industrial and manufacturing base for the wartime government in Chongqing. [citation needed]
As the battles of Shanghai, Taiyuan and Nanjing were lost by the end of 1937, and with Wuhan falling into Japanese occupation by the end of 1938, many more of China's military forces and civilians retreated to cities outside the reach of the Japanese military ground forces a year prior to the outbreak of the Second World War in Europe in 1939, including the relocation of the Chinese Air Force Academy from Jianqiao Airbase to Kunming's Wujiaba Airbase, where the airfield was vastly expanded, becoming the new training hub for the battered but regrouped Chinese Air Force in which Lieutenant General Claire Lee Chennault took command of cadet training duties in the summer of 1938. The Chinese Air Force command established the 41st Pursuit Squadron based in Kunming, also known as the French Volunteer Group squadron in June 1938, and with them they brought Dewoitine D.510 fighters, with the intention of securing the sale of the planes to the Chinese Air Force; the French participated in some combat engagements against Japanese raids, including dogfights against Mitsubishi A5M fighters with Chinese Hawk III fighters over Nanchang, but after several setbacks, including a fighter pilot KIA, the group was disbanded in October 1938.[29]
Although the Empire of Japan was focusing on ending the Chinese war of resistance at the Battle of Chongqing and Chengdu, Kunming was not out of the reach of Japanese air raids, and faced attacks by IJAAF and IJNAF bombers;[30] military assets and infrastructure were under regular attack, while the RoCAF 18th Fighter Squadron and units of the Air Force Academy at Wujiaba were tasked with aerial defense of Kunming.[31] The city of Kunming was prepared as an alternate National Redoubt in case the temporary capital in Chongqing fell, with an elaborate system of caves to serve as offices, barracks and factories, but never utilised. Kunming was to have served again in this role during the ensuing Chinese Civil War, but the Nationalist garrison there switched sides and joined the Communists. Instead Taiwan would become the last redoubt and home of the Republic of China government; a role it fulfills to this day.[32]
When the city of Nanning fell to the Japanese during the Battle of South Guangxi, China's sea-access was cut off. However, the Chinese victory at the Battle of Kunlun Pass kept the Burma Road open. When the Japanese began occupying French Indochina in 1940, the Burma Road that linked Kunming and the outside-world with unoccupied China grew increasingly vital as much of the essential support and materials were imported through Burma. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the start of the Pacific War in December 1941, Kunming acted as an Allied military command center, which grouped the Chinese, American, British and French forces together for operations in Southeast Asia. Kunming became the northern and easternmost terminus of the vital war-supply line into China known as "The Hump', which stretched over the Himalayas from British bases in India to port-of-entry Kunming. The Office of Strategic Services' Service Unit Detachment 101 (predecessor to the 1st Special Forces Group) was also headquartered in Kunming. Its mission was to divert and disrupt Japanese combat operations in Burma.[33]
Kunming, the northern terminus of all three of the Burma Road, the Ledo Road, and The Hump supply-line, was increasingly targeted by the IJAAF. When the Burma Road was lost to the Japanese, the Hump became China's primary lifeline to the outside world. The 1st American Volunteer Group, known as the "Flying Tigers", was based in Kunming and tasked with defense of The Hump supply-line against Japanese aerial interceptions.[34]
Industry became important in Kunming during World War II. The large state-owned Central Machine Works[35] was transferred there from Hunan, while the manufacture of electrical products, copper, cement, steel, paper, and textiles expanded.
After World War II
[edit]Until 1952, Kunming was a walled city. The city government in 1952 ordered hundreds of young people to tear down the wall and use its bricks to make a new road running north–south. To show its appreciation for the young people that demolished the east wall, the city government named the new street after them. The existence of the walls still echoes today at place names like Xiao Ximen (小西门; 'Lesser west gate') and Beimen Jie (北门街; 'North gate Street'). There are also less obvious connections to the wall, such as Qingnian Lu (青年路; 'Youth Road'), in the location of Kunming's east wall.
After 1949, Kunming developed rapidly into an industrial metropolis with the construction of large iron and steel and chemical complexes, along with Chongqing, Chengdu and Guiyang in the southwest. A Minorities' Institute was set up in the 1950s to promote mutual understanding and access to university education among Yunnan's multiethnic population. The city consolidated its position as a supply depot during the Vietnam War and subsequent border clashes. Until Mao Zedong's death, in much of the rest of the country Kunming was still generally thought as a remote frontier settlement. Accordingly, the government utilized Kunming as a place where to exile people who had fallen politically out of favor, especially during the Cultural Revolution.
In 1957, Kunming's rail link to Hanoi was re-opened (after being cut during World War II). It was cut again in 1979.
Since the economic reforms of the mid-1980s, Kunming has enjoyed increased tourism and foreign investment, for instance investors from Thailand trace their ancestries back to Yunnan. Several Thai Chinese banks have offices in Kunming, for example, Kasikorn Bank and Krung Thai Bank. Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn of Thailand has visited Kunming many times to study Chinese culture and promote friendly relations. [citation needed]
The rail link to Vietnam re-opened again in 1996.
In July 2005, the second Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Summit was held in Kunming, with government leaders from China, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam participating. There, China agreed to lend its neighbors more than $1 billion for a series of projects. China was then promoting GMS cooperation as a first step toward building an eventual China-ASEAN Free Trade Area.
Infrastructure improvements have been underway to improve links between Kunming and Southeast Asia in time for the 2010 China-ASEAN Free Trade Area. The FTA is expected to make Kunming a trade and financial center for Southeast Asia. In addition to physical improvements to enhance Kunming's trade with Southeast Asia, the central and provincial governments have made financial preparations to assist the city's emergence. At the end of 2004, the central government approved Kunming to be one of the 18 mainland cities in which foreign banks could conduct business in renminbi. [citation needed]
In the 1980s and 1990s, the city center was rebuilt, with Swiss help, in its current 'modern' style to impress visitors attending the 1999 World Horticultural Exposition.[36] It was primarily during 1997 and 1998 that much of the city's roads, bridges and high rises were built.
The World Horticultural Expo was widely regarded as a public relations success for Kunming.[citation needed] Today the after-effects of the Expo are apparent in more than just the physical improvements to the city—it was the Expo that made the outside world take notice of Kunming, which was relatively unknown at the time.[dubious – discuss]
In July 2006, talks at the ASEAN Regional Forum, China, Bangladesh and Myanmar (Burma) agreed to construct a highway from Kunming to Chittagong through Mandalay for trade and development.[37]
On 1 March 2014, 29 people were killed, and more than 130 were injured at Kunming Railway Station in a terrorist attack.[38]
Geography
[edit]Kunming is located in east-central Yunnan province. It is located between north latitude 24°23' and 26°22' N, and east longitude 102°10' and 103°40' E, with a total area of 21,600 square kilometres (8,340 square miles). Its widest stretch from the east to the west amounts to 140 kilometres (87 miles) and its largest expansion from the north to the south amounts to 220 kilometres (137 miles).
Situated in a fertile lake basin on the northern shore of the Lake Dian and surrounded by mountains to the north, west, and east, Kunming has always played a pivotal role in the communications of southwestern China. Lake Dian, known as "the Pearl of the Plateau", is the largest lake in Yunnan and the sixth largest fresh water lake in China. It has an area of approximately 340 square kilometres (130 square miles). Kunming's highest point is Mazong Ridge of the Jiaozi Snow Mountain in Luquan with an elevation of 4,247 metres (13,934 feet), and its lowest point is the joint of the Xiao River and the Jinsha River in Dongchuan District, with an elevation of 695 metres (2,280 feet). Its downtown area is 1,891 metres (6,204 feet) above sea level.
About 96 km (60 mi) southeast of the city centre is the Stone Forest in Shilin County, a karst formation developed as a tourist attraction consisting of rock caves, arches, and pavilions. It is part of the larger karst-based landscape of the area.
