Wuhan

Wuhan ( (About this soundlisten); simplified Chinese: 武汉; traditional Chinese: 武漢) is the capital of Hubei province, People’s Republic of China.
It is the largest city in Hubei and the most populous city in Central China, with a population of over 11 million, the ninth most populous Chinese city, and one of the nine National Central Cities of China. As of early 2020, outside China, Wuhan is most widely recognized as the origin of outbreak of the worldwide pandemic of COVID-19, or coronavirus.
The name “Wuhan” came from the city’s historical origin from the conglomeration of Wuchang, Hankou and Hanyang, which are collectively known as the “Three Towns of Wuhan” (武汉三镇). It lies in the eastern Jianghan Plain, on the confluence of the Yangtze River and its largest tributary, the Han River, and is known as “Nine Provinces’ Thoroughfare” (九省通衢).
Historical events taking place in Wuhan include the Wuchang Uprising, which led to the downfall of the Qing dynasty and the establishment of the Republic of China. Wuhan was briefly the capital of China in 1927 under the left wing of the Kuomintang (KMT) government led by Wang Jingwei. The city later served as the wartime capital of China in 1937 for ten months during the Second Sino-Japanese War.
Wuhan today is considered the political, economic, financial, commercial, cultural and educational center of Central China. It is a major transportation hub, with dozens of railways, roads and expressways passing through the city and connecting to other major cities. Because of its key role in domestic transportation, Wuhan is sometimes referred to as “the Chicago of China” by foreign sources. The “Golden Waterway” of the Yangtze River and its largest tributary, the Han River, traverse the urban area and divides Wuhan into the three districts of Wuchang, Hankou and Hanyang. The Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge crosses the Yangtze in the city. The Three Gorges Dam, the world’s largest power station in terms of installed capacity, is located nearby. Historically, Wuhan has suffered risks of flooding, prompting the government to alleviate the situation by introducing ecologically friendly absorption mechanisms.
While Wuhan has been a traditional manufacturing hub for decades, it is also one of the areas promoting modern industrial changes in China. Wuhan consists of three national development zones, four scientific and technological development parks, over 350 research institutes, 1,656 high tech enterprises, numerous enterprise incubators, and investments from 230 Fortune Global 500 firms. It produced GDP of US$22.4 billion in 2018. The Dongfeng Motor Corporation, an automobile manufacturer, is headquartered in Wuhan. Wuhan is home to multiple notable institutes of higher education, including Wuhan University, which was ranked third nationwide in 2017, and the Huazhong University of Science and Technology.
In 2017, Wuhan was designated as a Creative City by UNESCO, in the field of design. Wuhan is classified as a Beta world city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network. The 2019 Military World Games were hosted in Wuhan.
The city has been under lockdown since January 2020 as a result of the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic.

Contents
1Etymology
2History
2.1Antiquity
2.2Imperial China
2.2.1Wuchang Uprising
2.3Republic of China
2.4People’s Republic of China
3Geography
3.1Cityscape
3.2Overview
3.3Climate
4Government and politics
4.1Administrative divisions
4.2Diplomatic missions
5Economy
5.1Industrial zones
6Demographics
6.1Religion
7Transportation
7.1Railways
7.2Wuhan Metro
7.3Trams
7.4Maritime transport
7.5Ferry
7.6Airports
7.7Highways and expressways
7.8Bicycle-sharing system
8Destinations
9Education
9.1Schools and universities
9.2Scientific research
10Media
11Culture
11.1Language
11.2Cuisine
11.3Opera
11.4Sports
12Architecture
12.1Bridges
12.2Skyscrapers
13Notable Wuhanese
13.1Politics
13.2Business
13.3Science
13.4Sports
13.5Arts
13.6Other fields
14Sister cities
15Nature and wildlife
16See also
17References
18Further reading
19External links

Etymology
The name “Wuhan” is a portmanteau of the two major cities on the northern and southern banks of the Yangtze River that make up the Wuhan metropolis: “Wu” refers to the city of Wuchang (Chinese: 武昌), which lies on the southern bank of the Yangtze, while “Han” refers to the city of Hankou (Chinese: 汉口), which lies on the northern bank of the Yangtze.
In 1926, the Northern Expedition reached the Wuhan area and it was decided to merge Hankou, Wuchang and Hanyang into one city in order to make a new capital for Nationalist China. On January 1, 1927, the resulting city was proclaimed as ‘武漢’ (the traditional Chinese characters for ‘Wuhan’), which was later simplified as ‘武汉’ (also ‘Wuhan’).

History
Main article: History of Wuhan
Antiquity
Panlongcheng, located in the southernmost area of the Erligang culture

The Wuhan area has been settled for 3,500 years. Panlongcheng, an archaeological site primarily associated with the Erligang culture (c. 1510 – c. 1460 BC) (being sparsely populated during the earlier Erlitou period), is located in modern-day Huangpi District.
During the Western Zhou the State of E, which gives its name to the single character abbreviation for Hubei province, controlled the present-day Wuchang area south of the Yangtze River. After the conquest of the E state in 863 BC, the present-day Wuhan area was controlled by the State of Chu for the rest of the Western Zhou and Eastern Zhou periods.
Imperial China
Wuhan bell tower.

