|
- The modern word “China” most likely derives from the name
of the Qin (pronounced “chin”) dynasty. First Emperor Qin Shi
Huang (260-210 B.C.) of the Qin dynasty first unified China in 221 B.C.,
beginning an Imperial period which would last until A.D. 1912.k
- China is often considered the longest continuous civilization, with some
historians marking 6000 B.C. as the dawn of Chinese civilization. It also
has the world’s longest continuously used written language.c
- China is the fourth largest country in the world (after Russia, Canada,
and the U.S.). It has an area of 3,719,275 square miles (slightly smaller
than the U.S.) and its borders with other countries total more than 117,445
miles. Approximately 5,000 islands lie off the Chinese coast.a
- One in every five people in the world is Chinese. China’s population
is estimated to reach a whopping 1,338,612,968 by July 2009. China’s
population is four times that of the United States.a
- Fortune cookies are not a traditional Chinese custom. They were invented
in 1920 by a worker in the Key Heong Noodle Factory in San Francisco.i
- China is also known as the “Flowery Kingdom” and many of the
fruits and flowers (such as the orange and orchid) are now grown all over
the world.i
|
 |
|
| Invented in China, toilet paper was initially only for emperors |
|
|
- Toilet paper was invented in China in the late 1300s. It was for emperors
only.m
- The Chinese invented paper, the compass, gunpowder, and printing.c
- The Chinese invented kites (“paper birds” or “Aeolian
harps”) about 3,000 years ago. They were used to frighten the enemies
in battle, and Marco Polo (1254-1324) noted that kites were also used to
predict the success of a voyage. It was considered bad luck to purposely
let a kite go.i
- Cricket fighting is a popular amusement in China. Many Chinese children
keep crickets as pets.m
- Despite its size, all of China is in one time zone.h
- Many historians believe soccer originated in China around 1000 B.C.f
- Ping-pong is one of the most popular games in China, but it was not invented
in China. It originated in Britain, where it is called table tennis.m
|
 |
|
| Viewed
as a status symbol, stamp collecting is China’s number one hobby |
|
|
- The number one hobby in China is stamp collecting.m
- Giant Pandas (“bear cat”) date back two to three million
years. The early Chinese emperors kept pandas to ward off evil spirits
and natural disasters. Pandas also were considered symbols of might and
bravery.i
- White, rather than black, is the Chinese color for mourning and funerals.i
- Though Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) is credited with designing the first
parachute, Chinese alchemists successfully used man-carrying tethered kites
by the fourth century A.D. Parachutes were not used safely and effectively
in Europe until the late 1700s.m
- The custom of binding feet (euphemistically called “golden lilies”)
began among female entertainers and members of the Chinese court during
the Song dynasty (A.D. 960-1279). Tightly wrapped bandages gradually broke
the arch of the foot and caused the woman's toes and heel to grow inward
toward one another. Her leg muscles would also atrophy and become very
thin. Bound feet were seen as highly sexual.m
- Historians speculate that as the Chinese population grew, people had to conserve
cooking fuel by chopping food into small pieces so that it could cook faster.
These bite-sized foods eliminated the need for knives and, hence, chopsticks
were invented.c
- In A.D. 130, Zhang Heng, an astronomer and literary scholar, invented the first instrument for monitoring
earthquakes. The machine could detect and indicate the direction of an
earthquake.c
|
 |
|
| The Chinese invented ice cream by packing a milk mixture and rice into snow |
|
|
- China invented ice cream, and Marco Polo is rumored to have taken the
recipe (along with the recipe for noodles) back with him to Europe.i
- A civil servant named Su Song built the first mechanical clock between
A.D 1088 and 1092. It could tell the time of day and also track the constellations
so that accurate horoscopes could be determined.c
- On September 27, 2008, Zhai Zhigang made the first spacewalk by a Chinese
astronaut.l
- The Chinese were the first to invent the waterwheel to harness water
in A.D. 31—1,200 years before the Europeans. China was also the first
country in the world to use an iron plow. Europe didn’t begin using
the iron plow until the seventeenth century.m
- The name of China’s capital has changed over the centuries. At
one time or another it has been known as Yanjing, Dadu, and Beiping. Peking
or “Beijing means “Northern Capital.” Beijing is
the officially sanctioned pinyin spelling based on the Mandarin dialect.