Climate
[edit]Located at an elevation of 1,890 metres (6,200 feet) on the Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau with low latitude and high elevation, Kunming has one of the mildest climates in China, characterized by short, cool dry winters with mild days and crisp nights, and long, balmy and humid summers. With its perpetual spring-like weather which provides the ideal climate for plants and flowers, Kunming is known as the "City of Eternal Spring".[39] The weather has seldom reached high temperatures in summer, only exceeding 30 °C (86 °F) on a handful of occasions. However, freak snowfalls occur in occasional winters. Controlled by a subtropical highland climate (Köppen Cwb), the monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from 8.9 °C (48.0 °F) in January to 20.3 °C (68.5 °F) in June, with daily high temperatures reaching their lowest point and peak in December and May, respectively. The city is covered with blossoms and lush vegetation all-year round.[40] The period from May to October is the monsoon season and the rest of the year is dry. The city has an annual mean temperature of 15.52 °C (59.9 °F), rainfall of 979 millimetres (38.5 in) (nearly three-fifths occurring from June to August) and a frost-free period of 230 days. With monthly percent possible sunshine ranging from 30% in July to 69% in February and March, the city receives 2,198 hours of bright sunshine annually. Extreme temperatures in the city have ranged from −7.8 to 31.3 °C (18 to 88 °F).
Climate data for Kunming, elevation 1,888 m (6,194 ft), (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–2010) | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 24.0 (75.2) |
26.0 (78.8) |
28.8 (83.8) |
32.1 (89.8) |
32.9 (91.2) |
32.5 (90.5) |
31.0 (87.8) |
30.9 (87.6) |
30.4 (86.7) |
29.1 (84.4) |
26.4 (79.5) |
25.1 (77.2) |
32.9 (91.2) |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 16.3 (61.3) |
18.5 (65.3) |
21.8 (71.2) |
24.3 (75.7) |
25.2 (77.4) |
25.4 (77.7) |
24.8 (76.6) |
25.0 (77.0) |
23.5 (74.3) |
21.1 (70.0) |
18.7 (65.7) |
16.0 (60.8) |
23.5 (74.3) |
Daily mean °C (°F) | 9.3 (48.7) |
11.5 (52.7) |
14.8 (58.6) |
17.8 (64.0) |
19.6 (67.3) |
20.7 (69.3) |
20.5 (68.9) |
20.2 (68.4) |
18.8 (65.8) |
16.2 (61.2) |
12.5 (54.5) |
9.5 (49.1) |
16.0 (60.8) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 4.0 (39.2) |
5.8 (42.4) |
8.9 (48.0) |
12.0 (53.6) |
14.9 (58.8) |
17.3 (63.1) |
17.6 (63.7) |
17.2 (63.0) |
15.7 (60.3) |
12.9 (55.2) |
8.2 (46.8) |
4.8 (40.6) |
11.6 (52.9) |
Record low °C (°F) | −5.7 (21.7) |
−2.6 (27.3) |
−5.2 (22.6) |
−0.2 (31.6) |
5.1 (41.2) |
8.8 (47.8) |
10.1 (50.2) |
10.4 (50.7) |
5.4 (41.7) |
0.1 (32.2) |
−2.4 (27.7) |
−7.8 (18.0) |
−7.8 (18.0) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 23.8 (0.94) |
11.9 (0.47) |
19.6 (0.77) |
25.4 (1.00) |
80.1 (3.15) |
173.1 (6.81) |
215.7 (8.49) |
195.9 (7.71) |
119.3 (4.70) |
82.4 (3.24) |
30.1 (1.19) |
13.7 (0.54) |
991.0 (39.02) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) | 4.3 | 3.7 | 5.4 | 6.5 | 11.1 | 16.5 | 19.7 | 18.9 | 13.9 | 12.0 | 5.3 | 3.7 | 121.0 |
Average snowy days | 1.0 | 0.4 | 0.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.1 | 0.4 | 2.1 |
Average relative humidity (%) | 66 | 58 | 54 | 55 | 64 | 75 | 79 | 78 | 78 | 78 | 74 | 71 | 69 |
Mean monthly sunshine hours | 223.6 | 223.9 | 253.3 | 252.2 | 217.2 | 148.0 | 122.6 | 142.9 | 127.1 | 143.2 | 191.5 | 195.4 | 2,240.9 |
Percent possible sunshine | 67 | 70 | 68 | 66 | 52 | 36 | 29 | 36 | 35 | 40 | 59 | 60 | 52 |
Source 1: China Meteorological Administration[41][42] | |||||||||||||
Source 2: The Yearbook of Indochina (1937-1938, extremes 1907-1938)[43] |
Natural resources
[edit]Mineral resources include phosphorus, salt, magnesium, titanium, coal, quartz sand, clay, silica, copper. Phosphorus and salt mines are the most plentiful. Kunyang Phosphorus Mine is one of the three major phosphorus mines in the country. Rock salt reserves are 1.222 billion tonnes (1.203 billion long tons; 1.347 billion short tons) and mirabilite reserves are 1.908 billion tonnes (1.878 billion long tons; 2.103 billion short tons). Dongchuan is a major copper production base.
Proven reserves of Coal bed gas is about 500 billion cubic metres (18,000 billion cubic feet), equal to 720 million tonnes (710 million long tons; 790 million short tons) of standard coal.[44] Geothermal resources are widely distributed.
Environment and horticulture
[edit]Kunming has 2,585 hectares (6,390 acres) of lawns, trees and flowers, averaging 4.96 square metres (53.4 square feet) per capita and a green space rate of 21.7 percent. The city's smoke control area is 115 square kilometres (44 square miles) and noise control area 87 square kilometres (34 square miles). [citation needed]
Kunming is a significant horticultural center in China, providing products such as grain, wheat, horsebeans, corn, potato and fruit such as peaches, apples, oranges, grapes and chestnuts. [citation needed] Kunming is world-famous for its flowers and flower-growing exports. More than 400 types of flowers are commonly grown in Kunming. The camellia, Yulan magnolia, azalea, fairy primrose, lily and orchid are known as the six famous flowers of the city.
The camellia was confirmed by the Municipality of Kunming as its city flower in 1983.
The Kunming city government plans to create an environmental trial court to deal with environment-related lawsuits. It is to be part of the city's intermediate people's court and will have jurisdiction over appeals by companies that have been found guilty of violating environmental laws in cities throughout Yunnan.[45]
Demographics
[edit]The population of Han is 5,542,314, accounting for 86.16%; the population of all ethnic minorities add up to 889,898, accounting for 13.84%. Some of the 26 nationalities in the province live in Kunming, and the average life expectancy of the city's population is 76 years old.
National name | Han | Yi | Hui | Bai | Hmong | Hani | Zhuang | Dai | Lisu | Naxi | Others |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population | 5,542,394 | 444,261 | 158,384 | 82,560 | 59,925 | 25,807 | 23,283 | 20,831 | 19,756 | 11,010 | 43,998 |
Proportion of total population (%) | 86.17 | 6.91 | 2.46 | 1.28 | 0.93 | 0.40 | 0.36 | 0.32 | 0.31 | 0.17 | 0.68 |
Proportion of minority population (%) | --- | 49.93 | 17.80 | 9.28 | 6.73 | 2.90 | 2.62 | 2.34 | 2.22 | 1.24 | 4.94 |
Cityscape
[edit]The city center has three major squares and six major streets: Jinma Biji Square, Nanping Square and Dongfeng Square are the main squares, while Nanping Street, Zhengyi Road, Renmin Road, Dongfeng Road, Jinbi Road, and Qingnian Road are the main streets. While Beijing Road is arguably the main street of the city as a whole, it runs to the east of the city center. Jingxing Street, Guanghua Street, Zhengyi Road, Nanping Street, Qingnian Road, and Renmin Road are the main commercial areas in Kunming; the most popular pedestrian streets are Nanping Street, Zhengyi Road, and Jingxing Street.