During the Han dynasty, Hanyang became a fairly busy port. The Battle of Xiakou in AD 203 and Battle of Jiangxia five years later were fought over control of Jiangxia Commandery (present-day Xinzhou District in northeast Wuhan). In the winter of 208/9, one of the most famous battles in Chinese history and a central event in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms—the Battle of Red Cliffs—took place in the vicinity of the cliffs near Wuhan. Around that time, walls were built to protect Hanyang (AD 206) and Wuchang (AD 223). The latter event marks the foundation of Wuhan. In AD 223, the Yellow Crane Tower, one of the Four Great Towers of China, was constructed on the Wuchang side of the Yangtze River by order of Sun Quan, leader of the Eastern Wu. The tower become a sacred site of Taoism.
Due to tensions between the Eastern Wu and Cao Wei kingdoms, in the autumn of 228, Cao Rui, grandson of Cao Cao and the second emperor of the state of Cao Wei, ordered the general Man Chong to lead troops to Xiakou (夏口; in present-day Wuhan). In 279, Wang Jun and his army conquered strategic locations in Wu territory such as Xiling (in present-day Yichang, Hubei), Xiakou (夏口; present-day Hankou) and Wuchang (武昌; present-day Ezhou, Hubei).
In fall 550, Hou Jing sent Ren Yue to attack both Xiao Daxin and Xiao Fan’s son Xiao Si (蕭嗣). Ren killed Xiao Si in battle, and Xiao Daxin, unable to resist, surrendered, allowing Hou to take his domain under control. Meanwhile, Xiao Guan, who had by now settled at Jiangxia (江夏, in modern Wuhan), was planning to attack Hou, but this drew Xiao Yi’s ire—believing that Xiao Guan was intending to contend for the throne—and he sent Wang to attack Xiao Guan. In summer 567, Chen Xu commissioned Wu Mingche as the governor of Xiang Province and had him command a major part of the troops against Hua, along with Chunyu Liang (淳于量). The opposing sides met at Zhuankou (沌口, in modern Wuhan).
The city has long been renowned as a center for the arts (especially poetry) and for intellectual studies. Cui Hao, a celebrated poet of the Tang dynasty, visited the Yellow Crane Tower in the early 8th century; his poem made it the most celebrated building in southern China.
In spring 877, Wang Xianzhi captured E Prefecture (鄂州, in modern Wuhan). He then returned north, joining forces with Huang again, and they surrounded Song Wei at Song Prefecture (宋州, in modern Shangqiu, Henan). In winter 877, Huang Chao pillaged Qi and Huang (黃州, in modern Wuhan) Prefectures.
Before Kublai Khan arrived in 1259, word reached him that Möngke had died. Kublai decided to keep the death of his brother secret and continued the attack on the Wuhan area, near the Yangtze. The present-day Wuying Pagoda was constructed at the end of the Song Dynasty between attacks by the Mongolian forces. Under the Mongol rulers (Yuan dynasty) (after 1301), the Wuchang prefecture, headquartered in the town, became the capital of Hubei province. Hankou, from the Ming to late Qing, was under the administration of the local government in Hanyang, although it was already one of the four major national markets (zh:四大名镇) of the Ming dynasty.
Hanyang’s Guiyuan Temple was completed in the 15th year of Shunzhi (1658).
By the dawn of the 18th century, Hankou had become one of China’s top four most important towns of trade. In the late 19th century, railroads were extended on a north–south axis through the city, making Wuhan an important transshipment point between rail and river traffic. Also during this period foreign powers extracted mercantile concessions, with the riverfront of Hankou being divided up into foreign-controlled merchant districts. These districts contained trading firm offices, warehouses, and docking facilities. The French had a concession in Hankou. During the Taiping Rebellion, the Wuhan area was controlled for many years by rebel forces and the Yellow Crane Tower, Xingfu Temple, Zhuodaoquan Temple and other buildings were repurposed or damaged. During the Second Opium War (known in the West as the Arrow War, 1856–1860), the government of the Qing dynasty was defeated by the western powers and signed the Treaties of Tianjin and the Convention of Peking, which stipulated eleven cities or regions (including Hankou) as trading ports. In December 1858, James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, High Commissioner to China, led four warships up the Yangtze River in Wuhan to collect the information needed for opening the trading port in Wuhan.
In the spring of 1861, Counselor Harry Parkes and Admiral Herbert were sent to Wuhan to open a trading port. On the basis of the Convention of Peking, Harry Parkes concluded the Hankou Lend-Lease Treaty with Guan Wen, the governor-general of Hunan and Hubei. It brought an area of 30.53 square kilometers (11.79 sq mi) along the Yangtze River (from latter-day Jianghan Road to Hezuo Road) to become a British Concession and permitted Britain to set up its consulate in the concession.
Wuhan in 1864

Foreign concessions along the Hankow Bund c. 1900.

