The Great Wall of China is a barrier fortification in northern
China running west-to-east 13,171 miles (21,196 km) from the Jiayuguan Pass (in
the west) to the Hushan Mountains in Liaoning Province in the east, ending at
the Bohai Gulf. It crosses eleven provinces/municipalities (or ten, according
to some authorities) and two autonomous regions (Inner Mongolia and Ningxia).
Construction of the wall began in the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BCE) under the First
Emperor Shi Huangti and continued over hundreds of years throughout many
different dynasties. The Great Wall in the present day is almost completely the
work of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1664 CE) who added the distinctive watchtowers
and expanded the length and width of the wall. The now-famous national monument
fell into decay following the Ming Dynasty, when the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912
CE) took power and expanded the border of China northwards, making the wall obsolete.
Restoration and preservation efforts only seriously began in the 1980's CE, and
the wall was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987 CE.
The
Warring States Period (476-221 BCE), the different regions of China fought for
control of the country during the collapse of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (771-226
BCE). One state emerged victorious from this struggle: the state of Qin which
is pronounced 'chin' and gives China its name. The general who led Qin to
victory was Prince Ying who took the name `Qin Shi Huangti' (First Emperor)
after conquering the other states.
Shi Huangti
ordered construction of the Great Wall to consolidate his empire. The seven
warring states each had walls along their border for defense, which Shi Huangti
destroyed after he took power. As a sign that all of China was now one, the
emperor decreed a great wall would be built along the northern border to defend
against the mounted warriors of the nomadic Xiongnu of Mongolia; there would be
no more walls marking boundaries between separate states in China because there
would no longer be any separate states. His wall ran along a line further to
the north than the present one, marking what was then the border between China
and the Mongolian plains. The wall was constructed by unwilling conscripts and
convicts who were sent north under guard from all over China for the purpose.
Shi Huangti was not a benevolent ruler and was more interested in his own
grandeur than the good of his people. His wall was not regarded by the Chinese
people under the Qin Dynasty as a symbol of national pride or unity but as a
place where people were sent to labor for the emperor until they died.
The following
dynasties all made their own contributions and repairs to the wall until the
Ming Dynasty (1368-1664 CE) initiated a massive building project to protect the
country from invading nomads from Mongolia, the very same incentive that had
played a part in Shi Huangti's original vision. This similarity in purpose may
explain the belief that the present wall dates from the Qin Dynasty. The Ming
built the wall featuring over 25,000 massive watchtowers and ranging in height
from 16-26 feet (5-8 meters), 20 feet across the bottom (6 meters) and 16 feet
across the top (5 meters).
In addition to
creating the massive wall, the Ming Dynasty also enclosed their most important
agricultural center, Liaoning Province, behind a walled fortification known as
the Liaoning Wall (also known as the Liaodong Wall). This wall has been a
source of controversy between China and North Korea since 2009 CE when the
Chinese government claimed they had only recently discovered portions of the
Great Wall close to the border with North Korea by the Hushan Mountains. North
Korea has asserted that the 'newly discovered Great Wall' actually belongs to
them and is not part of China's Great Wall. The section of wall in dispute is
no doubt part of the Liaoning Wall. This wall in no way can be compared with
the Great Wall and was never built to be. It was a simple defensive barrier
constructed to hamper invasions of Liaoning from the north and was constructed
of earth, stone, and whatever else was available. Moats were dug on either side
of the wall to further impede an invading force.
As it turned out,
the Liaoning Wall and the Great Wall were equally useless in repelling
invasion. Manchu invasions from the north began in c. 1600 CE and continued
until 1644 CE when the Great Wall was opened to the invaders. China was again
in turmoil at this time as a rebellion had been mounted against the Ming
Dynasty. The Ming general Wu Sangui (1612-1678 CE), who had declared himself
emperor, opened the Great Wall to the Manchus in a deal whereby they would help
him defeat the rebels. Instead, the Manchus seized power, expelled the Ming
Dynasty, and established the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912 CE). The victory of the
Manchus over the Ming meant that the border of China was now some distance
north of the Great Wall, and since it was no longer of any use in defense, it
was neglected and fell into ruin until the rise of the Republic of China in
1912 CE, when it was found useful in controlling immigration and emigration.
There were efforts
over the years to maintain the structure, but no concerted effort existed until
as recently as 1980 CE when the wall was made a priority of the Chinese
government as a tourist attraction and source of revenue. It was not designated
a UNESCO World Heritage Site until 1987 CE, but even with that designation the
wall is slowly crumbling. Today, according to historians and preservationists
who monitor the site, there are only about 600 miles (372 km) of the wall left
in stable condition.
The origin
of this claim is the English essayist Sir Henry Norman, who wrote in 1895 that
the wall was "the only work of human hands on the globe visible from the
moon.
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