Loading...
Sign In
Join *John's journals and journeys

You are not signed in yet! Join now and access more functionality.

Welcome

John is married to Mei from Anshan. We are living in North East China, Liaoning Province and Anshan City (about 4,000,000 people). We have warm summers up to 36 - 38c and cold winters, down to -20 - 25c. Autumn and spring are relatively short. but quite distinct seasons. People in Anshan are very kind and generous. Friends from far and wide are welcome to join and contribute to our site.

Get updates by email - enter yours below

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Share

johnandmei Bookmarklet

Drag the button to your Bookmarks Bar and just click on it to quickly share any links in johnandmei.

Newsfeed

Load More

Where we are

Our house or where we are

Video's on Vimeo

Photos on Joomeo - click a picture for full screen

Meebo Bar

Trip wow

This travel slideshow of John’s trip to 4 cities including Beijing, Shenyang and Anshan was created by TripAdvisor on Tuesday, April 27, 2010 at 4:21am UTC. John traveled 2,273 kilometers (1,412 miles) on this trip.

About Liaoning, the province we live in

History and Culture-History (in Liaoning) Source: Global Times [16:47 January 29 2010]Comments Despite the Liaodong Wall, the Ming Liaodong was conquered by the Manchus in the early 17th century, decades before the rest of China fell to them. The Manchu dynasty, styled "Later Jin", established its capital in 1616-1621 in Xingjing (兴京), which was located outside of the Liaodong Wall in the eastern part of the modern Liaoning Province (near today's Xilaocheng village in Xinbin Manchu Autonomous County (新宾满族自治县), part of Fushun. It was moved to Dongjing (east of today's Liaoyang, Liaoning), and finally in 1625 to Shengjing (now, Shenyang, Liaoning). Although the main Qing capital was moved from Shengjing to Beijing after it fell to the Qing in 1644, Shengjing retained its importance as a regional capital throughout most of the Qing era. The Qing conquest of Liaodong resulted in a significant population loss in the area, as many local Chinese residents were either killed during fighting, or fled south of the Great Wall, many cities being destroyed by the retreating Ming forces themselves. As late as 1661, the Civil Governor (Fuyin) of Fengtian Province, Zhang Shangxian reported that, outside of Fengtian City (Shenyang), Liaoyang, and Haicheng, all other cities east of the Liaohe were either abandoned, or hardly had a few hundred residents left. In the Governor's words, "Tieling and Fushun only have a few vagrants". West of the Liaohe, only Ningyuan, Jinzhou, and Guangning had any significant populations remaining. In the last half of the seventeenth century (starting with laws issued in 1651 and 1653 the imperial Qing government recruited migrants from south of the Great Wall (notably, from Shandong) to settle the relatively sparsely populated area of Fengtian Province (roughly corresponding to today's Liaoning). Many of the current residents of Liaoning trace their ancestry to these seventeenth century settlers. During the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) Manchuria (roughly today's Liaoning) was ruled by three generals, one of whom, the General of Shengjing, ruled much of modern Liaoning. In 1860, the Manchu government began to reopen the region to migration, which quickly resulted in Han becoming the dominant ethnic group in the region. In the twentieth century, the province of Fengtian was set up in what is Liaoning today. When Japan and Russia fought the Russo-Japanese War in 1904–1905, many key battles took place in Liaoning, including the Battle of Port Arthur and the Battle of Mukden, which was, to that point, the largest land battle ever fought. During the Warlord Era in the early twentieth century, Liaoning was under the Fengtian Clique, including Zhang Zuolin and his son Zhang Xueliang; in 1931, Japan invaded and the area came under the rule of the Japanese-controlled puppet state of Manchukuo. The Chinese Civil War that took place following Japanese defeat in 1945 had its first major battles (the Liaoshen Campaign) in and around Liaoning. At the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Liaoning did not exist; instead there were two provinces, Liaodong and Liaoxi, as well as five municipalities, Shenyang, Luda, Anshan, Fushun, and Benxi. These were all merged together into "Liaoning" in 1954, and parts of former Rehe province were merged into Liaoning in 1955. Liaoning was one of the first provinces in China to industrialize, first under Japanese occupation, and then even more in the 1950s and 1960s. The city of Anshan, for example, is home to one of the largest iron and steel complexes in China. In recent years this early focus on heavy industry has become a liability, as many of the large state-run enterprises have experienced economic difficulties. Recognizing the special difficulties faced by Liaoning and other provinces in Northeast China because of their heritage of heavy industry, the Chinese central government recently launched a "Revitalize the Northeast" Campaign. Wikipedia

Photo updates

Play some of my music

Meebo

Video's on Viddler - have a look

Talk to us

Talk to us on Skype

My status

Google buzz

Share it

ShareThis

Try it out, it is very good

Download Opera, the fastest and most secure browser
This group does not have an admin. Claim this network to become its administrator.

May 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031123

Download Open Office, free

Use OpenOffice.org