In 1889, Zhang Zhidong was transferred from Viceroy of Liangguang (Guangdong and Guangxi provinces) to Viceroy of Huguang (Hunan and Hubei provinces). He governed the province for 18 years, until 1907. During this period, he elucidated the theory of “Chinese learning as the basis, Western learning for application,” known as the ti-yong ideal. He set up many heavy industries, founded Hanyang Steel Plant, Daye Iron Mine, Pingxiang Coal Mine and Hubei Arsenal and set up local textile industries, boosting the flourishing modern industry in Wuhan. Meanwhile, he initiated education reform, opened dozens of modern educational organizations successively, such as Lianghu (Hunan and Hubei) Academy of Classical Learning, Civil General Institute, Military General Institute, Foreign Languages Institute and Lianghu (Hunan and Hubei) General Normal School, and selected a great many students for study overseas, which well promoted the development of China’s modern education. Furthermore, he trained a modern military and organized a modern army including a zhen and a xie (both zhen and xie are military units in the Qing dynasty) in Hubei.
Originally known as the Hubei Arsenal, the Hanyang Arsenal was founded in 1891 by Qing official Zhang Zhidong, who diverted funds from the Nanyang Fleet in Guangdong to build the arsenal. It cost about 250,000 pounds sterling and was built in 4 years. On 23 April 1894, construction was completed and the arsenal, occupying some 40 acres (160,000 m2), could start production of small-caliber cannons. It built magazine-fed rifles, Gruson quick fire guns, and cartridges.
Wuchang Uprising
Main article: Wuchang Uprising
Wuchang Uprising Memorial, the original site of revolutionary government in 1911

Present-day Wuhan area in 1915

By 1900, according to Collier’s magazine, Hankau, the Yangtze River boom town, was “the St. Louis and Chicago of China.” On October 10, 1911, Sun Yat-sen’s followers launched the Wuchang Uprising, which led to the collapse of the Qing dynasty, as well as the establishment of the Chinese Republic. Wuhan was the capital of the left-wing Kuomintang government led by Wang Jingwei, in opposition to Chiang Kai-shek’s right-wing government during the 1920s.
The Wuchang Uprising of October 1911, which overthrew the Qing dynasty, originated in Wuhan. Before the uprising, anti-Qing secret societies were active in Wuhan. In September 1911, the outbreak of the protests in Sichuan forced the Qing authorities to send part of the New Army garrisoned in Wuhan to suppress the rebellion. On September 14 the Literary Society (文學社) and the Progressive Association (共進會), two local revolutionary organizations in Hubei, set up joint headquarters in Wuchang and planned for an uprising. On the morning of October 9, a bomb at the office of the political arrangement exploded prematurely and alerted local authorities. The proclamation for the uprising, beadroll and the revolutionaries’ official seal fell into the hands of Rui Cheng, the governor-general of Hunan and Hubei, who demolished the uprising headquarters the same day and set out to arrest the revolutionaries listed in the beadroll. This forced the revolutionaries to launch the uprising earlier than planned.
On the night of October 10, the revolutionaries fired shots to signal the uprising at the engineering barracks of Hubei New Army. They then led the New Army of all barracks to join the revolution. Under the guidance of Wu Zhaolin, Cai Jimin and others, this revolutionary army seized the official residence of the governor and government offices. Rui Cheng fled in panic into the Chuyu ship. Zhang Biao, the commander of the Qing army, also fled the city. On the morning of the 11th, the revolutionary army took the whole city of Wuchang, but leaders such as Jiang Yiwu and Sun Wu disappeared. Thus the leaderless revolutionary army recommended Li Yuanhong, the assistant governor of the Qing army, as the commander-in-chief. Li founded the Hubei Military Government, proclaimed the abolition of the Qing rule in Hubei, the founding of the Republic of China and published an open telegram calling for other provinces to join the revolution.
As the revolution spread to other parts of the country, the Qing government concentrated loyalist military forces to suppress the uprising in Wuhan. From October 17 to December 1, the revolutionary army and local volunteers defended the city in the Battle of Yangxia against better armed and more numerous Qing forces commanded by Yuan Shikai. Huang Xing would arrive in Wuhan in early November to take command of the revolutionary army. After fierce fighting and heavy casualties, Qing forces seized Hankou and Hanyang. But Yuan agreed to halt the advance on Wuchang and participated in peace talks, which would eventually lead to the return of Sun Yat-sen from exile, founding of the Republic of China on January 1, 1912. Through the Wuchang Uprising, Wuhan is known as the birthplace of the Xinhai Revolution, named after the Xinhai year on the Chinese calendar. The city has several museums and memorials to the revolution and the thousands of martyrs who died defending the revolution.
Republic of China
A map of Wuhan painted by Japanese in 1930, with Hankou being the most prosperous sector

