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Ningbo (Wade-Giles: Ning-po; literally "Tranquil Waves")
is a coastal city in the Zhejiang province of China.
It lies in the south of the populous Yangtze River
delta and faces the East China Sea to the east. It
covers an area of 9,365 sq.km and has a population
of 5.43 million. The jurisdiction of Ningbo City encompasses
two counties (Xiangshan and Ninghai), three county-level
cities (Yuyao, Cixi and Fenghua) and six urban districts
(Haishu, Jiangdong, Jiangbei, Zhenhai, Beilun and
Yinzhou).

Though a sub-provincial city, it enjoys
the same rights as possessed by a provincial government
in terms of economic management. Ningbo, "a large
city" entitled to formulate local laws and regulations,
is also a famous historic city with rich cultural
heritage. It is the birthplace of the "Neolithic Hemudu
Culture" dating back more than 7,000 years. Two thousand
years ago, Xu Fu, a necromancer of the Qin Dynasty
(221-207 B.C.), led a fleet from here, thus becoming
the first to commence China's exchanges with other
countries. Ningbo first rose to importance during
the latter part of the 5th century, when Korean
shipping found it the most convenient port for contacts
with the southern capital at Nanjing (Nanking; then
called Chien-k'ang). Under the Tang dynasty (618-907)
this traffic continued. Although official relations
lapsed after 838, private trade continued on a large
scale. In the 11th century Ningbo became a centre
of the coastal trade. Its importance grew with the
establishment of the Southern Song capital at Hangzhou
in 1127, when overseas trade to and from the capital
flowed through Ningbo. It grew rapidly during the
Song (960-1279) and Yuen periods.
The early period of the Ming
dynasty (1368-1644) brought a setback to Ningbo's
development. Overseas trade was deliberately curtailed
by the government and the building of oceangoing ships
prohibited, and even coastal trade was severely restricted.
Ningbo was attacked by Japanese pirates, and it became
a defensive base of some importance. Its growth seems
to have stagnated, however, until the last quarter
of the 15th century, when the rural prosperity of
its hinterland began to recover.
This recovery was assisted when the
Portuguese began trading in Ningbo in 1545, at first
illicitly, but later (after 1567) legally. Still later,
Dutch and British merchants arrived, and the Ningbo
merchants began to trade with the China coast from
Manchuria to Canton, as well as with the Philippines
and Taiwan. Ningbo was the commercial centre of the
coastal plain to the east of Shaoxing and an outport
for the Yangtze River Delta area, to which it was
linked by the Zhedong Canal leading to Shaoxing and
the Qiantang River. As a result, in the 17th and 18th
centuries the Ningbo merchants became important in
China's internal commerce and began to play a national
role as bankers in the early 19th century. In 1843
Ningbo was opened to foreign trade as a treaty port,
but trade declined, and its place was taken by Shanghai.
Ningbo ranked with Yangzhou and Guangzhou
as the three biggest ports for foreign trade in Tang
Dynasty and with Guangzhou and Quanzhou in Song Dynasty.
In the early 20th century "Hong-band" tailors from
Ningbo traveled extensively throughout China making
their living. And now, Ningbo port is still one of
the most important ports in China. Its cargo handling
capacity reached 150 million tonnages in 2002, ranking
second among the ports in the mainland of China, and
its container handling capacity amounted to 1,855,000
TEU.
As it enjoys a sound infrastructural
basis, Ningbo has scored remarkable achievements in
its social and economic development since the beginning
of reform and opening up. In 2002, the city's GDP
reached RMB150.03 billion, among which the per capita
GDP makes up 3331 dollars, the revenue RMB 25.8 billion.
The average disposable income of urban dwellers grew
to RMB12,969.9 and the net income of farmers climbed
to RMB5,764. Nowadays, Ningbo has become an important
industrial city and foreign trade port in east China,
a key city and chemical industrial base in the Yangtze
River delta and an economic centre of Zhejiang Province.
Of a typical subtropical monsoon climate,
Ningbo features mild temperature with moderate humidity
and distinctive seasons, and it is an ideal resort
to enjoy both natural and cultural endowment. A tranquil
coastal city, Ningbo's 500-km coastline forms a scenic
seascape. The Sun and the Moon Lakes, dug in the seventh
century, are a particularly beautiful sight. The people
of Ningbo have throughout their history had a deep
affinity for the ocean.
Ningbo has great potentials
in its development. Since China adopted the policy
of reform and opening, the Ningbo people have pursued
the trends of this new era. Visitors may witness the
dramatic changes that have taken place in this city:
widened roads, more diverse styles of dress on the
part of the local people, and Mandarin gradually supplanting
the local Ningbo dialect. Ningbo is an active participant
in the progressive world trend. By the year 2010,
Ningbo will be modernised into a more open international
port city that boasts even stronger economy, more
advanced science and culture, greater affluence and
better social fabrics and environment.
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