Baoding, city, southwest-central Hebei sheng (province), China. It is situated in a well-watered area on the western edge of the North China Plain; the Taihang Mountains rise a short distance to the west. Situated on the main road from Beijing through western Hebei, it is southwest of the capital, roughly midway between Beijing and Shijiazhuang, the provincial capital. To the west, a route leads into northern Shanxi province via the Longquan Pass.
Baoding is in an area of old-established settlement. Before the Qin dynasty (221–207 bce) the area was between the states of Yan and Zhao. In 477, during the Bei (Northern) Wei dynasty (386–534/535), it was made a county named Qingyuan, and it retained that designation for centuries. The area was of major strategic importance from early times. During the Tang dynasty (618–907) it was the headquarters of one of the armies guarding the northeastern frontier against the Khitan, a Ural-Altaic people, and it later became a key garrison for government forces defending access to Shanxi against the autonomous provinces of Hebei. During the Five Dynasties (Wudai) period (907–960) and the early years of the Song dynasty (960–1279), it was a military prefecture on the contested border between the Song and the Liao in the north. Under the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty (1206–1368) the area it administered became Baoding circuit (lu). The transfer of the capital to Beijing in Yuan and the succeeding Ming (1368–1644) times meant that its strategic role was reversed, so that it became the chief defensive bastion protecting Beijing against attack from the south or incursions over the passes of the Taihang Mountains. Under the Ming it was the administrative centre of the Baoding prefecture (fu), and under the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) it became even more important. It was both the seat of the provincial government of Zhili (Chihli) and also the alternative seat, with Tianjin, of the military governor of Zhili. The city was heavily fortified, with walls more than 5 miles (8 km) in circumference enclosing the government offices of the province, the military governor’s offices, extensive barracks, and a military academy.
Although Baoding was primarily an administrative city, with an extensive service sector, it was also a notable centre of learning. Under the Ming and Qing it had many well-known schools, and during the reign of the Yongzheng emperor (1722–35) the Lianchi Academy, which in 1908 became the Zhili (later Hebei Provincial) Library, was founded at the renowned Lotus Pond Garden (Lianhua Chi). Among its many present-day institutions of higher learning is Hebei University (1960, moved from Tianjin to Baoding in 1970). The scenic Lotus Pond Garden, built in the city in 675 during the Tang dynasty, is home to stelae with scholarly calligraphic inscriptions dating to the Tang.
As a communication centre, it also had commercial importance. It was a hub of a rather dense premodern road network and in the 1900s was joined to Beijing and Tianjin, and later to Hankou, by railway. It was also a commercial centre, collecting grain, wool, cloth, cotton, cottonseed oil, and various agricultural products.
The city maintained its administrative importance both under the Japanese occupation before and during World War II and under the communist government that came to power in 1949. It remained the provincial capital and the seat of the Hebei People’s Assembly until 1968; in that year the provincial administration was transferred to Shijiazhuang. The city has continued to grow, however. Its economy expanded in the 1950s and early ’60s and again after 1980. Its role in transportation remains important, with new express highways and rail lines linking it to other major cities. Manufactures include machinery, auto parts, electronics, chemicals, building material, textiles, paper, and processed foods. A high-technology industrial park was established there in 1992. Pop. (2002 est.) city, 666,068; (2007 est.) urban agglom., 1,107,000.