With the northern extension of the Northern Expedition, the center of the Great Revolution shifted from the Pearl River basin to the Yangtze River basin. On November 26, the KMT Central Political Committee decided to move the capital from Guangzhou to Wuhan. In middle December, most of the KMT central executive commissioners and national government commissioners arrived in Wuhan, set up the temporary joint conference of central executive commissioners and National Government commissioners, performed the top functions of central party headquarters and National Government, declared they would work in Wuhan on January 1, 1927, and decided to combine the towns of Wuchang, Hankou, and Hanyang into Wuhan City, called “Capital District”. The national government was in the Nanyang Building in Hankou, while the central party headquarters and other organizations chose their locations in Hankou or Wuchang.
In March 1927, Mao Zedong appeared at the Third Plenum of the KMT Central Executive Committee in Wuhan, which sought to strip General Chiang of his power by appointing Wang Jingwei leader. The first phase of the Northern Expedition was interrupted by the political split in the Kuomintang following the formation of the Nanjing faction in April 1927 against the existing faction in Wuhan. Members of the Chinese Communist Party, who had survived the April 12 massacre, met at Wuhan and reelected Chen Duxiu (Ch’en Tu-hsiu) as the Party’s Secretary General. The split was partially motivated by the purge of the Communists within the party, which marked the end of the First United Front, and Chiang Kai-shek briefly stepped down as the commander of the National Revolutionary Army.
In June 1927, Stalin sent a telegram to the Communists in Wuhan, calling for the mobilization of an army of workers and peasants. This alarmed Wang Jingwei, who decided to break with the Communists and come to terms with Chiang Kai-shek. The Wuhan coup was a political shift made on July 15, 1927 by Wang Jingwei towards Chiang Kai-shek, and his Shanghai-based rival in the Kuomintang (KMT). The Wuhan Nationalist Government was established in Wuhan on February 21, 1927 and ended by August 19, 1927. After the end of the Northern Expedition, Hankou was elevated to a centrally-controlled municipality.
In the 1931 China floods, one of the deadliest flood disasters in world history, Wuhan was a refuge for flood victims from outlying areas, who had been arriving since the late spring. But when the city itself was inundated in the early summer, and after a catastrophic dike failure just before 6:00 AM on July 27,:270 an estimated 782,189 urban citizens and rural refugees were left homeless. The flood covered an area of 32 square miles and the city was flooded under many feet of water for close to three months.:269–270 Large numbers gathered on flood islands throughout the city, with 30,000 sheltering on a railway embankment in central Hankou. With little food and a complete breakdown in sanitation, thousands soon began to succumb to diseases. Jin Shilong, Senior Engineer at the Hubei Flood Prevention Agency, described the flooding:

There was no warning, only a sudden great wall of water. Most of Wuhan’s buildings in those days were only one story high, and for many people there was no escape- they died by the tens of thousands. … I was just coming off duty at the company’s main office, a fairly new three-story building near the center of town … When I heard the terrible noise and saw the wall of water coming, I raced to the top story of the building. … I was in one of the tallest and strongest buildings left standing. At that time no one knew whether the water would subside or rise even higher.:270

The high-water mark was reached on 19 August at Hankou, with the water level exceeding 16 m (53 ft) above normal. In 1936, when natural disaster struck Central China with widespread flooding affecting Hebei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Wuhan and Chongqing caused by the Yangtze and Huai Rivers bursting their banks, Ong Seok Kim, as Chairman of the Sitiawan Fundraising and Disaster Relief Committee, raised money and materials in support of the victims.
The gunboat Zhongshan

During the Second Sino-Japanese War and following the fall of Nanking in December 1937, Wuhan had become the provisional capital of China’s Kuomintang government, and became another focal point of pitched air battles beginning in early 1938 between modern monoplane bomber and fighter aircraft of the Imperial Japanese forces and the Chinese Air Force, which included support from the Soviet Volunteer Group in both planes and personnel, as U.S. support in war materials waned. As the battle raged on through 1938, Wuhan and the surrounding region had become the site of the Battle of Wuhan. After being taken by the Japanese in late 1938, Wuhan became a major Japanese logistics center for operations in southern China.
Chiang Kai-Shek inspecting Chinese soldiers in Wuhan as Japanese forces approach the city

In early October 1938, Japanese troops moved east and north in the outskirts of Wuhan. As a result, numerous companies and enterprises and large numbers of people had to withdraw from Wuhan to the west of Hubei and Sichuan. The KMT navy undertook the responsibility of defending the Yangtze River on patrol and covering the withdrawal. On October 24, while overseeing the waters of the Yangtze River near the town of Jinkou (Jiangxia District in Wuhan) in Wuchang, the KMT gunboat Zhongshan came up against six Japanese aircraft. Though two were eventually shot down, the Zhongshan sank with 25 casualties. Raised from the bottom of the Yangtze River in 1997, and restored at a local shipyard, the Zhongshan has been moved to a purpose-built museum in Wuhan’s suburban Jiangxia District, which opened on September 26, 2011.
As a key center on the Yangtze, Wuhan was an important base for Japanese operations in China. On 18 December 1944, Wuhan was bombed by 77 American bombers that set off a firestorm that destroyed much of the city. For the next three days, Wuhan was bombed by the Americans, destroying all of the docks and warehouses of Wuhan, as well as the Japanese air bases in the city. The air raids killed thousands of Chinese civilians which American bombers did not know. “According to casualty statistics compiled by Hankou city in 1946, more than 20,000 were killed or injured in the December bombings of 1944.”
Wuhan returned to Chinese control in September 1945. Administratively, Wuchang and Hanyang were initially combined into a new City of Wuchang, but in October 1946 were separated into the City of Wuchang (including Wuchang only) and the County of Hanyang. Hankou became a centrally controlled municipality in August 1947. Militarily, the Wuhan Forward Headquarters was established in Wuhan, headed by Bai Chongxi.
People’s Liberation Army troops at Zhongshan Avenue, Hankou on May 16, 1949

During the later stages of the Chinese Civil War, Bai sought to broker peace, proposing that the Communist Party could rule northern China while the Nationalist government retained southern China. This was rejected, and on 15 May 1949 Bai and the Wuhan garrison retreated from the city. People’s Liberation Army troops entered Wuhan on the afternoon of Monday, May 16, 1949.
People’s Republic of China
In his poem “Swimming” (1956), engraved on the 1954 Flood Memorial in Wuhan, Mao Zedong envisions “walls of stone” to be erected upstream.