Kunming's modern city center is Nanping Square on the west bank of the Panlong River, at the intersection of Nanping Street and Zhengyi Street. This area is where Kunming's southern city wall once stood. Rapidly being modernized, this area is a crowded and dense shopping precinct packed with clothing and electronics stores. Surrounding the area are plenty of new high-rises. The area formerly considered the city center is Dongfeng Square, located on the east bank of the Panlong River outside of the old city walls at the intersection of Beijing Road and Dongfeng Road, where in the mornings there are crowds doing taijiquan and playing badminton. Weekend amateur theatre is also performed in the square. The Panlong River has had an artificial flow ever since the construction of the Songhua Dam, and the river has been developed into effectively a canal. The river receives sewage and wastewater from surrounding pipes.[47]
The center is an area of importance to Kunming's Hui population, with Shuncheng Street, one of the last old streets in the center of the city, previously forming a Muslim quarter. Until shortly before 2005, this street was full of wind-dried beef and mutton carcasses, pitta bread and raisin sellers, and huge woks of roasting coffee beans being stirred with shovels.[citation needed] Under Kunming's rapid modernisation, however, the street has been demolished to make way for apartments and shopping centers. Rising behind a supermarket one block north off Zhengyi Road, Nancheng Qingzhen Si is the city's new mosque, its green dome and chevron-patterned minaret visible from afar and built on the site of an earlier Qing edifice.
Running west off Zhengyi Road just past the mosque, Jingxing Street leads into one of the more bizarre corners of the city, with Kunming's huge Bird and Flower Market convening daily in the streets connecting it with the northerly, parallel Guanghua Street. The market offers many plants such as orchids that have been collected and farmed across the province. In the small grounds of a now vanished Confucian temple off the western end of Changchun Road, there is an avenue of pines, an ancient pond and pavilion, and beds of bamboo, azaleas and potted palms.[citation needed]
Jinbi Road runs south of Dongfeng Road. Both of them connect to Beijing Road. Two large Chinese pagodas rise south of Jinbi Road and the city center, each a solid thirteen stories of whitewashed brick crowned with four iron cockerels. The West Pagoda was built between 824 and 859, during the Tang dynasty; its original counterpart, the East Pagoda, was built at the same time, but was destroyed by an earthquake in 1833 and rebuilt in the same Tang style in 1882. [citation needed] South down Dongsi Road, past another mosque, the entrance to the West Pagoda is along a narrow lane on the right. In the tiny surrounding courtyard, sociable idlers while away sunny afternoons playing cards and sipping tea in the peaceful, ramshackle surroundings. The East Pagoda is a more cosmetic, slightly tilted duplicate standing in an ornamental garden a few minutes' walk east on Shulin Jie. The temples associated with both pagodas are closed to the public.
Many streets are lined with Jacaranda trees, which can be seen blooming abundantly in mid to late April, particularly on Jiaochang Middle Road. The trees are not native to Kunming, but originate from seeds exchanged with Algeria, which were grown in the Kunming Botanical Garden. Seeds from the botanical garden were then used by the city to plant the trees along streets.[48][49]
Parks
[edit]Cuihu Park (Green Lake Park) is one of Kunming's major parks and is predominately a lake surrounded by greenery. Located in the west side of the park is the statue of one of Yunnan's most famous patriots—Nie Er, the composer of China's national anthem. Now it is open to public for free.
Daguan Park lies on Dian Chi in Kunming's southwestern limits. Originally laid out by the Kangxi Emperor in the Qing dynasty, it has been modified over the years to include a noisy funfair, food stalls and emporiums, and is a favourite haunt of Kunming's youth.
Kunming's zoo, founded in 1950, is adjoined to Yuantong Park. The zoo houses 5,000 animals from 140 species and receives 3 million visitors a year.[50]
Other parks in Kunming include Black Dragon Pool, and the Kunming Botanical Gardens in the north, and Wenmiao Tea Garden in Wuhua District.
Landmarks
[edit]The "Garden of the World Horticultural Exposition", located in the northern suburbs of Kunming, is six kilometres (3.7 miles) from central Kunming. From 1 May to 31 October 1999, Kunming held the 1999 World Horticulture Exposition, with the theme of "Man and Nature—Marching Toward the 21st Century".
The "Golden Hall Scenic Zone", located on the Mingfeng Hill in the northern suburbs of Kunming, is eight kilometres (5.0 miles) from central Kunming. Constructed in 1602 (the 30th year of the Wanli reign period of the Ming dynasty), all of its beams, pillars, arches, doors, windows, tiles, Buddhist statues, and horizontal inscribed boards are made of copper, weighing more than 200 tons. It is the largest copper building in China.
Notable museums in Kunming:
- Yunnan Provincial Museum
- Kunming City Museum (redeveloped in 2014)
- Kunming Natural History Museum of Zoology (opened in November 2006)
- Yunnan Ethnology Museum (opened 1995)
Yuantong Si is Kunming's major Buddhist temple. It is Kunming's largest and most famous temple with the original structure being first constructed more than 1,200 years ago during the Tang dynasty. The temple sits in a depression on the southern side of Yuantong Park. Northwest about 12 km (7.5 mi) from the city center is the Qiongzhu Si (Bamboo Temple) built in 639 and rebuilt in 1422 to 1428. Numerous Buddhist temples line the road to the Dragon Gate (龙门) in the Western Mountains.
Administrative divisions
[edit]The prefecture-level city of Kunming has jurisdiction over 14 subdivisions; seven districts, one county-level city, three counties and three autonomous counties. Kunming also borders with Panzhihua prefecture level city and Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Sichuan province.
The historical city and current city center of Kunming is in southeastern Wuhua District, close to where the four main districts converge. However, after integrating it into Kunming in 2011, the Kunming city government has built a masterplanned new city center in Chenggong District and moved the city government offices there.
Kunming plans to add two new districts (Chenggong and Jinning) to its existing four urban districts (Panlong, Wuhua, Guandu, Xishan) over the next few years.
Map | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Simplified Chinese | Hanyu Pinyin | Population (2020 census) |
Area (km2) | Density (/km2) | |
City Proper | ||||||
Chenggong District | 呈贡区 | Chénggòng Qū | 649,501 | 510 | 1,273.5 | |
Panlong District | 盘龙区 | Pánlóng Qū | 987,955 | 869 | 1,136.9 | |
Wuhua District | 五华区 | Wǔhuá Qū | 1,143,085 | 315 | 3,628.8 | |
Guandu District | 官渡区 | Guāndù Qū | 1,602,279 | 633 | 2,531.2 | |
Xishan District | 西山区 | Xīshān Qū | 960,746 | 880 | 1,091.8 | |
Suburban and satellite city | ||||||
Jinning District | 晋宁区 | Jìnníng Qū | 346,268 | 1,337 | 259.0 | |
Dongchuan District | 东川区 | Dōngchuān Qū | 260,744 | 1,866 | 139.7 | |
Anning city | 安宁市 | Ānníng Shì | 483,753 | 1,303 | 371.2 | |
Rural | ||||||
Fumin County | 富民县 | Fùmín Xiàn | 149,506 | 1,060 | 141 | |
Yiliang County | 宜良县 | Yíliáng Xiàn | 384,875 | 1,913 | 201 | |
Songming County | 嵩明县 | Sōngmíng Xiàn | 410,929 | 826 | 497.5 | |
Shilin Yi Autonomous County | 石林彝族自治县 | Shílín Yízú Zìzhìxiàn | 240,827 | 1,680 | 143.3 | |
Luquan Yi and Miao Autonomous County | 禄劝彝族苗族自治县 | Lùquàn Yízú Miáozú Zìzhìxiàn | 378,881 | 4,234 | 89.5 | |
Xundian Hui and Yi Autonomous County | 寻甸回族彝族自治县 | Xúndiàn Huízú Yízú Zìzhìxiàn | 460,739 | 3,588 | 128.4 |
Society and culture
[edit]Leisure and entertainment
[edit]Within Kunming, the entertainment district has its focus around Kundu Square, with many cinemas, bars, clubs and restaurants. Food aside, one feature of less formal Yunnanese restaurants is that they often have a communal bamboo water pipe and tobacco for their customers. [citation needed] There are plenty of student bars and clubs. The city has several operatic troupes and indigenous entertainments which include huadeng, a lantern dance. Although indoor performances are lacking, there are often informal shows at the weekend outside the Workers' Cultural Hall and in Cuihu Park. There are similar shows at the Yunnan Arts Theater on Dongfeng Xi Lu. Kunming's main cinema house is on the south side of the Dongfeng Lu/Zhengyi Lu intersection. The other main multiplex, the XJS, at the junction of Wenlin Jie and Dongfeng Xi Lu.