Beijing is the second largest city after Shanghai.h
- It was customary for wealthy men and women in the late empire to grow
the nails of their little fingers extremely long as a sign of their rank.
They often wore decorative gold and silver nail guards to protect their
nails.c
- By the fourth century B.C., the Chinese were drilling for natural gas
and using it as a heat source, preceding Western natural gas drilling by
about 2,300 years.m
- By the second century B.C., the Chinese discovered that blood circulated
throughout the body and that the heart pumped the blood. In Europe, circulation
wasn’t discovered until the early seventeenth century by William
Harvey (1578-1657).m
- The Chinese were using the decimal system as early as the fourteenth
century B.C., nearly 2,300 years before the first known use of the system
in European mathematics. The Chinese were also the first to use a place
for zero.m
- The crossbow was invented and first used by the Chinese. They were also
the first in the world to use chemical and gas weapons, 2,000 years before
gas was used in Europe during WWI.m
- The Three Gorges Hydroelectric Dam spans the Yangtze River and is the largest dam in the world. It is also the most controversial dam in the world because it has been plagued by corruption, human rights violations, technological difficulties, and has caused dramatic environmental changes.e
|
 |
|
| Tea was supposedly discovered when a tea leaf fell into a Chinese emperor’s boiling water |
|
|
- According to popular legend, tea was discovered by the Chinese emperor
Shennong in 2737 B.C. when a tea leaf fell into his boiling water. The
Chinese consider tea to be a necessity of life.i
- Martial arts are practiced throughout China and were largely developed
from ancient farming and hunting methods.i
- The most important holiday in China is the Chinese New Year or Lunar
New Year. Chinese traditionally believe that every person turns one
year older on the New Year and, thus, that day is considered to be everyone’s
birthday.i
- Chinese is spoken by 92% of China’s population. There are at least
seven major families of the Chinese language, including Mandarin, Cantonese,
Wu, Hakka, Gan, Xiang, and Min.i
- Red symbolizes happiness for the Chinese and is commonly used at Chinese
festivals and other happy occasions such as birthdays and weddings.i
- In ancient China, the lotus was seen as a symbol of purity and was sacred
to both the Buddhists and Daoists. The peony (“King of Flowers”)
symbolized spring, the chrysanthemum symbolized long life, and the narcissus
was thought to bring good luck.i
|
 |
|
| Anyone caught smuggling the secrets of silk making out of ancient China were put to death |
|
|
- The Chinese have made silk since at least 3,000 B.C. The Romans knew
China as “Serica,” which means “Land of Silk.” The
Chinese fiercely guarded the secrets of silk making, and anyone caught
smuggling silkworm eggs or cocoons outside of China was put to death.i
- According to a Chinese legend, silk was discovered in 3000 B.C. by Lady
Xi Ling Sui, wife of the Emperor Huang Di. When a silk worm cocoon accidentally
dropped into her hot tea, fine threads from the cocoon unraveled in the
hot water and silk was born.i
- The oldest piece of paper in the world was found in China and dates back
to the second or first century B.C. Paper was so durable, it was sometimes
used for clothing and even light body armor.m
- The Chinese were the first in the world to use stirrups in the third
century A.D.m
- China’s “one child” policy has contributed to female
infanticide and has created a significant gender imbalance. There are currently
32 million more boys than girls in China. In the future, tens of millions
of men will be unable to find wives, prompting some scholars to suggest
that this imbalance could lead to a threat to world security.m
- The first known species of Homo erectus, the Peking Man, was
found in China and lived between 300,000-550,000 years ago. It is thought
that he knew how to manipulate fire.c
- During the first half the twentieth century, Shanghai was the only port
in the world to accept Jews fleeing the Holocaust without an entry visa.i
- Chinese mathematics evolved independently of Greek mathematics and is
consequently of great interest to historians of mathematics.m
- Originating as far back as 250 B.C., Chinese lanterns were an important
symbol of long life. Lanterns were once symbols of a family’s wealth,
and the richest families had lanterns so large, it required several people
with poles to hoist them into place.i
- In the Tang dynasty, anyone with an education was expected to greet as
well as say goodbye to another person in poetic verse composed on the spot.i
- In 1974, a group of farmers digging for a well in the Shaanxi province
