We took an overnight trip and backtracked toward Beijing to spend a day in yet another former capital of China: Nanjing. Through China's 5,000 year history, they claim to have had four ancient capital cities: Beijing, Xi'an, Nanjing and Luoyang. We are visiting three of the four. Nanjing was the capital for six dynasties including the Ming. We came to see Sun Yat-sen's (China's George Washington) mausoleum, the Ming tombs, the Memorial Hall for the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders (that really is the name) and to see where the Treaty of Nanking was signed that ended the First Opium War. The building at the head of the stairs contains a seated statue of Sun looking very much like the Lincoln Memorial
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Shanghai and Nanjing
View of Pudong from the Bund in Shanghai.
April 12, 2026
I've fallen behind because all Google products are not allowed in China. My VPN was not crafty enough to allow me to easily use them, and Karl's travel plans have kept us moving quickly. We took the train from Beijing to Shanghai.
View of the Bund on the Huangpu River in Shanghai.
The Bund is the famous waterfront promenade in Shanghai that is sometimes referred to as a museum of world architecture. The buildings are colonial-era banks, hotels and consulates with the famous Fairmont Peace Hotel and the Customs House. This area's heyday was between the 1860s and the 1930s. The buildings all have plaques on them describing who built them. I could have spent all my time wandering around looking at them.
Outside the Shanghai History Museum.
We saw two museums for Karl's course. The Shanghai History Museum was a new museum to us located in the former Shanghai Race Club building, another historical colonial relic. The bottom two floors contained bronzes and jades, which were not what we were there to see. The upper floors' museum collection tells the story of Shanghai's history through the utilitarian lens of the Communist Party. The students were tasked to find examples of "top-down" and "bottom-up" popular Chinese nationalism.
Painting at the entrance to the Memorial Hall to the First National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.
The first time we came to this location in 1992, there was just a historical marker on the wall of the building. When we came nine years ago, the government had created a museum of a few rooms with artifacts and pictures. We were surprised to see the Party has rebuilt it on an even grander scale. And there were lots of Chinese tourists educating themselves on the Party's glorious beginnings. This painting is interesting because it is a grouping of key communist historical sites. We have been to most of these buildings on this trip. The pagoda on the hill was the one we saw in Yan'an.
We climbed 382 steps to get to the top of the Sun Yat-sen mausoleum.
Grove of trees covering the burial mound of the Emperor Zhu Yuangzhang and his wife.
We also visited the Ming tombs in Nanjing which immortalize the founder of the Ming Dynasty and his Empress wife. There is another set of stairs to climb to see a large building, but we learned that he was buried with his wife on a hill behind the building that is covered with trees. After seeing the Taj Mahal and many grand memorials over these past few months, I liked the contrast to this simple yet equally beautiful burial mound.
This is not to say the Ming tombs are not ostentatious. This is the Stone Elephant road that leads to the mausoleum. It has 12 pairs of massive stone animal statues. The first pair is standing, the second pair is seated. They represent a procession leading the emperor from the material world to the afterlife. They represent the emperor's power and the vastness of his empire.
Like the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC or the Hiroshima Peace Museum in Japan, the Nanjing Massacre Museum is another museum with a tough topic to cover. The purpose of this museum is to document the truth, educate the public, honor the victims and promote peace. It has the feel of a patriotic education site. The displays are mostly pictures and descriptive narrative. The numbers stated of those harmed are not agreed upon by scholars. It is a sobering experience nonetheless.
This photo is in the museum educating the public on the end of the First Opium War. The treaty was signed in August of 1842 on board a British warship docked in the Yangtze River in Nanjing. This event seems like it should be old news! But the Party has memorialized it with a new museum declaring how China's century of humiliation was overcome by the Party.
We had some free time before we needed to catch our train back to Shanghai, so we went on our own to the Fuzimiao Temple. The temple grounds hold the Confucian Examination Hall, one of two sites where students could sit to take the Imperial Examination. They sat through nine days of examinations in order to qualify for elite government positions.
This picture shows a sock a student wrote notes on to take into the examination. Cheating on tests has been a problem for centuries!
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Shanghai and Nanjing
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