Language
[edit]The Kunming dialect is very similar to that of Sichuan and Guizhou but uses the third tone much less than standard Chinese. Many terms are used only in Kunming dialect, such as "板扎" meaning 'terrific'.
The pronunciations of certain Chinese characters are very different from Mandarin Chinese. For example, "鱼 (fish)" would be pronounced as "yi" in Kunming dialect instead of "yu" in Mandarin Chinese; "街 (street)" would be pronounced as "gai" instead of "jie".
When someone speaks Mandarin Chinese with a strong Kunming accent, it'll be called Mapu (马普), short for Majie (马街, a place in Kunming) Mandarin Chinese.
The Kunming Dialect is slowly dying due to it being 'informal' and is being replaced by Mandarin Chinese. Nevertheless, it is still spoken by a decent number of residents today. Sometimes this is called dirt language or slum language (土话)
Tourism
[edit]Kunming attracts domestic and foreign tourists year-round. At the center of Yunnan and as its capital, Kunming is also a transport hub for tourists heading to other parts of Yunnan such as Dali, Lijiang and Shangrila.
Conference and exhibition venues in Kunming include the Kunming International Convention and Exhibition Center and the Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Hall.
Kingdom of the Little People, a theme park featuring performers with dwarfism, is also located near Kunming.[51]
Other famous attractions include Stone Forest and Yunnan's Ethnic Village.
Sports
[edit]Every year, many Chinese and international athletes come to Kunming for high-altitude training. The city has been China's national high-elevation training base for more than 30 years. There are two major training complexes, Hongta Sports Center and Haigeng National Training Center.[52]
Hongta Sports Center was built in 2000 by Hongta (Red Pagoda) cigarette company, at a cost of US$58 million. Located near Haigeng Park, the complex is mostly used by professional athletes, but also acts as a sports club for the general public. Every weekend, it hosts amateur football matches. Aside from about 10 football pitches, including one surrounded by a running track, Hongta also has a 50-metre (160-foot) swimming pool, a badminton gymnasium, tennis courts and a basketball court. It also has one of China's few ice hockey rinks, and a workout room with treadmills and weightlifting machines. There are also game rooms for air hockey; also pool tables and a basement bowling alley. The complex comes complete with a 101-room hotel and restaurant.[52]
Haigeng National Training Center is located ten minutes away from Hongta on Dianchi (Lake Dian) near Kunming's award-winning Lakeview Golf Club and new condominium developments. This complex dates from the late 1970s and was built by the government specifically to specialize in high-altitude training.[52]
Golf
[edit]Golf is a major attraction in Kunming. There are four golf courses within an hour's drive of downtown. For the last six years [when?], Spring City Golf and Lake Resort in nearby Yiliang County has reigned as the best golf course in China and Hong Kong according to US Golf Digest. In 2004, it was named Asia's best golf resort by Asian Golf Monthly.[53] It hosts the Kunming Leg of the Omega China Tour.
Kunming has attracted foreign investment in golf course development. "Spring City" Golf Resort is a US$600 million project that began as an investment led by Singapore's Keppel Land Group in 1992. Jack Nicklaus and course designer Robert Trent Jones, Jr designed the two courses.[53]
Sport facilities
[edit]Major sports facilities include:
- Tuodong Sports Center, a multi-purpose venue
- Golf: Spring City Golf and Lake Resort, its 'Mountain Course' was designed by Jack Nicklaus
- Lakeview Golf Villa
- Cuihu Park tennis courts
- Kunming Municipal Athletic Center
- Kunming Gymnasium
- Yunnan Provincial Stadium, home to Hongta Yunnan Football Club
- Wuhua District Stadium
Economy
[edit]Kunming has three economic advantages over other cities in southwest China: significant natural resources, a large consumer market and a mild climate. Due to its position at the center of Yunnan, one of China's largest producers of agricultural products, minerals and hydroelectricity, Kunming is the main commercial hub for most of the province's resources.
Kunming's chief industries are copper, lead and zinc production. Its iron and steel industry has been expanded. Salt and phosphate mines around Kunming are some of the largest in China. Yunnan Copper Company Limited, based in Kunming, is one of Yunnan's largest mining corporations. From the late 1970s, Kunming's main industries also came to include food and tobacco processing and the manufacture of construction equipment and machines. [citation needed]
In May 1995, the State Council approved Kunming as an Open City. By the end of 1995, the city had approved 929 overseas-funded enterprises with a total investment of $2.3 billion including $1.1 billion of foreign capital. More than 40 projects each had an investment of more than $9 million.
Kunming is a center of engineering and the manufacture of machine tools, electrical machinery, equipment and automobiles (including heavy goods vehicles). It has a chemical industry, and plastics, cement works and textile factories. Its processing plants, which include tanneries, woodworking and papermaking factories, use local agricultural products. In 1997, Yunnan Tire Co. opened a tire plant in Kunming, with a capacity to produce two million tires per year. [citation needed]
Development zones
[edit]Kunming has two major development zones, Kunming High-tech Industrial Development Zone (biological medicine, new materials, electronic information, photoelectron, agriculture) and Kunming Economic and Technology Development Zone (mechanical equipment production, biological science and food industry, information industry, software).
Industrial parks
[edit]There are 30 key industrial parks promulgated and recognized by National Development and Reform Commission in Yunnan Province.[54]
The largest include:
- Chenggong Industrial Park
- Anning Industrial Park
- Songming Yanglin Industrial Development Zone
- Dongchuan Special Industrial Park
- Xundian Special Industrial Park
- Kunming Haikou Industrial Park.
Companies
[edit]As of 2008[update], Kunming is home to 65 of the Top 100 Enterprises in Yunnan Province. The top 100 enterprises were based on their revenues for 2007. Hongta Group, with revenues of some RMB39.88 billion for 2007 topped the list. The tobacco sector remains the largest sector in the province.
Flower industry
[edit]Yunnan has developed into the largest flower export base in Asia, with many Dutch experts having transferred technology to the area. The Dounan Flower Market, located in suburban Kunming, is the largest in China with daily sales of 2.5 million yuan (US$300,000) from the 2 million sprays of flowers (as of 2006[update]). The provincial government agency, the Yunnan Flower Association, regulates the industry.[55]
Logistics
[edit]Kunming East Station is at present Yunnan province's only container handling depot, with direct links to only three provinces; Guangdong, Guizhou and Sichuan. It also has direct access to the metropolitan district of Chongqing.
The Jiaying Depot is connected with the new system of highways built linking Yunnan to the increasingly important markets of Southeast Asia, facilitating cheap Chinese exports to the region and granting resource-poor China greater access to the region's massive raw material resources. Yunnan has thereby become a progressively important area in the Southwest's rail logistics both in terms of national and international logistics.
Solar energy
[edit]In July 2008, Kunming began to implement a program to transform the city's solar energy industry into a US$8.8 billion industrial base in China by 2013. Kunming receives an annual average sunshine of more than 2,400 hours. Each 1 kW PV system has the potential to generate 1500 kilowatt-hours of electricity a year from solar energy. [citation needed]
As of 2007[update], the Kunming Economic Committee listed about 130 solar energy enterprises in the city. Of these, 118 enterprises produce solar lamps and solar water heaters, with a combined total production value of about US$43.8 million, and 10 enterprises are engaged in solar photovoltaic cells manufacturing, with a total production value of about US$51.2 million.[56]
Suntech Power announced in December 2008 that it was jointly constructing a solar energy project with Yunnan Provincial Power Investment and other investors. The 1MW first-phase of the Shilin 66MW on-grid solar power station began generating power on 28 December 2009. The initial phase of the 66MW project was originally scheduled to start production in first half of 2010 while the 20MW second phase and 36 MW third phase were under construction.
Transport
[edit]This section is written like a travel guide. (December 2011) |
Kunming is situated on the Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau. Rail and air are the main two methods to travel to or from Kunming from outside Yunnan.
Air transport
[edit]Kunming has air connections with several Chinese and Southeast Asian cities. Kunming is served by Kunming Changshui International Airport (KMG), which opened in June 2012, replacing the older international airport, which was located 4–5 km (2.5–3.1 mi) southeast of central Kunming.
The now defunct Yunnan Airlines was headquartered in Kunming until it was acquired by China Eastern Airlines. China Southwest Airlines used to operate routes to and from Kunming, until it was merged with Air China.
