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Thread: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

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    Avalon Member Ravenlocke's Avatar
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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

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    60-second review of the landing of the Shenzhou 15 return capsule!
    On June 4, the return capsule of the Shenzhou 15 manned spacecraft successfully landed at Dongfeng Landing Field. Welcome home the God Fifteen Crew!
    https://twitter.com/XinhuaChinese/st...04873896538112


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

    They saved the mama and her baby.

    https://twitter.com/MatreshkaRF/stat...14258315018267


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

    https://twitter.com/onlydjole/status...17997215481858


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

    https://twitter.com/TripInChina/stat...15849110540288



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    https://twitter.com/TripInChina/stat...19474488074240



    ¤=[Post Update]=¤

    https://twitter.com/TripInChina/stat...60975016423430


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

    Hidden - China's Flagship EVs are Exploding in Huge Numbers

    It starts at around 4 minutes and shows some clips showing this


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

    Ruyi Bridge

    https://x.com/Hana_b30/status/1556144997094883329



    https://x.com/PDChina/status/1369029153710817284


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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

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    This is fascinating. A peer-reviewed study discovered that men in China's Tang dynasty (618–907 CE) - the dynasty that introduced meritocracy in China with the imperial examination system (the famous Keju) - had as much social mobility as in 1960s America.

    The Tang dynasty introduced the Keju system in 650CE. The study bases its finding on the analysis of excavated tomb epitaphs of male elites from that time. These epitaphs are highly detailed, and provide a trove of information on the officials' ancestral origins, family backgrounds, and careers. The study finds that early in the Tang Dynasty - before the Keju system - aristocratic ancestry was a distinct advantage, but over time, passing the Keju became an increasingly important predictor of one’s career achievement and eventually overtook aristocracy. The study also found that coming from a prominent clan or having a powerful father had no significant impact on whether someone passed the exam, which means it was true meritocracy.

    Subsequent dynasties kept the Keju system in place and it is arguably still broadly the system in place in China today, except that the big exam is now called Gaokao.

    All this goes to show just how far ahead - literally more than a millennia ahead - China was on the rest of the world in matters of social justice. France, the country that took the lead in ending aristocratic privileges in the West, only did so after 1789. And, interestingly enough, was much inspired by China in that process: if you study enlightenment thinkers like Voltaire, you can see they had an almost religious fascination for China. For instance Voltaire kept only one portrait in his study, facing him at all times, that of Confucius.

    This is the link to the article:
    https://businessinsider.com/baby-boo...-status-2024-1 and a link to the study itself: https://pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2305564121

    https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1750317066203353407

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    Default Re: Interesting Bits and Pieces about China

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    Since I've traveled to almost all provinces in China (I'm missing just 3!) I often get asked what's the most spectacular place that I know in the country, and I think it's probably Fanjingshan in Guizhou province.

    It's two temples, linked by a bridge, first built in the 7th century AD, on top of an extremely steep peak at 2,572 meters altitude. Going there is quite the journey as you need to climb a huge staircase of exactly 8,888 steps to reach the top 😅 You really wonder how they managed to build these temples back in the days! Thankfully nowadays you can also take a cable car that brings you closer, in which case the journey is shortened to about 2,300 steps, which took us about 2 hours with me carrying one of my daughters on my back and holding the other one's hand (picture below).

    Unfortunately when we went it was quite foggy so I couldn't take good pictures but I included sunny-weather pictures so you can see just how jaw-dropping this place is.



    The surroundings of Fanjingshan, and Guizhou province generally, are immensely charming too. Guizhou is one of the most rural provinces in China and home to plenty of ethnic minorities who've remained very traditional, with unique architecture styles for their villages.

    For instance right around Fanjingshan we visited two villages (see both videos): one village called Yunshe of the Tujia ethnic minority, and one called Zhaisha which is a village of the Dong minority, famous for their very special towers in the middle of their villages.


    https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1782246119210352992





    Text:

    One other place in Guizhou where I haven't been but where I would very much like to go next time I visit the province is a place that I'm pretty much certain no-one outside China has ever heard of called Pingba (平坝樱花): the world's largest gathering of cherry blossoming trees: an incredible 700,000 trees! All of this in islands and peninsulas on a lake. This place looks like the closest thing there is on earth to the garden of Eden!

    It's a shame Guizhou is rarely visited by foreign tourists. In general in my experience it's the number 1 mistake people make when they visit China: they tend to spend all their time visiting cities (Shanghai, Beijing, Xi'an, etc.) when the countryside is in my humble opinion in some ways more impressive, with so many absolutely breathtaking sites.

    A fun anecdote I recently read in the French press (https://20minutes.fr/publicommunique...mondiale-chine) which illustrates this is that there's this French guy called Jean Bottazzi who's the Vice President of the French Speleology Federation (FFS). One day he decided to visit China and Guizhou specifically (since the place is filled with mountains and huge cave networks, including the Shuanghe cave network, the longest one in China) and... he literally stayed there, he now lives in China!

    https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1782246122989502841

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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