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Beijing, China: tourist information
The Capital of the People's Republic of China, Beijing is the political and economic heart of the country, as well as a major artistic and cultural enclave with its 5,000 years of glorious history, a university and scientific center and one of the main financial markets in Asia. Since the last decades of the 20th century Beijing has become a modern metropolis, still preserving however its magical Eastern charm of enchanting gardens, natural landscapes of amazing beauty, historical sites of astonishing grandeur. Present-day Beijing is a caleidoscope of contradictions: a communist country in a by now almost capitalistic economy, exaggerately modern and still preserver of the true ancient soul of the Chinese nation.
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The seat of the 2008 Olympic Games, Beijing is getting ready to this epochal event with the utmost attention to details and magnificence, the heritage of this ancient people of farmers, philosophers and warriors. Beijing International Airport, 20 km southeast from the downtown center, is by now one of the largest in the world, and the first in Asia for air traffic.
Air connections to Beijing Visitors to China can fly to Beijing from all major airports in the world, Airchina has daily flights from London Heathrow (http://www.air-china.co.uk/timetable.html); for Air China flights from other airports in the world check the company's website http://www.airchina.com.cn/, the homepage loads in Chinese, choose "English" at top; from the States also American Airlines and Northwestern fly to Beijing.
Air France offers flights 4 times a week from Paris, Alitalia twice a week from Rome, British Airways twice a week from Heathrow, Finnair twice a week from Helsinki, El Al twice a week from Tel Aviv, KLM once a week, Lufthansa 6 times a week from Frankfurt, Sabena twice a week from Brussels, Swissair 3 times a week from Zurich.
History of Beijing
The name Beijing (until not so long ago Peking) means etimologically "North Capital", as opposed to Nanchin (Nanjing) which was the "South Capital". In the course of thousands of years the city had many names: Zhongdu under the Jin dynasty, Khanbaliq in the Mongolian language - which Marco Polo spread in Europe as Cambuluc. When the Ming emperors reconquered China driving the Mongolian occupiers away, the city was renamed Shuntian, and from 1928 until 1949, when the capital was moved to Nanjing, it was called Beiping. Finally in 1949 the COmmunist government re-established the capital in the city, returning to the name Beijing (Peking). From this thousand-year-long history, unique monuments have survived in the surroundings of the Chinese capital.
What to see
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