Lucky Air is a budget airline based in Kunming and operates scheduled services from Dali to Kunming and Xishuangbanna, and plans to expand to other areas of China.
Currently, the longest non-stop flight from Kunming is to Paris, France, operated by China Eastern Airlines since 18 December 2014.[57]
Highway
[edit]China National Highways 108, 213 and 320 intersect in Kunming. Highways link Kunming to Thailand, Vietnam and Laos, and provide Yunnan province access to seaports of Southeast Asia.
Rail
[edit]Kunming is the main rail hub of Yunnan province. The Chengdu–Kunming railway from Sichuan, Shanghai–Kunming railway from Guizhou, and Nanning–Kunming railway from Guangxi converge in Kunming from the north, northeast and east. The Yunnan–Vietnam Railway runs from Kunming southeast to Hekou and Lao Cai on the Sino-Vietnamese border and then on to Haiphong The Kunming–Yuxi railway runs south to Yuxi, where a second rail line to Vietnam is being planned and built. To the west of Kunming, the Guangtong–Dali railway extends off the Chengdu–Kunming Line to Dali (Xiaguan Town).
Kunming has three major railway stations:
- Kunming railway station is at the southern end of Beijing Xi Lu. Compared with the other railway station (North Railway Station), Kunming Railway Station services most of the "conventional" (not high-speed) trains to places to other provinces of China. Trains run north to Chengdu, southeast via Xingyi to Baise and Nanning in Guangxi, and east through Guizhou, via Liupanshui, Anshun, Guiyang, into the rest of the country.
- Kunming South railway station, opened at the end of 2016, is located in Chenggong District, many miles southeast from the historical city center. It is the western terminal of the Shanghai–Kunming high-speed railway and the Guangzhou–Nanning–Kunming high-speed railway, and has high-speed service to destinations along these lines and elsewhere on the nation's high-speed network.
- Kunming North railway station (serviced by the No. 23 Bus) is on the heritage 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) metre gauge Kunming–Hai Phong Railway, which runs to Hekou and Vietnam. Most of the station has been converted into a museum. Due to the deterioration of the railway line, the long distance narrow-gauge service has been cancelled; however, as of 2012[update], some local narrow gauge service still operates at Kunming North Railway Station, in particular two daily trains to Shizui (石咀) Station on the western outskirts of Kunming, and to Wangjiaying (王家营) east of the city.[58]
As of 2017, railway development projects continue to proceed in the Kunming metropolitan area. In February 2017, the railway authorities announced that a connector between the new Kunming South railway station and the old Kunming railway station (also known as the Nanyao Station; 南窑火车站) will open by the end of 2017, making it possible for some high-speed train to serve Kunming railway station as well.[59]
Urban rail plan
[edit]In May 2010, Kunming began construction on its first urban rail lines, line 1 and 2 of the Kunming Metro. An elevated test section had been under construction since 2009. Parts of lines 1 and 2 opened in April 2014.[60] Construction on line 3 began in August 2010 and the Phase 1 was completed in 2018. The entire system consisting of 6 lines and covering a total of 162 kilometres (101 miles) is estimated to be complete by 2018.
High-speed rail plan
[edit]Kunming will be the hub and terminus for the "Pan Asia High Speed Network" using high-speed trains to connect China, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore.[61]
Completed but under trial high-speed railways:
- Kunming–Shanghai. The construction completed on 16 June 2016. It goes through 6 provincial capital cities: Shanghai, Hangzhou, Nanchang, Changsha, Guiyang and Kunming. The overall length is 2,266 kilometres (1,408 miles). As estimated it would take 3 hours from Shanghai to Nanchang, 2.5 hours from Hangzhou to Nanchang, 4 hours from Kunming to Changsha, 8 hours from Kunming to Hangzhou and 9 hours from Shanghai to Kunming. It is expected to start operating on 30 December 2016.
Construction is underway for the following high-speed railways:
- Kunming–Shanghai. The speed will be 350 km/h (220 mph).
- Kunming–Nanning. The speed will be 200 km/h (120 mph). Later the speed may be improved to 250 km/h (160 mph) or 156 miles/h.
- Kunming–Vietnam via Honghe Prefecture.
- Kunming–Singapore via Laos, Thailand, and Malaysia.
Study or planning is being done for the following railways:
- Kunming–Chengdu. The speed will be 250 km/h (160 mph).
- Kunming–Chongqing. The speed will be 350 km/h (220 mph).
- Intercity rail will connect three neighboring cities: Qujing, Chuxiong, and Yuxi. The line to Chuxiong will then be extended to Dali. The speed will be 250 km/h (160 mph).
- Kunming to Kolkata, India via Myanmar
- Kunming to Kyaukphyu, Myanmar.[62]
Road and transit
[edit]Yunnan has built a comprehensive highway system with roads reaching almost all the major cities or towns in the region. Bus travel across the region is extensive. Buses head from Kunming to destinations such as Dali and Lijiang several times a day.
There are four major long-distance bus stations in Kunming with the South Bus Station and Railway Square Bus Station being the most primary.
- South Bus Station faces the Kunming Railway Station in Beijing Xi Lu, with standard, luxury, express and sleeper buses departing for all over Yunnan and neighboring provinces.
- Railway Square Bus Station is smaller than SBS and the majority of the buses depart from the station are private-run. Usually no fixed schedules are available and buses will leave when they are full. There are standard and sleeper services to Dali, Jinghong and elsewhere in Yunnan.
Leaving China by road into Vietnam and Laos is also possible through the respective crossings at Hekou in southeastern Yunnan or Bian Mao Zhan in Xishuangbanna.
The Kunming–Bangkok Expressway is the first expressway from China to Bangkok via Laos. The 1,800 km (1,100 mi) long Kunming–Bangkok Expressway begins at Kunming going down to Ban Houayxay in Laos; it then crosses the Mekong River to Chiangkhong in Thailand and eventually reaches Bangkok.
At the 14th Greater Mekong Subregion Ministerial Conference in July 2007, China, Laos and Thailand signed an agreement on the construction of a new bridge over the Mekong River to connect Chiangkhong in Thailand and Ban Houayxay in Laos, to the Kunming–Bangkok Highway. The completion of the new bridge over the Mekong River will help connect China's southeast provinces with Bangkok. With capital investments from both China and Thailand, the bridge is expected to be completed in 2011 and will be the last link in the highway system that winds through the Mekong River region.
Local transit
[edit]Public buses and taxis are the two main means of transport within the city. A metro system is currently under construction (see Kunming Metro).
Nearly two hundred public bus lines crisscross the city center, covering the whole prefecture.
Cycling is common, and many hotels around the Kunming Railway Station provide bicycle rental services.
Conscious of its growing traffic issues, the city is currently renovating a pedestrian-friendly city centre.
Central Kunming
[edit]The city hangs off two main thoroughfares: Beijing Lu forms the north–south axis, passing just east of the center as it runs for 5 km (3.1 mi) between the city's two trains stations; while Dongfeng Lu crosses it halfway along, divided into east (Dongfeng Dong Lu), middle (Dongfeng Zhong Lu) and west (Dongfeng Xi Lu) sections as it cuts right through the business center. The far end runs out of the city as Renmin Xi Lu, the first leg of the Burma Road. Most of the city's famous hotels and foreign consulates lies along Dongfeng Dong Lu and the southern half of Beijing Lu, while the majority of specific landmarks and shopping district are north and west of the center around Dongfeng Xi Lu and Cuihu Park (Green Lake Park). Circling most of this is the city's first highway ring road, Huancheng Lu, though others are planned.
Education and research
[edit]Kunming remains a major educational and cultural center in the southwest region of China, with universities, medical and teacher-training colleges, technical schools, and scientific research institutes. As of 2023, it was listed among the top 125 cities in the world by scientific research output.[8]
Colleges and universities
[edit]- Kunming Medical University
- Kunming Metallurgy College
- Kunming University
- Kunming University of Science and Technology (1925)
- Southwest Forestry University
- Yunnan Agricultural University
- Yunnan Arts University
- Yunnan Normal University
- Yunnan Normal University Business School
- Yunnan University (1922)
- Yunnan University of Finance and Economics
- Yunnan Nationalities University
- Yunnan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Yunnan University
[edit]Yunnan University (云南大学), located in Kunming, is one of the largest and the most prestigious universities in China and is the only university in Yunnan province which has been developed into a "National Key University". It was founded in 1922, as "University of the Eastern Land". Its name has been changed six times subsequently. The institution has 17 schools on the local campus and 3 independent schools located in other cities. It claims the largest and best law school in Yunnan province.