The Changjiang Water Resources Commission was reestablished in February 1950 with its headquarters in Wuhan. From June to September 1954, the Yangtze River Floods were a series of catastrophic floodings that occurred mostly in Hubei Province. Due to an unusually high volume of precipitation as well as an extraordinarily long rainy season in the middle stretch of the Yangtze River late in the spring of 1954, the river started to rise above its usual level in around late June. In 1969, a large stone monument was erected in the riverside park in Hankou honoring the heroic deeds in fighting the 1954 Yangtze River floods.
Before construction of the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, Hunslet Engine Company built two extra heavy 0-8-0 locomotives for loading the train ferries for crossing the Yangtze River in Wuhan.
The project of building the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, also known as the First Yangtze River Bridge, was regarded as one of the key projects during the first five-year plan. On October 25, 1955, construction began on the bridge proper. The same day in 1957, the whole project was completed and an opening-to-traffic ceremony was held on October 15. The First Yangtze River Bridge united the Beijing–Hankou Railway with the Guangdong–Hankou Railway into the Beijing–Guangzhou Railway, making Wuhan a ‘thoroughfare to nine provinces’ (九省通衢) in name and in fact.
After Chengdu Conference, Mao went to Chongqing and Wuhan in April to inspect the countryside and factories. In Wuhan, he called all the leaders of provinces and municipalities who had not attended Chengdu Conference to report their work. Tian Jiaying, the secretary of Mao, said that Wuhan Conference was a supplement to Chengdu Conference.
In July 1967, civil strife struck the city in the Wuhan Incident (“July 20th Incident”), an armed conflict between two hostile groups who were fighting for control over the city at the height of the Cultural Revolution.
In 1981, the Wuhan City Government commenced reconstruction of the Yellow Crane Tower at a new location, about 1 km (0.62 mi) from the original site, and it was completed in 1985. In 1957, the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge was built with one trestle of the bridge on the site of the tower, which had been last destroyed in 1884.
During the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, students in Wuhan blocked the Yangtze River Railway bridge and another 4,000 gathered at the railway station.:400 About one thousand students staged a railroad ‘sit-in’. Rail traffic on the Beijing-Guangzhou and Wuhan-Dalian lines was interrupted. The students also urged employees of major state-owned enterprises to go on strike.:405 The situation was so tense that residents reportedly began a bank run and resorted to panic-buying.:408
Huazhong University of Science and Technology

In the wake of the United States bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade on May 7, 1999, protests broke out throughout China, including in Wuhan.
On June 22, 2000, a Wuhan Airlines flight from Enshi to Wuhan was forced to circle for 30 minutes due to thunderstorms. The aircraft eventually crashed on the banks of Han River in Hanyang District, all on-board perished (there were varying accounts of number of crews and passengers). In addition, the crash also killed 7 people on the ground.
Chinese protesters organized boycotts of the French-owned retail chain Carrefour in major Chinese cities including Kunming, Hefei and Wuhan, accusing the French nation of pro-secessionist conspiracy and anti-Chinese racism. The BBC reported that hundreds of people demonstrated in Beijing, Wuhan, Hefei, Kunming and Qingdao. On May 19, 2011, Fang Binxing, the Principal of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications (also known as “Father of China’s Great Fire Wall”) was hit on the chest by a shoe thrown at him by a Huazhong University of Science and Technology student who calls herself “hanjunyi” (寒君依, or 小湖北) while Fang was giving a lecture at Wuhan University.
The city has been subject to devastating floods, which are now supposed to be controlled by the ambitious Three Gorges Dam, a project which was completed in 2008. The 2008 Chinese winter storms damaged water supply equipment in Wuhan: up to 100,000 people were out of running water when several water pipes burst, cutting the supply to local households. The 2010 Northern Hemisphere summer heat wave hit Wuhan on July 3. In the 2010 China floods, the Han River at Wuhan experienced its worst flooding in twenty years, as officials continued sandbagging efforts along the Han and Yangtze Rivers in the city and checked reservoirs. In the 2011 China floods, Wuhan was flooded, with parts of the city losing power. In the 2016 China floods, Wuhan saw 570 mm (22 in) of rainfall during the first week of July, surpassing the record that fell on the city in 1991. A red alert for heavy rainfall was issued on 2 July, the same day that eight people died after a 15-meter (49 ft) section of a 2 m (6.6 ft) tall wall collapsed on top of them. The city’s subway system, the Wuhan Metro was partially submerged as was the main railway station. At least 14 city residents were killed, one was missing, and more than 80,000 were relocated.
In early July 2019, there were protests against plans for a new incinerator in Xinzhou District.
The 2019 Military World Games were hosted in Wuhan in October.
In December 2019, the 2019–20 novel coronavirus outbreak first emerged in Wuhan, at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market. Wuhan has been under lockdown since late January 2020.

