EPISODE 339 GREAT WALL OF CHINA



EPISODE 339    THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA   circa 2013

alan skeoch
May 2021




“So Kevin, what’s up for today?”
“First, the hotel breakfast…take what you want buffet…including bacon and eggs and coffee.
“Then what?”
“We will need all the energy we can muster.  We will have to climb on ancient stone blocks
to get to the site and then we can walk for 13,000 miles “
“Get serious Kevin”
“We are going to climb onto the GREAT WALL OF CHINA…One of the great wonders
of the world.  13,000 miles long with some gaps.   We will climb onto the most famous
parts of the great wall.”
“Many people will be there I bet…”
“Lots of people but the wall is so big it just swallows the crowds…you will be stunned by
the place.   Up top it is as wide as a highway…up and down high hills…ramparts…forts.
“Why was it built?”
“Good question.   The Wall was designed to stop barbarian invasions.   It never really did that.”
“What year was it built?”
-You mean what century…the wall took hundreds of years to build.  Began perhaps as far
back as the 5th century B.C…some parts even earlier…around 220 B.C. The Chinese emperor
at the time ordered his people to build the wall…3,500 miles constructed with primitive tools and
animals and thousands of people…some say that over 400,000 workers died building
the Great Wall of China and many of their bodies are buried here and there under and inside
the wall.”
  


Marjorie and I could hardly believe that we were actually going to walk sections of
the Great Wall of China.   But we were there.  First we wound our way up a steep
hill which was packed with little sales booth…souvenirs, food, silk clothing…everything
from soup to nuts.   Then we had to climb up a rather chaotic stairway of large stepping
stones until we arrived on  top of the wall.

We were part of large crowd of tourists…all nationalities included a whopping big
number of caucasians.  Once on top of the wall the crowd seemed to disappear.  Getting there
however we had to thread our way through a forest of arms, legs, elbows. On top the crowd just disappeared.  As you will see.
An interesting crowd.  When they saw Marjorie’s cane many offered help…the cluster parted to let her through.  Manners…respect
for older people.  Just a bit surprising.   

HERE IT IS…THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA



WHY THE CANE?  Marjorie just had knee surgery…titanium knees yet she was able to scale the wall.  She had to do that.  Feared
we would leave her behind sitting of a block of stone carved thousands of years ago.   On top of the wall the walking was easy.




UPDATED:
NOV 5, 2019
ORIGINAL:
AUG 24, 2010

Great Wall of China

The Great Wall of China is an ancient series of walls and fortifications, totaling more than 13,000 miles in length, located in northern China. Perhaps the most recognizable symbol of China and its long and vivid history, the Great Wall was originally conceived by Emperor Qin Shi Huang in the third century B.C. as a means of preventing incursions from barbarian nomads. The best-known and best-preserved section of the Great Wall was built in the 14th through 17th centuries A.D., during the Ming dynasty. Though the Great Wall never effectively prevented invaders from entering China, it came to function as a powerful symbol of Chinese civilization’s enduring strength.

Qin Dynasty Construction 

Though the beginning of the Great Wall of China can be traced to the fifth century B.C., many of the fortifications included in the wall date from hundreds of years earlier, when China was divided into a number of individual kingdoms during the so-called Warring States Period. 

Around 220 B.C., Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of a unified China under the Qin Dynasty, ordered that earlier fortifications between states be removed and a number of existing walls along the northern border be joined into a single system that would extend for more than 10,000 li (a li is about one-third of a mile) and protect China against attacks from the north.

Construction of the “Wan Li Chang Cheng,” or 10,000-Li-Long Wall, was one of the most ambitious building projects ever undertaken by any civilization. The famous Chinese general Meng Tian initially directed the project, and was said to have used a massive army of soldiers, convicts and commoners as workers. 

Made mostly of earth and stone, the wall stretched from the China Sea port of Shanhaiguan over 3,000 miles west into Gansu province. In some strategic areas, sections of the wall overlapped for maximum security (including the Badaling stretch, north of Beijing, that was later restored during the Ming Dynasty). 

From a base of 15 to 50 feet, the Great Wall rose some 15-30 feet high and was topped by ramparts 12 feet or higher; guard towers were distributed at intervals along it.

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