Yunnan Normal University
[edit]Yunnan Normal University (云南师范大学) was founded in 1938 as the National Normal College of Southwestern Union University. In 1946, when some faculties returned to the north of China, it changed its name to National Kunming Normal College. It now as 6 campuses in Kunming itself and other cities. With 22 schools, it has an enrollment of some 33000 undergraduate students.
Kunming University of Science and Technology
[edit]Kunming University of Science and Technology (昆明理工大学) was established in 1954 and was given "key university" status in 2010. In 2017, it had 3 campuses in Kunming housing 24 schools and had an enrollment of 27000 undergraduates.
Yunnan Nationalities University
[edit]Yunnan Nationalities University was founded in 1951 as Yunnan Nationalities College. It is now one of six "key" universities in the province. It has established cooperative relations with 26 foreign universities including University of Bergen in Norway, La Trobe University in Australia, and University of Virginia in the United States. The university has a Nationalities Museum, which contains more than 20000 rare exhibits. There are more than 23000 undergraduates on campus.
Huayang Academy
[edit]Huayang Academy is a specialist Chinese language training centre considered unique for offering training Kunming dialect as well as standard Mandarin. Its locality is a popular centre of Western culture in Kunming, attracting numerous foreign-owned businesses.[63]
Management training
[edit]The Shanghai-based China Europe International Business School, aka CEIBS, will launch in 2009 its Business Development Certificate Programme in Kunming. With the Business Development Certificate Programme, CEIBS and program partner Frankfurt School of Finance & Management aim to train approximately 500 Chinese managers in the coming four years, with the first phase of the program beginning in 2008 in Hefei, the capital of Anhui province. Kunming and Harbin will be the focus of the program's expansion in 2009. The program is part of a two million Euro umbrella project funded by the EU, which also includes another program that provides scholarships for MBA students from China's less-developed regions.[64]
Research institutes
[edit]- Solar Energy Research Institute of Yunnan Normal University
- Kunming Municipal Planning and Design Research Institute
Chinese Academy of Sciences
[edit]The Kunming Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) was established in 1957. It was formerly known as Kunming Office of CAS and was promoted and renamed into a branch in 1958. In 1962, Yunnan Branch combined with Sichuan Branch and Guizhou Branch to establish Southwest China Branch of CAS in Chengdu. In October 1978, Kunming Branch was reestablished at the approval of the State Council.
As a working department of CAS, Kunming Branch now administers five research institutes:
- Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Kunming Institute of Medical Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Kunming Primate Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Gardens in Menglun, Mengla County, Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, far southern Yunnan.
At present, it has a total staff of 1,160, of whom 808 are professional researchers, seven are academicians and 343 are senior researchers. There are also 447 PhD degree students and 530 master's degree students. The retired staff is 1,090. The Branch has set up three national key open labs, two CAS key open labs, five key labs set up by CAS and local province, three engineering centers, five doctoral sites, five post doctoral stations and national famous plant herbariums and halls of wildlife specimens and has a series of up-to-date research instruments and apparatus, computer networks and biodiversity information systems. The Branch has become an advanced comprehensive science research base in astronomy, geology and biology.
Libraries
[edit]Twin towns and sister cities
[edit]Kunming currently maintains sister city agreements with the following foreign cities.[65]
In April 2020, The City of Wagga Wagga council voted to cut ties with its sister city Kunming city, a week later they would vote again joining Kunming as a sister city.[68][69][70]
Health
[edit]Currently, there are 2,774 medical institutes of various kinds and 33,600 medical professionals in the city. The 170 medical service institutes based on communities cover a population of 1.86 million.[71] China Health Management Corp (CNHC) is the main private healthcare provider in the city. It has been predicted that private hospitals will provide 70 percent of total medical health care services by 2012 within Kunming City.[72]
Hospitals in Kunming include:
- Yunnan Provincial Red Cross Hospital and Emergency Center, is the main general hospital in Kunming.
- Yunnan Provincial First People's Hospital
- First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical College
- Kunming Mental Hospital, founded in 1955, houses over 400 patients.
- Kunming Physical Rehabilitation Center
HIV/AIDS
[edit]In late 2006, China's first provincial-level HIV/AIDS treatment center was built. The US$17.5 million center is located 28 km (17 mi) from downtown Kunming. The center has six main departments: clinical treatment, technical consulting, research and development, international exchange and cooperation, clinical treatment training and psychological therapy.
Yunnan, with a population of more than 45 million, leads China in HIV/AIDS infections: primarily spread through intravenous drug use and unsafe sex, often involving the sex industry. According to official statistics, by the end of 2005, Yunnan was home to more than 48,000 HIV-infected patients, 3,900 patients with AIDS and a death toll of 1,768.[73]
Military
[edit]Kunming is headquarters of the 14th Group Army of the People's Liberation Army, one of the two group armies that comprise the Chengdu Military Region responsible for the defense of China's southwestern borders with India and Myanmar, as well as security in Tibet.
Public security and crime
[edit]The headquarters of the Kunming Municipal Public Security Bureau is on Beijing Lu. Its foreign affairs department, located on Jinxing Huayuan, Jinxing Xiao Lu in the northeast of the city, handles immigration and travel visas.[74]
Drug trafficking
[edit]Kunming has a pivotal role as a major conduit point in international drug trafficking as it is the closest major Chinese city to the Golden Triangle in Southeast Asia. The Kunming Municipal Public Security Bureau Narcotics Squad is the specialist counter-narcotics police service.
Police confiscated at least three tons of drugs in Yunnan in 2005. Yunnan province seized 10 tons of illegal drugs in 2006, accounting for 80 percent of the total drugs confiscated nationwide during the period, according to Sun Dahong, then deputy director of Yunnan's provincial Public Security Bureau. The total is more than double the amount seized in the province in 2005.[75]
Heroin and methamphetamine seem to be the main targets of the 30,000+ strong anti-drug police in Yunnan. The majority of heroin coming into China from the Golden Triangle passes through Dali[citation needed] from where it is then distributed to the rest of China and internationally via China's coastal cities.
Kunming Municipal Compulsory Rehabilitation Center in Kunming is the main rehabilitation center for drug addicts, mostly recovering from heroin addiction. International drug rings have used Yunnan and Kunming to channel new synthetic drugs (like methamphetamine) as well as traditional drugs like heroin.
Opium was until recently in widespread medicinal use by many of the minority peoples of the province; however, after the Opium War the Chinese government has made growing the poppy illegal, and all but stamped out its production within the borders of Yunnan.[citation needed]
International relations
[edit]The following countries have a diplomatic mission in Kunming:
- Consulates:[76]
- Trade offices:
- Australia
- Netherlands
Notable residents
[edit]Notable people from Kunming include:
- Benedict Anderson, scholar (born in Kunming)
- Cai Xitao, botanist
- Chih-Kung Jen, physicist
- Wang Xiji, aerospace engineer and recipient of the "Two Bombs, One Satellite" Meritorious Award
- Pierre Jean Marie Delavay, 19th-century French missionary, lived and died in Kunming
- Lamu Gatusa, professor and writer
- He Yunchang, Chinese performance artist born in Kunming whose early, seminal works were also performed there[79]
- Li Weiwei, Olympics handball player
- Liu Fang, pipa player
- Maran Brang Seng, Burmese politician (died in Kunming)
- Ma Yashu, actress
- Nie Er, composer (born in Kunming)
- Frank Shu, Chinese-American astrophysicist, born in Kunming
- Xing Ruan, Chinese-Australian author and architect, born in Kunming
- Song Wencong, aerospace engineer and aircraft designer
- Tang Jiyao, general and warlord of Yunnan, died in Kunming
- Tong Yao, actress
- Tu Wei-ming, ethicist (born in Kunming)
- Wang Hongni, triathlete and Asian Games gold medallist
- Wen Yiduo, poet and scholar, (lived and assassinated in Kunming)
- Anthony Zee, physicist
- Zhang Xiaogang, artist, born in Kunming
- Zheng He, Ming dynasty explorer
- Zhu De, military leader (studied in Kunming)
- Zhu Youlang (Ming dynasty emperor), (fought and was executed in Kunming)
Diplomats:
- Auguste François, French consul in south China
- George Soulié de Morant, French diplomat
- John S. Service, American diplomat served in Kunming for two years
National Southwestern Associated University:
- Chen Ning Yang, physicist
- Chen Yinke, linguist
- Feng Youlan, philosopher
- Shiing-Shen Chern, mathematician
- Ta-You Wu, physicist
- Tsung-Dao Lee, physicist
- Wang Yuan, mathematician
- Wu Ningkun, professor emeritus
- Zhang Boling, founder of Nankai University
See also
[edit]- 2008 Kunming bus bombings
- 3650 Kunming, an asteroid
- Category:Films set in Kunming
- Zheng He
- List of cities in the People's Republic of China
- List of twin towns and sister cities in China
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "China: Yúnnán (Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map".
