| For most
visitors to Beijing, it's not a question of whether they will go and see the Great
Wall, but more which part of the wall they will visit. Starting from Shanhaiguan
in the east and ending at Jiayuguan in the west, the Great Wall has an approximate
length of 6700 kilometers. Badaling, 70 kilometers (40 miles) northwest of Beijing
is where most people go - there is a cable car, tourist shops selling everything
imaginable and plenty of fellow day-trippers. Beginning
in the Warring States period (475-221 BC), to prevent northern nomadic tribes
from invading their territory, Chinese rulers built the Great Wall, which is known
as the "10,000-li (5000 km) wall" in China and one of the seven ancient wonders
of the world. And subsequent dynasties continued the project. The Great Wall averages
7.8 meters in height and is 6.5 meters wide at the base and 5.8 meters wide at
the top. A watchtower was built every hundred meters. Beyond the city wall at
Badaling are scattered beacon towers, on which sidewalls were constructed. These
towers served as advance defensive posts to protect Badaling. Not far from Suoyao
Pass out of the North Gate is a brick-structured building known as Chadaocheng.
This used to be the advance command headquarters. Built during the reign of Emperor
Longqing of the Ming Dynasty (1571), it housed three generals and 788 soldiers,
as well as stockpiles of weapons. Mutianyu, 90
kilometers (56 miles) from Beijing is another option. There is also a cable car
and gift shops, but the crowds are a bit smaller. Made of choice material, Mutianyu
Great Wall was very solidly built. The wall is 7 to 8 meters high and the top
is 4 to 5 meters wide. The base of the wall is composed of thirteen layeas of
green granite. The structure of Mutianyu Pass is rare in the whole building of
the Great Wall. Simatai, 110 kilometers (68 miles)
from Beijing used to be the unspoiled option. It is a very steep, sweeping section
of the wall and therefore very dramatic. But even there, the cable car, tourist
shops and crowds have arrived. Those with a spirit
of adventure - and plenty of time - can hike from Simitai over to the Jinshanling
section. It is only 10 kilometers (6 miles), but because of the steep, broken
path it takes the best part of a half-day and is tricky in parts. |