The end of the Great Wall of China. Photo Link
Old Dragon’s Head - Where The
Great Wall of China Meets the Sea — The Great Wall of China is one of
the most amazing piece of architecture and the most ambitious building
project ever attempted in the history of mankind. Construction of this
formidable defensive structure, built to ward off invasion and to
protect the Chinese Empire, goes back by more than two thousand years to
the the 7th century BC during the Chunqiu period. Especially famous is
the wall built between 220–206 BC by the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi
Huang. Little of that wall remains. Since then, the Great Wall has on
and off been rebuilt, maintained and fortified. Construction continued
up to the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), when the Great Wall became the
world's largest military structure. 08 more images after the break...
One
of the more interesting places to visit The Great Wall is where it
meets the Bohai Sea near Shanghaiguan in Qinhuangdao City about 300
kilometers east of Beijing. Shanhaiguan or Shanhai Pass is one of the
major passes of the Great Wall of China located south of Yan Mountain,
and north of the Bohai Sea. The Wall extends 5 kilometers north of
Shanhai Pass where it juts into the sea. This is where The Wall starts
(or ends depending on how you look at it) and from here it stretches to
Lop Lake in the west, along an arc that roughly delineates the southern
edge of Inner Mongolia – a length of approximately 8,850 km.
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This part of the wall is known as
Laolongtou or the Old Dragon’s Head, because it looks like a long dragon
dipping his head drinking water from the sea. This section of the Wall
extends about 23 meters out into the Bohai Sea, and it is possible to
walk out onto the Wall and look over the edge directly down into the
water below. Laolongtou was built in 1579 in the Ming Dynasty.
In July 1904, Japanese troops
landed at Shanhai Pass, prior to marching on Peking to relieve the siege
of the legations during the Boxer Uprising. A pre-landing bombardment
of the area, which was totally unnecessary as few Chinese troops were
present, destroyed this section of the wall. What stands today is a
1980s effort by the authorities to replicate the original. By the shore,
the Changtai Tower, and the Temple to the Sea Goddess that sits in its
center, was originally built in 1579, but is now covered with replica
soldiers in Qing Dynasty costumes. Most interestingly, the original wall
was built using a mixture of glutinous rice soup mixed with sand, earth
and lime.
The Laolongtou Great Wall is
mainly formed by 7 parts, which are the Estuary Stone City, Chenghai
Tower, Nereus Temple, Jinglu Beacon Tower, Nanhaikou (Southern Estuary)
Pass, Ninghai City and Binhai (Seafront) Walls. Among them, Chenghai
Tower is the most celebrated structure. Chenghai Tower is a two-storey
building built with wood and bricks, which functioned as a defensive
arrow tower. Emperors of the Qing Dynasty once visited it while on their
way to Northeast China, worshipped their ancestors and left many poems
and inscriptions. There are also poems by famous literary figures
inscribed on the tablets embedded on the walls.
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Watchtower on the wall, Shanhaiguan. Photo Link
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Aerial view of Laolongtou and the surrounding area. Photo Link
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