uncovered some bits of very old pottery. They discovered the tomb of Qin
(259-210 B.C.) the first emperor who united China. The tomb contained thousands
of amazing life-sized soldiers, horses, and chariots.c
|
 |
|
| The Grand Canal of China is the world’s longest canal |
|
|
- China’s Grand Canal is the world’s oldest and longest canal
at 1,114 miles (1,795 km) long with 24 locks and around 60 bridges.e
- The bat is a traditional good luck symbol that is frequently depicted
in designs for porcelain, textiles, and other crafts.i
- The bicycle was introduced into China around 1891 by two American travelers
named Allen and Sachtleben. The bicycle is now the primary transportation
for millions of Chinese. The last Qing emperor (Puyi) rode a bicycle around
the Forbidden City in Beijing. China is currently the leading bicycle manufacturer.i
- The Boxer Rebellion between 1898 and 1901 in northern China was against
Christian missionaries, foreign diplomats, and technology by a secret group
called the “Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists” (Yihequan or I-ho-ch’uan)
so named because its members practiced weaponless martial arts as well
as secret rituals. Westerns called it “shadow boxing” and the
members “Boxers.”m
- Suspension bridges were invented in China in 25 B.C, 1,800 years before
such bridges were known in the West.m
- The first American woman to win the Nobel Prize was Pearl S. Buck (1892-1973)
for her novels about China, most notably The Good Earth (1931).
Amy Tan (1952-) is a best-selling Chinese-American author of The Joy
Luck Club.i
- The Chinese word for civilization (wen) is pronounced the same
as the word for script, pattern, or calligraphy. In fact, calligraphy was
thought to reveal the calligrapher’s moral and spiritual self-cultivation
as a type of “heart print.”i
- The carp is a symbol of strength and perseverance. The scales and whiskers
of the fish make it resemble a dragon, the greatest symbol of power in China. Fish
in general play a large role in Chinese culture and the words for “fish” and “abundance” are
pronounced the same in Chinese (yu).i
|
 |
|
| In some regions of ancient China, pigtails were indicative of girl’s marital status |
|
|
- In some parts of China, “pigtails” were associated with a
girl’s marital status. A young girl would wear two pigtails, and
when she married, she would wear just one. This may have contributed to
the Western view that pigtails are associated with children and young girls.i
- In ancient China, mirrors were believed to protect their owners from
evil, making hidden spirits visible and revealing the secrets of the future.
A person who had been scared by a ghost could be healed by looking in the
mirror. Mirrors were often hung on the ceilings of burial chambers.i
- The longest river in China is the 3,494-mile Yangtze (Changjian)
River and the 2,903-mile-long Yellow (Huanghe) River.e
- The Chinese developed a theory of three levels of heaven—Heaven,
Earth, and man—which has been influential in landscape painting and
flower arrangements.e
- The horse most likely originated in Central Asia and became very important
in China. A horse is considered to be associated with the masculine symbol, yang,
and with the element of fire. A person born in the Year of the Horse is
considered cheerful, independent, clever, talkative, quick to anger, and
able to handle money.i
- Because the cicada (katydid) has the longest life span of any insect
(up to 17 years) and sheds its skin, it has long been a symbol of regeneration
and rebirth for the Chinese. In ancient China, the Chinese would place
jade cicadas in the mouths of the dead because they were thought to slow down
the decay process and speed up the rebirth in another world.i
- Concubinage has been practiced throughout Chinese history, primarily
by wealthy men who could afford it. Chinese emperors had large harems with
hundreds of concubines.j
- The phoenix is the most important bird in Chinese legend and represents
the feminine power of the empress. The graceful crane, which is a symbol
of long life, is the second most important bird in Chinese legend. Ducks
are also important symbols and represent happiness and marital faithfulness.i
- The Cultural Revolution (the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution) from1966-1976
resulted in severe famine, thousands of deaths, and the erosion of thousands
of acres of farmland.m
- While the dragon is typically seen as an evil creature in Western culture,
it holds first place among the four greatest creatures in Chinese mythology,
including the phoenix, tiger, and tortoise. It is typically associated
with the emperor.i
- The highest mountain in the world (29,028 feet) is named in the honor
the Englishman Sir George Everest who was the first surveyor of India.
