|
On
both sides of a slabstone-paved street stand pubs, restaurants, pawnshops,
weaving and dyeing establishments, and other businesses, all housed in
wooden structures of brown. Rivers and creeks spanned with stone bridges
in various designs flow through the town, and the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand
Canal passes by. Old waterside houses and outside corridors can be found
here and there. This is the ancient town of Wuzhen.
Wuzhen Town, in Tongxiang City,
Zhejiang Province, has a history of more than 1,000 years. Of the ancient
residential houses, workshops, and stores still standing on the banks
of the rivers, 169,600 square meters, accounting for 81.54 percent of
the town's total floor area, have remained unchanged, lending an atmosphere
of antiquity.
Wuzhen has many sites of historical
and cultural interest. From the Song (960-1279) through the Qing (1644-1911)
Dynasties, Wuzhen produced more successful candidates in the highest imperial
examinations than any other town south of the lower reaches of the Changjiang
(Yangtze) River. Bearing witness to the town's emphasis on education is
the Lizhi (Aspiration) Academy of Classical Learning of the Qing Dynasty,
which still retains its original appearance.
During
the Northern and Southern Dynasties (420-581), Crown Prince Liang Zhaoming
once studied at Wuzhen. The prince is famous for his Literary Selections
by Zhaoming, a milestone in the history of Chinese literature, and the
town of Wuzhen built a memorial archway to commemorate his stay there
and has kept it well preserved. Other historical and cultural sites include
the Wenchang Pavilion, the Xiuzhen Taoist Temple, the ancient stage, the
mansion of a member of the Imperial Academy, and the former residence
of Mao Dun, a great master of contemporary Chinese literature.
Tradition is still very much
alive in Wuzhen. In addition to flower-drum opera, shadow-puppet shows,
and temple fairs, Wuzhen also attracts visitors with its time-honored
art of making indigo-dyed printed calico. In ancient times, indigo-dyed
printed calico was used for curtains, scarves, and tablecloths in every
household in the countryside of Zhejiang Province. Today, it is still
common to see old women in indigo-blue gowns leisurely operating spinning
wheels or looms at weaving workshops in the old lanes of Wuzhen, while
the squeaks of the looms resound throughout the lanes. Carrying on this
tradition has become a part of the lives of the old women.
The raw material for dye printing
is Eupatorium fortunei, a herb that turns into indigo after being fermented
and precipitated. For convenience in transporting the cloth, the weaving
workshops and dyeing workshops are usually on the same street, only a
few doors from each other. At the dyeing workshop, the cloth is soaked
and air-dried again and again to produce white flowers on a blue background.
|
|
|
|
Setting
out candle lanterns on the river for a special occasion.
|
A
shadow-puppet show. The puppet master is 70 years old.
|
|
|
|
|
Waterside
houses make it possible for housewives to buy food and other daily
necessities without leaving home.
|
A
local temple fair.
|
Wuzhen is at its best on rainy
days. Strolling with an umbrella along an old lane past the centuries-old
wooden houses and seeing the rain flow off the engraved eaves that cover
the doorways is an amazing experience. The falling raindrops bring ripples
on the river surfaces, while boats travel to and fro. The waterside pavilions
and corridors and the arched bridges, all shrouded in drizzle, make up
a charming scene.
People
in Wuzhen live a simple life. Many of them breed silkworms and raise chrysanthemums,
and they have mostly retained the tradition of buying fruit and vegetables
from trade boats through the windows of their waterside houses. They benefit
from an inherited harmony of man and nature and enjoy the pleasing living
environment that comes from social progress. In May 1999, the local government
invested 200 million yuan for maintaining and improving the town's environment.
The project was to be completed within five years, and the first phase,
with an investment of 80 million yuan, was completed by the end of 2001.
While taking care to retain
the town's original look, efforts have been made in the treatment of the
water environment, the renovation of public toilets, the installation
of outdoor lighting, and the management of the sanitation and appearance
of the town. A clean, beautiful environment has thus been ensured.
Wuzhen has been included by
UNESCO in the reserve list of world cultural heritages.
|