- ^ 云南省统计局、国家统计局云南调查总队 (December 2023). 《云南统计年鉴-2023》. 中国统计出版社. ISBN 978-7-5037-9653-1.
- ^ "Kunming". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 18 May 2021.
- ^ "Illuminating China's Provinces, Municipalities and Autonomous Regions". PRC Central Government Official Website. Archived from the original on 18 June 2014. Retrieved 17 May 2014.
- ^ "Records of U.S. Army Forces in the China-Burma-India Theaters of Operations". www.archives.gov. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ Magazine, Smithsonian; Bergin, Bob. "Kunming Remembers the Flying Tigers". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "South China Karst". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ a b "Leading 200 science cities 2023| | Supplements | Nature Index". www.nature.com. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
- ^ "2020 Airport Traffic Report" (PDF). Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. July 2021. p. 30. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
- ^ 2019 Annual Airport Traffic Report (PDF). United States: Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. 2020.
- ^ "Foreign consulates in Kunming". www.embassypages.com. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
- ^ Horton, Chris (13 November 2007). "Rankings: Yunnan's strongest companies". GoKunming. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
- ^ "Fudian Bank". english.fudian-bank.com. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
- ^ 《云南各民族历史大事概略》编写组古代史组 (1975). "云南历史上几个族名、地名的由来和演变" [The origin and the evolvement of some ethnic names and the place names in the history of Yunnan]. 思想战线 (Thinking) (in Chinese) (6): 83–86.
- ^ Tu, Liang-jun (2009). ""昆明"得名来源考" [The Original Meaning of the Word "昆明"]. Journal of Yunnan Normal University (Humanities and Social Sciences Edition) (in Chinese). 41 (6): 124–131.
- ^ The Peopling of East Asia, pp. 192
- ^ Theobald, Ulrich. "Dian 滇 (www.chinaknowledge.de)". www.chinaknowledge.de. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
- ^ General History of Yunnan. ISBN 978-7500496854.
- ^ a b c The geography of China : sacred and historic places. Pletcher, Kenneth. (1st ed.). New York, NY: Britannica Educational Pub. in association with Rosen Education Services. 2011. pp. 260. ISBN 9781615301829. OCLC 656841273.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Gaubatz, Piper Rae, 1962- (1996). Beyond the Great Wall : urban form and transformation on the Chinese frontiers. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. p. 78. ISBN 0804723990. OCLC 31970027.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Tan, Ta Sen. (2010). Cheng Ho and Islam in Southeast Asia. ISEAS. p. 92. ISBN 9789812308375. OCLC 917840557.
- ^ Dillon, Michael (7 December 2015). China's Muslim Hui community : migration, settlement and sects. Routledge. p. 23. ISBN 978-1138970441. OCLC 941876321.
- ^ Hays, Jeffrey. "MARCO POLO'S DESCRIPTIONS OF CHINA | Facts and Details". factsanddetails.com. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
- ^ Spence, Jonathan D. (2002), "The K'ang-hsi Reign", in Peterson, Willard J. (ed.), Cambridge History of China, Vol. 9, Part 1: The Ch'ing Dynasty to 1800, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 120–182, ISBN 0521243343
- ^ Leung, Chi-Cheung; Lo, Sonny Shiu-Hing (June 2015). "Social Needs and Aspirations: Heritage, Urbanization, Revitalization, Lifestile, and Accessibility". Creativity and Culture in Greater China: The Role of Government, Individuals, & Groups. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 9781626430099.
- ^ 杨亚伦(策划), 李晓明. "民航资源网". 民航资源网 机场新闻. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
从1922年巫家坝机场建成到1929年,云南又建成了23个机场,机场数翻了24倍,在中国机场建设史上绝无仅有,机场建设速度之快,创造了一个世界第一!抗战爆发后,出动150万民工再建28个机场,机场总数达到52个,密度之大,堪称亚洲第一,世界少有,云南由此成为中国最主要的抗日空军作战基地。与此同时,云南人民向抗日前线捐献的飞机数量,名列全国第一!修一个机场最快只用20多天...
- ^ 【原创】“昆明”的由来与释义. yunnan.cn (in Chinese). 26 April 2020.
- ^ Sun, Vlasova, Lianggang, Evgenia. "Shanghai 1937 – Where World War II Began". SHANGHAI 1937: WHERE WORLD WAR II BEGAN. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
When did World War II begin? Shanghai 1937: Where World War II Began answers that question in a way most audiences will find surprising. Americans might say December 7, 1941… The day the Japanese Imperial Navy attacked the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. For Europeans, it was September 1, 1939… When Nazi Germany invaded Poland. But in China, people will tell you a different date. August 13, 1937.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Gustavsson, Hakans. "Hakans Aviation page - Sino-Japanese Air War 1938". Biplane Fighter Aces - China. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
In June the 41st PS was organised in Kunming (Yunan Province), and with it served French advisors-volunteers. Their main assignment seemed to have been the securing the purchase of the Dewoitine D.510 from France. At this time the Japanese began continuous attacks on the city... French volunteers... fought the Japanese... repulsing one of the attacks by A5Ms... they lost four machines, from which two pilots baled out. After several days, the Japanese shot down three more and one pilot was killed. After this the group ceased to exist. Machin perceived the reason to be the significant superiority of the A5M over the Hawk.
- ^ "KUNMING BOMBED". Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957). 18 June 1940. p. 1. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
Tuesday, 18 June 1940, Japanese planes bombed Kunming, on the French Indo-China railway line... causing speculation of possible attack on Haiphong, which for two years an important entry point for imports to China.
- ^ Gustavsson, Hakans. "Håkans Aviation page – Sino-Japanese Air War 1939". Biplane Fighter Aces - China. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
In January 1939 the 18th PS relocated to Kunming for defence of the city from air attacks while continuing training on the Hawk 75Ms. Reportedly Claire Chennault led it (but the Squadron Commander was Major Yang Yibai)... 11 January 1939 Led by Squadron Commander Liu Yi-Jun (劉依鈞), the five remaining Hawk 75Ms of 25th PS were flown to Chongqing and transferred to the 18th PS. On returning aboard an air transport plane, all five pilots were killed when the transport plane crashed in an accident. In April, 18th PS took part in intercepting operations over Kunming as part of the Pursuit Group led by Group Commander Hu Zhengyu (胡莊如).
- ^ "Last Stand". Time magazine. 19 December 1949. Archived from the original on 2 January 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2007.
- ^ "Special Operations Association" (2005) By Special Operations Association. Turner Publishing. ISBN 1-59652-156-2
- ^ Rossi, J.R. "History: The Flying Tigers — American Volunteer Group — Chinese Air Force". Archived from the original on 22 July 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
- ^ "AIM25 collection description". Aim25.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
- ^ "China hosts giant horticultural expo". BBC World Service. 1 May 1999. Retrieved 21 January 2008.
