Contemporary city

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Also known as: Canton, Kuangchou, Kwangchow
Wade-Giles romanization:
Kuang-chou
Also spelled:
Kwangchow
Conventional:
Canton

News

Chinese city still officially in summer as 30-year heat record broken Nov. 15, 2024, 4:18 AM ET (The Guardian)
China-Canada direct flights to ‘surge’ to meet demand as talks yield results Nov. 13, 2024, 1:47 AM ET (South China Morning Post)
National Games win ‘one of my biggest targets’ says Kho, as 1-year countdown begins Nov. 9, 2024, 2:09 AM ET (South China Morning Post)
Chinese suppliers storm Temu office in Guangzhou to protest ‘harsh’ policies Oct. 31, 2024, 2:10 AM ET (South China Morning Post)

Guangzhou came under the spell of its most illustrious son, Sun Yat-sen, from 1895 to 1925. Sun made the city the testing ground for his campaign to overthrow the Manchu dynasty and to establish a Chinese republic. The Guangzhou Uprising of 1911 paved the way for the success of the Chinese Revolution of 1911–12. Guangzhou became the base of operations for action against the warlords between 1916 and 1925 and served as the headquarters of Sun’s Nationalist Party (Kuomintang, or Guomindang). Besides completing his Three Principles of the People, Sun reorganized the party in 1924 to reactivate the Nationalist revolution. All manner of people flocked to Guangzhou—the right- and left-wing members of the Kuomintang, the members of the newly formed Chinese Communist Party, and Soviet advisers. Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi), Mao Zedong, and Zhou Enlai began their careers in Guangzhou under Sun’s tutelage.

Chiang gained power when he crushed an uprising by the Guangzhou Merchants’ Volunteer Corps and defeated the disloyal local warlords (1924). With Sun’s death in 1925, however, Guangzhou was embroiled in the power struggle between the communists and the Nationalists. In 1927 a communist-led coup attempted to set up a workers’ government in the city, only to be crushed by Chiang. From 1928 to 1937 Guangzhou was officially under the control of the Nationalist government, but it was actually controlled by independent leaders, who criticized Chiang’s dictatorship and threatened secession from the Nationalist government at Nanjing. In 1937, when war against the Japanese broke out, Guangzhou became a prime target of Japanese air raids. The city fell in 1938 and remained under Japanese occupation until 1945. Recovery did not begin until the communist government took control in 1949.

In 1921, during the Republican period, Guangzhou officially had been designated an administratively independent city under the Nationalist government, with the son of Sun Yat-sen being Guangzhou’s first mayor. At first, under the new communist regime, it retained its status as a municipality directly under the national government, but in 1954 the city was placed under the administration of Guangdong province. Another significant administrative change occurred in 2005, when some urban districts were amalgamated and a number of what until then had been suburbs became city districts under a much-enlarged municipality.

The modernization of Guangzhou had begun in the 1920s but was interrupted by the Japanese occupation. It resumed after 1949, especially from the late 1950s, when heavy industries were introduced. The city developed into one of China’s centres of foreign trade. Guangzhou benefited tremendously from China’s adoption of economic reform policies beginning in the early 1980s, particularly with the establishment of special economic zones in nearby Shenzhen and Zhuhai. Guangzhou underwent a sustained period of economic growth that continued into the early 21st century and was marked by considerable building construction and infrastructure development. In the process, the city reemerged as a financial and economic hub of southern China.

Ping-chia Kuo Zhong Gong-fu