Geography
Cityscape
Panorama of Hankou (2017).
Northward view from Wuchang (2017).
Landmarks from left to right: Tortoise Mountain TV Tower (Hanyang), Wuhan Center (Hankou), Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, Wuhan Greenland Center and Yellow Crane Tower (Wuchang).
Overview
Map including the Wuhan area (AMS, 1953)

Wuhan is in east-central Hubei, at latitude 29° 58’–31° 22′ N and longitude 113° 41’–115° 05′ E. Wuhan sits at the confluence of the Han River flowing into the Yangtze River at the East of the Jianghan Plain along the Yangtze’s middle reaches.
The metropolitan area comprises three parts—Wuchang, Hankou, and Hanyang—commonly called the “Three Towns of Wuhan” (hence the name “Wuhan”, combining “Wu” from the first city and “Han” from the other two). The consolidation of these cities occurred in 1927 and Wuhan was thereby established. The three former cities face each other across the rivers and are linked by bridges, including one of the first modern bridges in China, known as the “First Bridge”.
Wuchang lies South East of the Yangtze River that separates it from both Hankou and Hanyang.
Hankou sits North of the Yangtze River separating it from Wuchang. Hankou is North of the Han River separating it from Hanyang.
Hanyang lies West of the Yangtze separating it from Wuchang. Hanyang is south of the Han river separating it from Hankou.
Hongshan District

It is simple in terrain — low and flat in the middle and hilly in the south, with the Yangtze and Han rivers winding through the city. The She River enters the Yangtze in Huangpi District. Wuhan occupies a land area of 8,494.41 square kilometers (3,279.71 sq mi), most of which is alluvial plain and decorated with hills and a great number of lakes and ponds. Water makes up one quarter of Wuhan’s urban territory, which is the highest percentage among major cities in China. Wuhan has nearly 200 lakes, including the East Lake of 33 km2, and Tangxun Lake, which are the largest lakes entirely within a city in China.
Other well-known lakes include South Lake and Sand Lake. Liangzi Lake, the largest lake by surface area in Hubei province, is located in the southeast of Jiangxia District. At 709 m (2,326 ft) above sea level, the highest point in Wuhan is the main peak of Yunwu Mountain (云雾山) in northwestern Huangpi District. There are also several mountains within the city limits of Wuhan including Mount Luojia (珞珈山) in Wuchang District as well as Mount Hong (洪山) and Mount Yujia (喻家山/瑜珈山) in Hongshan District.
Climate
Wuhan’s climate is humid subtropical (Köppen Cfa) with abundant rainfall in summer and four distinctive seasons. Wuhan is known for its humid summers, when dewpoints can often reach 26 °C (79 °F) or more. Historically, along with Chongqing and Nanjing, Wuhan is referred to as one of the “Three Furnacelike Cities” along the Yangtze River for their hot summers. However, the climate data of recent years suggests that Wuhan is no longer among the top tier of “The hottest cities in summer” list, the New Four Furnacelike Cities are Chongqing, Fuzhou, Hangzhou, and Nanchang. Spring and autumn are generally mild, while winter is cool with quite low rainfall and occasional snow. The monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from 4.0 °C (39.2 °F) in January to 29.1 °C (84.4 °F) in July. Annual precipitation totals 1,320 mm (52 in), the majority of which falls from April to July; the annual mean temperature is 17.13 °C (62.8 °F), the frost-free period lasts 211 to 272 days. With monthly possible sunshine percentage ranging from 31 percent in March to 59 percent in August, the city proper receives 1,865 hours of bright sunshine annually. Extreme low and high temperatures recorded are −18.1 °C (−1 °F) on 31 January 1977 and 39.7 °C (103 °F) on 27 July 2017 (unofficial record of 41.3 °C (106 °F) in 1934).
hideClimate data for Wuhan (1981–2010, extremes 1951–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 25.4 29.1 32.4 35.1 36.1 37.8 39.7 39.6 37.6 34.4 30.4 23.3 39.7
-77.7 -84.4 -90.3 -95.2 -97 -100 -103.5 -103.3 -99.7 -93.9 -86.7 -73.9 -103.5
Average high °C (°F) 8.1 10.7 15.2 22.1 27.1 30.2 32.9 32.5 28.5 23 16.8 10.8 21.5
-46.6 -51.3 -59.4 -71.8 -80.8 -86.4 -91.2 -90.5 -83.3 -73.4 -62.2 -51.4 -70.7
Daily mean °C (°F) 4 6.6 10.9 17.4 22.6 26.2 29.1 28.4 24.1 18.2 11.9 6.2 17.1
-39.2 -43.9 -51.6 -63.3 -72.7 -79.2 -84.4 -83.1 -75.4 -64.8 -53.4 -43.2 -62.9
Average low °C (°F) 1 3.5 7.4 13.6 18.9 22.9 26 25.3 20.7 14.7 8.4 2.9 13.8
-33.8 -38.3 -45.3 -56.5 -66 -73.2 -78.8 -77.5 -69.3 -58.5 -47.1 -37.2 -56.8
Record low °C (°F) −18.1 −14.8 −5.0 −0.3 7.2 13 17.3 16.4 10.1 1.3 −7.1 −10.1 −18.1
(−0.6) -5.4 -23 -31.5 -45 -55.4 -63.1 -61.5 -50.2 -34.3 -19.2 -13.8 (−0.6)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 48.7 65.5 91 135.7 166.8 218.2 228.1 117.5 74 80.9 60 29.6 1,316
-1.92 -2.58 -3.58 -5.34 -6.57 -8.59 -8.98 -4.63 -2.91 -3.19 -2.36 -1.17 -51.82
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 9.5 9.8 13.1 12.5 12.2 11.8 11.6 9.6 7.5 9 8 6.9 121.5
Average relative humidity (%) 76 75 76 75 74 77 77 77 75 76 75 73 76
Mean monthly sunshine hours 101.9 97 121.8 152.8 181 170.9 220.2 226.4 175.8 151.9 139.3 126.5 1,865.50
Percent possible sunshine 33 33 31 39 43 43 54 59 48 46 45 43 43
Source: China Meteorological Administration

