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Datong is the second largest city in Shanxi, and is known
by the locals as the coal capital (Meidu) for a good reason.
Datong coal is everywhere: tons of it powering the whole of
Shanxi and other cities beyond, piles of it chugging along
the roads around town in Soviet style off-blue trucks, smears
of it discovered on a face-wiped handkerchief. The city is
one of China's most polluted and not only asthma sufferers
should think twice before spending any amount of time in the
city. Industrial and economic development has bounded in great
leaps since the communists came to power in 1950, and huge
swathes of the city have been altered into concrete. Despite
all this travellers still have a few huge incentives to visit
Datong, incentives that are all related to the town's ancient
past.Lying in the northern area of Shanxi Province, Datong
was originally, over 2,200 years ago, founded as a military
stronghold, holding out the hordes that frequently pushed
south from Mongolia. If you are interested there still remain
a number of dilapidated watchtowers on the Great Wall about
40km north of the city at the inter-provincial border. The
city was often raided, the Mongols were often repelled, and
the city took on a rough border town look.It was not until
1,600 years ago that the city's luck turned. A group of nomadic
Turkish people, the Toba, setting up their Northern Wei Dynasty
(386-534 AD), decided to establish their capital at Datong.
The Toba were to become fanatic Buddhists, as is shown from
the carvings in the Yungang Grottoes, and by their later work
in the Longmen Caves when the capital was moved to Luoyang
in 494 AD. The Yungang Grottoes, although much removed from
their former glory, are still one of the most impressive cave
sights in China.The city fell from imperial favour for a few
centuries, but regained importance in 916 AD when the city
was again made capital, this time of the Buddhist Liao Dynasty
(916-1125 AD), and this continued on into the ensuing Jin
Dynasty (1115-1234 AD). Buddhist temples from this era are
what remain of the Liao & Jin Buddhist belief, who helped
establish or improve the Huayan Monastery, the Shanhua Temple
and Hengshan Mountain's Hanging Monastery. These sights still
remain today.
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Bank
Post
office:
Hospital:
Police
Station:
please dail 110
Airport
At present, despite the airport that can be found to the
south of town, there are no flights to the city. It may be
worth asking - most likely flights will be from Beijing and
Guangzhou - in the city you are in if the service has been
resumed.Those wishing to leave the city by air can try the
Datong Air Service Company (Tel: 0352-2044039) at 1 Nanguan
nanjie, who will give you information, and who are able to
book flight tickets other than from/to Datong.
Railway
station
Datong boasts a well developed system of railway transport,
probably because of its vast major coal reserve. The city
is linked to Beijing as well as other major provincial cities
in Shanxi Province by the Beijing-Baotou railway line and
Datong-Fenglingdu railway line (a route usually taken by the
trans-Siberia trains). Travelling longitudinally is the Datong-Lianyungang
railway line.The railway station lies on the northern outskirts.
Train tickets can be hard to get, especially for those to
Xi'an. CITS can help you to obtain tickets, although there
will be a commission placed on their services. The CITS office
is within the railway station, or in the Yungang Hotel.
Bus
station
city
transport
Food
Shopping
Entertainment |