Suburban and outlying districts

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Also known as: Ch’ung-ch’ing, Chungking
Wade-Giles romanization:
Ch’ung-ch’ing
Conventional:
Chungking

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Chinese turning to casual work to supplement wages amid economic slump Oct. 30, 2024, 11:05 PM ET (Straits Times)

In contrast to the congested conditions in the central city and the industrial districts, the suburban districts have a number of delightful resorts and spas. Among the scenic spots on the south shore are the temple in honour of the empress Yu, consort of the Yu (or Da Yu) emperor (the legendary founder of the Xia dynasty), on Mount Tu; the wooded summer resorts of Qingshuixi (“Clear Water Creek”) on Mount Huang; and Nanwenquan (“South Hot Springs”), which has delightful retreats at Huaxi (“Flower Creek”) and Huxiaokou (“Tiger Roar Gap”). A short distance north of the city are the springs of Geleshan. Farther up the Jialing River at Beipei are the Jinyun Temple, the celebrated retreat of the Song dynasty savant Feng Jinyun, and Beiwenquan (“North Hot Springs”), reputedly superior to Nanwenquan because its water is warmer in winter and cooler in summer.

With the establishment of the larger provincial-level municipality, the administrative area under the city expanded significantly to the northeast and southeast. The area of the Old City was renamed Yuzhong district; Yuzhong continues to function as the political, economic, and commercial hub of the municipality, focused on the district’s main business centre, located around the Liberation Monument (Jiefangbei) in the centre of the Old City.

Areas surrounding Yuzhong, including some former suburbs, are now the municipality’s core districts, including Jiangbei, Nan’an, Shapingba, Jiulongpo, and Dadukou. These districts have developed into major shopping and commercial centres. Shapingba also has emerged as a regional cultural centre, home to several of the municipality’s major institutions of higher learning. Jiangbei district is a centre of automobile and machinery production, as well as a distribution hub for goods and materials, and Nan’an district has developed light industries and supportive commercial services.

Farther to the northeast, Chongqing municipality is included in the western portion of the Three Gorges Dam project along the Yangtze, which required that large numbers of residents in areas flooded by the reservoir be relocated. Wanzhou district (formerly Wanxian city), at the western end of the reservoir, has become one of the major ports along the Yangtze and has emerged as a regional hub of water, rail, road, and air transportation with the construction of deepwater berths, rail lines, express highways, and an airport.

Housing

Before the Sino-Japanese War, Chongqing was a city of narrow streets and crowded housing. Streets and lanes followed the contours of the hills. The houses were constructed of bamboo, wood, or thatch in the poorer residential areas and of brick in the wealthier areas. In all areas there was a high degree of congestion. A vigorous modernization program was introduced when the city became the seat of the Nationalist government. Most of the city wall was demolished to make way for new streets, and existing streets were graded and widened. The tremendous demand for housing created by an influx of government workers and refugees led to the rapid expansion of the sections west of the Old City.

From 1938 to 1942 Chongqing was heavily bombarded by the Japanese, causing massive destruction in the city. Parts of the remaining wall and virtually all of the city’s historic monuments and temples were damaged or destroyed. Because of the destruction, the new communist government (which came to power in 1949) had little difficulty in carrying forward the tasks of modernization and expansion after the war. Modern buildings now stand throughout the city, with skyscrapers dotting the sky in the newer commercial centres. In the northern suburban districts and adjacent areas, large buildings were erected to provide living quarters for workers and accommodations for factories and workshops. More recently, the completion of the Three Gorges Dam and the subsequent relocation or resettlement of some one million inhabitants in the municipality precipitated an economic boom, as massive government investment was used to build new towns, business enterprises, and communications and transportation infrastructure in the affected areas.

People

Before the war with Japan, Chongqing had fewer than 250,000 inhabitants. From 1938 onward, people from the Japanese-occupied coastal provinces flocked to the wartime capital at an astonishing rate. A part of Chongqing’s population increase since 1938 consisted of government workers, factory personnel, and refugees from other provinces. In the late 1940s, however, the city’s population decreased temporarily with the return of people to the coastal provinces. The influx of people from downriver contributed to turning formerly parochial Chongqing into a cosmopolitan city. The population generally has continued to grow since the early 1950s, especially after the establishment of the municipality in 1997. The number of people living in the city’s core districts is now some 20 times greater than the population of the Old City before the war.

The Southern Mandarin dialect of Chinese is the most commonly spoken language in the municipality. Despite its heavy accent and many regional slang words, it is quite intelligible to speakers of standard Mandarin. There are more than one million people of the Tujia minority group and some half million Miao (Hmong) living in four autonomous counties and in Qianjiang district in the eastern and southeastern parts of the municipality.