Government and politics
The main gate of Wuhan Municipal Party Committee

Wuhan is a sub-provincial city. Municipal government is regulated by the local Communist Party of China (CPC), led by the Wuhan CPC Secretary (Chinese: 武汉市委书记), Wang Zhonglin (王忠林). The local CPC issues administrative orders, collects taxes, manages the economy, and directs a standing committee of the Municipal People’s Congress in making policy decisions and overseeing the local government.
Government officials include the mayor (市长), Zhou Xianwang (周先旺), and vice-mayors. Numerous bureaus focus on law, public security, and other affairs.
Administrative divisions
Main articles: List of administrative divisions of Hubei § Administrative divisions, and List of township-level divisions of Hubei § Wuhan
The sub-provincial city of Wuhan currently comprises 13 districts. As of the Sixth Census of China in 2010, the 13 districts comprised 160 township-level divisions including 156 subdistricts, 3 towns, 1 townships.
Map District Chinese (S) Pinyin Population Area (km2) Density
(2010 census) (/km2)
1
2 Central Districts 64,34,373 888.42 7,242
3 Jiang’an 江岸区 Jiāng’àn Qū 8,95,635 64.24 13,942
Hanyang Jianghan 江汉区 Jiānghàn Qū 6,83,492 33.43 20,445
Wuchang Qiaokou 硚口区 Qiáokǒu Qū 8,28,644 46.39 17,863
Qingshan Hanyang 汉阳区 Hànyáng Qū 7,92,183 108.34 7,312
Hongshan Wuchang 武昌区 Wǔchāng Qū 11,99,127 87.42 13,717
Dongxihu Qingshan 青山区 Qīngshān Qū 4,85,375 68.4 7,096
Hannan Hongshan 洪山区 Hóngshān Qū 15,49,917 480.2 3,228
Caidian Suburban and Rural Districts 33,46,271 7,605.99 440
Jiangxia Dongxihu 东西湖区 Dōngxīhú Qū 4,51,880 439.19 1,029
Huangpi Hannan 汉南区 Hànnán Qū 1,14,970 287.7 400
Xinzhou Caidian 蔡甸区 Càidiàn Qū 4,10,888 1,108.10 371
Hankou districts Jiangxia 江夏区 Jiāngxià Qū 6,44,835 2,010.00 321
1. Jiang’an Huangpi 黄陂区 Huángpí Qū 8,74,938 2,261.00 387
2. Jianghan Xinzhou 新洲区 Xīnzhōu Qū 8,48,760 1,500.00 566
3. Qiaokou Water Region (水上地区) 4,748 – –
Total 97,85,392 8,494.41 1,152

Diplomatic missions
Main article: List of diplomatic missions in China § Wuhan
There are four countries that have consulates in Wuhan:
Consulate year Consular District
 France Consulate General Wuhan October 10, 1998 Hubei/Hunan/Jiangxi
 United States Consulate General Wuhan November 20, 2008 Hubei/Hunan/Henan/Jiangxi
 Republic of Korea Consulate General Wuhan October 25, 2010 Hubei/Hunan/Henan/Jiangxi
 United Kingdom Consulate General Wuhan January 8, 2015 Hubei/Henan

The current U.S. Consul General, the Honorable Mr. Jamie Fouss, was posted to Wuhan in August 2017. The office of the U.S. Consulate General, Central China (located in Wuhan) celebrated its official opening on November 20, 2008 and is the first new American consulate in China in over 20 years. The consulate is currently scheduled to offer visa and citizen services in the Fall of 2018.
Japan and Russia will be establishing consular offices in Wuhan.

