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#5 Best Neighborhood in Beijing

Qianmen

Beijing's restored imperial market street

About the neighborhood

Beijing has many neighborhoods, some of which are new and others with a long history.

Prominent neighborhoods

Qianmen 前门

Tian'anmen 天安门

Di'anmen 地安门

Chongwenmen 崇文门

Xuanwumen 宣武门

Fuchengmen 阜成门

Xizhimen 西直门

Deshengmen 德胜门

Andingmen 安定门

Sanlitun 三里屯

Dongzhimen 东直门

Chaoyangmen 朝阳门

Yongdingmen 永定门

Zuo'anmen 左安门

You'anmen 右安门

Guangqumen 广渠门

Guang'anmen 广安门

Huashi 花市

Xibianmen 西便门

Hepingmen 和平门

Fuxingmen 复兴门

Jianguomen 建国门

Gongzhufen 公主坟

Fangzhuang 方庄

Guomao 国贸

Hepingli 和平里

Ping'anli 平安里

Beixinqiao 北新桥

Jiaodaokou 交道口

Kuanjie 宽街

Wangjing 望京

Wangfujing 王府井

Dengshikou 灯市口

Wudaokou 五道口

Xidan 西单

Dongdan 东单

Zhongguancun 中关村

Panjiayuan 潘家园

Beijing CBD 北京商务中心区

Yayuncun 亚运村

Shifoying 石佛营

Ethnic enclaves

In the case of some enclaves the name starts with the name of the originating province and the name ends in cun (C: 村, P: cūn) or "Village". For instance, Anhuicun or "Anhui Village" houses people from that room, and Henancun or "Henan Village" has settlers from that region.

Several ethnic enclaves house rural migrant workers based on their origin, such as Henancun and Zhejiangcun (Zhejiang Village). Other ethnic enclaves consist of ethnic minorities who are established as permanent Beijing residents, including several Hui people settlements, such as Niujie and Madian,

Wenfei Wang, Shangyi Zhou, and Cindy Fan wrote that Hui people, despite being permanent Beijingers, are "highly segregated" from Han people "socially and spatially". They added that the survival of Hui neighborhoods in Beijing is "solely dependent on the existing Hui residents and communities" because the communities are "not as readily replenished by new migrants" and because Hui see themselves as Beijingers and their communities as having "more permanent meanings" compared to migrant worker communities.

Migrant worker enclaves

Residents of the migrant worker enclaves support each other in looking for jobs and dealing with the local government. Inhabitants consider themselves "compatriots" (S: 同乡, P: tóngxiāng), a word equivalent to the English "homies". In the rural migrant worker communities there is a high turnover as members arrive for work and leave to go back to their hometowns. Some residents work in family workshops and go to the city to sell their wares while others commute to work within the city. Most residents plan to eventually return to their home lands and do not consider themselves to be from Beijing. Even though the rural migrant workers are also Han Chinese they are considered to be of a lower status because they are not permanent residents and because they have rural upbringings and low socioeconomic statuses, so each community, in the words of Wenfei Wang, Shangyi Zhou, and Cindy Fan, "connotes a native place–based ethnicity distinct from the urbanites".

During periods the Beijing government has attempted to dismantle ethnic villages in the periphery of Beijing. In the 1990s the government made attempts to dismantle Zhejiangcun, including one time in 1995, and had also acted against Henancun (C: 河南村, P: Hénán-cūn) and Xinjiangcun.

While Uighurs, like the Hui, are Muslim, the Uighurs in Beijing had migrated there more recently than the Hui. Wenfei Wang, Shangyi Zhou, and C. Cindy Fan, authors of "Growth and Decline of Muslim Hui Enclaves in Beijing," stated that the Beijing Uighur communities are "much smaller in size" compared to Hui communities.

See also

Geography of Beijing

References

Deng, F. Frederick and Youqin Huang (Department of Geography and Planning, SUNY Albany). "Uneven land reform and urban sprawl in China: the case of Beijing" (Archive). Progress in Planning 61 (2004) 211–236. Accepted October 27, 2003.

Friedmann, John. China's Urban Transition. University of Minnesota Press, 2005. ISBN1452907412, 9781452907413.

Wang, Wenfei, Shangyi Zhou, and C. Cindy Fan. "Growth and Decline of Muslim Hui Enclaves in Beijing" (Archive). Eurasian Geography and Economics, 2002, 43, No. 2, pp.104–122.

Notes

Encyclopedic content adapted from the Wikipedia article on Qianmen, used under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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