The Chinese call Mount Everest Qomolangma, which means “Mother
Goddess of the Earth.”e
|
 |
|
| The position of the stars on the Chinese flag represents the people’s unity under Communism |
|
|
- China’s national flag was adopted in September 1949 and first flown
in Tiananmen Square (the world’s largest public gathering place)
on October 1, 1949, the day the People’s Republic of China was formed.
The red in the flag symbolizes revolution. The large star symbolizes communism
and the little stars represent the Chinese people. The position of the
stars represents the unity of the Chinese people under the leadership of
the Communist Party.i
- China has the world’s oldest calendar. This lunar calendar originated
in 2600 B.C. and has 12 zodiac signs. It takes 60 years to complete.i
- The number of birth defects in China continues to rise. Environmentalist
and officials blame China’s severe pollution.d
- The consumption of mushrooms was recorded in Chinese historical documents
more than 3,000 years ago. In 1996, China produced 600,000 tons of mushrooms,
making it the world’s leading producer, and it has 60% of the world’s
mushroom varieties.i
- In 2007, dog food and toothpaste products made in China were recalled
because they contained poisonous ingredients. In July, China’s head
of the State Food and Drug Administration was found to have accepted bribes
from pharmaceutical companies. He was executed.g
- Famous Chinese and Chinese-American actors include Jackie Chan (Hong
Kong), Chow Yun Fat (Hong Kong), Bruce Lee (San Francisco), Jet Li (Beijing),
Zhang Ziyi (Beijing), and Lucy Lui (New York).e
- The 2008 Olympic
Games in Beijing were the most expensive games in history.b
While the 2004 Athens Games were estimated to cost around $15 billion,
the Beijing Games were estimated to cost a whopping $40 billion.j
-- Posted May 4, 2009
References
a
CIA.gov. “The
World Fact Book—China.” April 9, 2009. Accessed:
April 20, 2009.
b
CNN.com. “Emotion
Kicks off China’s Olympics.” August 9, 2008.
Accessed: April 20, 2009.
c
Cotterell, Arthur. 2005. Ancient China. New York: NY: Dorling Kindersley
Limited.
d
Demick, Barbara. “China
Blames Pollution for Surge in Birth Defects.” LosAngelesTimes.com. February
2, 2009. Accessed: April 21, 2009.
e
Fenby, Jonathan, ed. 2007. The Seventy Wonders of China. New York,
NY: Thames & Hudson Ltd.
f
Goldblatt, David. 2008. The Ball Is Round: A Global History of Soccer. New
York, NY: Penguin Group.
g
MSNBC.com. “Zheng Convicted
of Accepting Bribes, Dereliction of Duty: China’s Top Drug Regulator Gets Death Sentence.” May 29, 2007. Accessed:
April 21, 2009.
h
National Geographic Traveler. 2001 China. Washington, D.C.: National
Geographic Society.
i
Perkins, Dorothy. 2000. Encyclopedia of China: The Essential Reference to
China, Its History and Culture. New York, NY: Checkmark Books.
j
Rabinovitch, Simon. “Beijing
Games to be Costliest, but No Debt Legacy.” Reuters.com.
August 2008. Accessed: May 2, 2009.
k
Tucker, Anne Wilkes. 2007. The Great Wall of China: Photographs by Chen
Changfen. New Haven, CT: Yale University in cooperation with the Museum
of Fine Arts, Houston.
l
USAToday.com. “China
Space Program Advances with First Spacewalk.” September
27, 2008. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
m
Wright, David C. 2001. The History of China. Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press.
|