- ^ "(Xinhua)". English.people.com.cn. 31 July 2006. Archived from the original on 18 March 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
- ^ "Chinese security official vows harsh punishment for terrorists". Xinhua News Agency. 2 March 2014. Archived from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
- ^ "China's Kunming: An unexplored 'tourism paradise' in India's vicinity". Business Standard India. Press Trust of India. 8 December 2018. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
- ^ "Climate of Kunming". Chinakunming.travel. Archived from the original on 27 January 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
- ^ 中国气象数据网 – WeatherBk Data (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
- ^ 中国气象数据网 (in Simplified Chinese). China Meteorological Administration. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
- ^ The Yearbook of Indochina (1937-1938)
- ^ "ref". km.gov.cn.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Kunming Plans to Establish Environment Court Archived 4 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine (CRIENGLISH.com 22 September 2008)
- ^ Yunnan Provincial Census Office, Yunnan Provincial Bureau of Statistics (September 2012). "Yunnan Provincial Census Data in 2010". China Statistics Press. ISBN 978-7-5037-6548-3.
- ^ Duan, Chang-Qun; Hu, Bin; Wang, Zheng-Hong; Wen, Chuan-Hao; Yan, Shen-Qi; Jiang, Xiao-Hua; Wang, Ding-Kang; Li, Qing; Liang, Xiao-Feng (19 May 1999). "Tradescantia bioassays for the determination of genotoxicity of water in the Panlong River, Kunming, People's Republic of China". Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis. 426 (2): 127–131. Bibcode:1999MRFMM.426..127D. doi:10.1016/S0027-5107(99)00054-8. ISSN 0027-5107. PMID 10350584.
- ^ "蓝花楹-昆明初夏街边独特的一抹蓝----中国科学院昆明植物研究所". www.kib.cas.cn. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
- ^ "【七彩文韵】昆明的蓝花楹". m.yunnan.cn. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
- ^ Ma, Guihua (29 June 2004). "A farewell to two zoos?". China Daily. Archived from the original on 5 November 2007. Retrieved 21 January 2008.
- ^ LaFraniere, Sharon (26 March 2010). "A Miniature World Magnifies Dwarf Life". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
- ^ a b c "China's high-altitude training centers". Gokunming.com. 24 March 2008. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
- ^ a b Spring City Blooming Archived 4 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Kunming - China.GOV". Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
- ^ Bradsher, Keith (25 September 2006). "Bouquet of Roses May Have Note: 'Made in China'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ^ "Kunming aims to build a city run by solar energy". emerging-china.com. Archived from the original on 8 August 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- ^ "Direct flights between Kunming and Paris launched - CITS". Archived from the original on 9 December 2018. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
- ^ 滇越铁路徒步第一程(昆明——宜良). Mafengwo. Archived from the original on 30 December 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
- ^ Qiao, Changhong (乔长红) (28 February 2017). 昆明南窑火车站年底有望通高铁. 昆明铁路枢纽扩能改造工程年底完工,滇池环线铁路将闭合. yunnan.cn (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 28 February 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Kunming opens more metro lines". Railwaygazette. Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
- ^ "China continues building the Pan Asian High speed railway network". Next Big Future. 28 April 2016. Archived from the original on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
- ^ Myanmar in China's Push into the Indian Ocean Archived 20 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Joshy M Paul, 14 March 2016, retrieved 20 January 2017
- ^ "Chinese language school Kunming – Huayang Academy". learnchineseinyunnan.com. Archived from the original on 28 October 2018. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
- ^ "CEIBS Launches Business Development Certificate Programme in Hefei". Ceibs.edu. 5 September 2008. Archived from the original on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^ 全国各省、自治区、直辖市建立友好城市统计-云南 [Friendly city statics – Yunnan]. www.cifca.org.cn (in Chinese). 中国国际友好城市联合会. Retrieved 30 August 2018.[permanent dead link]
- ^ InKunming (20 April 2012). "Kunming and Kuching build sister city relations". en.kunming.cn. Archived from the original on 4 June 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
- ^ "Städtepartnerschaft | Dietzenbach – Kunming".
- ^ "City council severs China relations over 'death and destruction across the world with COVID-19'". ABC News. 15 April 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ "Wagga Wagga severs ties with Chinese sister city over 'death and destruction' from coronavirus". the Guardian. 15 April 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ "Wagga council reverses controversial decision to cut ties with Chinese sister city". ABC News. 22 April 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ "Economic Situation-Kunming Tour". Chinakunming.travel. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^ China Health Management Corp.: Members of the Standing Committee of Yunnan Province and Government Officials Pay Visit to Richland International Hospital Archived 5 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine 16 June 2008
- ^ Bacaër, Nicolas; Xamxinur Abdurahman; Jianli Ye (April 2006). "Modeling the HIV/AIDS Epidemic Among Injecting Drug Users and Sex Workers in Kunming, China". Bulletin of Mathematical Biology. 68 (3). Springerlink.com: 525–550. doi:10.1007/s11538-005-9051-y. PMID 16794944. S2CID 352971. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
- ^ 昆明市公安局西山分局涉外网络警务室. 8599999.net. Archived from the original on 24 June 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^ "Yunnan Witnesses Record Drug-busting 2006". china.org.cn. 31 December 2006. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^ "Kunming - China.GOV". en.km.gov.cn. Archived from the original on 7 October 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Welcoming to the Website of the Consulate-General of the Union of Myanmar in Kunming,P.R.China". www.mcg-kunming.com. Archived from the original on 4 October 2003. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Redirecting". Archived from the original on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
- ^ Berghuis, Thomas J. (2006). Performance Art in China. Timezone 8 Limited. pp. 113–114. ISBN 978-988-99265-9-5.
Further reading
[edit]- Kunming Statistical Yearbook-2007 (in Chinese) China Statistics Press [1].
- Qi Duxia (1999). A Complete Guide Series of Travel and Tourism in China – Kunming. China Travel & Tourism Press. ISBN 978-7-5032-1491-2.
- Carl Fingerhuth, Ernst Joos (2002). The Kunming Project: Urban Development in China — A Dialogue. Birkhauser Verlag AG. ISBN 978-3-7643-6742-8.
- Sustainable Urban Development – the Case Study of Kunming, China Willy Schmid, Markus Eggenberger, 1997.
- NSL – Network City and Landscape – contains Kunming sustainable development papers
- Franklin, B. Evans (2005). 600 Days in Kunming China, 1944–45. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4208-2117-8.
- Maochun Yu (1997). OSS in China: Prelude to Cold War. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-06698-2.
- Cai, Le; Chongsuvivatwong, Virasakdi (2006). "Rural-urban differentials of premature mortality burden in south-west China". International Journal for Equity in Health. 5: 13. doi:10.1186/1475-9276-5-13. PMC 1617105. PMID 17040573.
- Remick, Elizabeth J. (2007). "Police-Run Brothels in Republican Kunming". Modern China. 33 (4): 423–461. doi:10.1177/0097700407304804. S2CID 145794588. Archived from the original on 8 December 2008.
- Chin, K. and Zhang, S. "Street-Level Heroin Sales in Kunming, China". American Society of Criminology (ASC) 2008-06-26
- Kunming Communiqué on Cross-border Collaboration for Drug Demand Reduction and HIV/AIDS Prevention Social Development Division, United Nations ESCAP
- Kobusingye KA. "Voluntary counseling and testing among injecting drug users in Kunming city, Yunnan Province" Int Conf AIDS. 2004 Jul 11–16; 15: abstract no. WePeC5999.
- "China's Disabled Get Helping Hand in High Places" Kunming Journal. Nicholas D. Kristof. 30 May 1991
- Book about Kunming's regional cooperation with Southeast Asia: ASEAN-China Relations: Realities and Prospects (2005) Saw Swee Hock, Lijun Sheng, Sheng Lijun, Kin Wah Chin, Chin Kin Wah. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) ISBN 981-230-342-1
- Wei Xing. "Prevalence of ethnic intermarriage in Kunming: Social exchange or insignificance of ethnicity?" Asian Ethnicity, Volume 8, Issue 2 June 2007, pages 165–179
- Jianli Li; Mary Francis Marx. "A Survey of Four Libraries in Kunming: Library Automation and Modernization in a Far Removed Province in China" Journal of Southern Academic and Special Librarianship (2000)
External links
[edit]- Official Kunming Municipal Government Website Archived 3 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- Official Kunming Website Archived 10 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine (in Chinese and English)