Economy
A night sight near a modern shopping mall in Hongshan District

Up until the 21st century, Wuhan was largely an agricultural region. Since 2004 it has been a focal point of the Rise of Central China Plan, which aims to build less-developed inland economies into hubs of advanced manufacturing.
Since 1890, the steel industry has been the backbone of Wuhan’s industry. In 2010, automobile industry exceeded GDP for Wuhan Iron and Steel Corporation (WISCO) steel for the first time. There are 5 car manufacturers, including Dongfeng Honda, Citroen, Shanghai GM, DFM Passenger Vehicle and Dongfeng Renault. Dongfeng-Citroen Automobile Co., Ltd is headquartered in the city.
As of 2016, Wuhan has attracted foreign investment from over 80 countries, with 5,973 foreign-invested enterprises established in the city with a total capital injection of $22.45 billion USD. Among these, about 50 French companies including Renault and PSA Group have operations in the city, representing over one third of French investment in China, and the highest level of French investment in any Chinese city.
Wuhan is an important center for economy, trade, finance, transportation, information technology, and education in China. Its major industries include optic-electronic, automobile manufacturing, iron and steel manufacturing, new pharmaceutical sector, biology engineering, new materials industry and environmental protection. Environmental sustainability is highlighted in Wuhan’s list of emerging industries, which include energy efficiency technology and renewable energy.
Wangjiadun CBD

Industrial zones
Major industrial zones in Wuhan include in chronological order:
Wuhan Economic and Technological Development Zone
Wuhan Economic and Technological Development Zone is a national level industrial zone incorporated in 1993. Its current zone size is about 10–25 square km and it plans to expand to 25–50 square km. Industries encouraged in Wuhan Economic and Technological Development Zone include Auto-mobile Production/Assembly, Biotechnology/Pharmaceuticals, Chemicals Production and Processing, Food/Beverage Processing, Heavy Industry, and Telecommunications Equipment.
Wuhan Export Processing Zone
Wuhan Export Processing Zone was established in 2000. It is located in Wuhan Economic and Technology Development Zone, planned to cover 2.7 square kilometers (1.0 square mile) of land. The first 0.7-square-kilometer (0.3-square-mile) area has already been created.
Wuhan Donghu New Technology Development Zone
Wuhan Donghu New Technology Development Zone is a national level high-tech development zone. Optical-electronics, telecommunications, and equipment manufacturing are the core industries of Wuhan East Lake High-Tech Development Zone (ELHTZ) while software outsourcing and electronics are also encouraged. ELHTZ is China’s largest production center for optoelectronic products with key players like Yangtze Optical Fiber and Cable, (the largest fiber-optical cable maker in China), and Fiberhome Telecommunications. Wuhan Donghu New Technology Development Zone also represents the development center for China’s laser industry with key players such as HG Tech and Chutian Laser being based in the zone.
Wuhan Optical Valley (Guanggu) Software Park
Wuhan Optical Valley (Guanggu) Software Park is located in Wuhan Donghu New Technology Development Zone. Wuhan Optics Valley Software Park is jointly developed by East Lake High-Tech Development Zone and Dalian Software Park Co., Ltd. The planned area is 0.67 square kilometers (0.26 square miles) with total floor area of 6,000,000 square meters (65,000,000 square feet). The zone is 8.5 km (5.28 mi) away from the 316 National Highway and is 46.7 km (29.02 mi) away from the Wuhan Tianhe Airport.
Wuhan Biolake
Biolake is an industrial base established in 2008 in the Optics Valley of China. Located in East Lake New Technology Development Zone of Wuhan, Biolake covers 15 km2 (5.8 sq mi), and has six parks including Bio-innovation Park, Bio-pharma Park, Bio-agriculture Park, Bio-manufacturing Park, Medical Device Park and Medical Health Park, to accommodate both research activities and living.

Demographics
Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1953 14,27,300 —    
1982 41,01,000 187.30%
1990 69,01,911 68.30%
2000 83,12,700 20.40%
2007 72,43,000 −12.9%
2010 97,85,388 35.10%
2014 1,03,38,000 5.60%
2015 1,06,07,700 2.60%
Population size may be affected by changes on administrative divisions. 1953, 1982, 1990, 2000  2007 2015

Wuhan is the most populous city in Central China and among the most populous in China. In the Sixth Census of China in 2010, Wuhan’s built-up area made of 8 out of 10 urban districts (all but Xinzhou and Hannan not yet conurbated) was home to 8,821,658 inhabitants. As of 2015, the city of Wuhan had an estimated population of 10,607,700 people.
The encompassing metropolitan area was estimated by the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) to have, as of 2010, a population of 19 million. As of November 2019 urban development status considering both spatial and socioeconomic processes has been examined using Night Time Lighting data and land cover data as proxies; it showed Wuhans high concentration of socioeconomic activities compared to its urban spatial development.
Religion
Religion in Wuhan (2017)
  Chinese religion or not religious (including Taoists (0.9%)) (79.2%)
  Buddhism (14.7%)
  Protestantism (2.9%)
  Islam (1.6%)
  Catholicism (0.3%)
  Other (1.6%)

According to a survey published in 2017, 79.2% of the population of Wuhan are either irreligious or practice worship of gods and ancestors; among these 0.9% are Taoists. Among other religious doctrines, 14.7% of the population adheres to Buddhism, 2.9% to Protestantism, 0.3% to Catholicism and 1.6% to Islam, and 1.6% of the population adheres to unspecified other religions.
Religious sites in Wuhan
Baotong Buddhist Temple

Gude Buddhist Temple

Thanksgiving Protestant Church

Holy Family Catholic Church

Transportation
Railways
The old Dazhimen railway Station (智門火車站), the original Hankou terminus of the Beijing-Hankou Railway. Constructed in 1900–1903, it was closed in 1991 after the opening of the present Hankou Railway Station.

China Railway Wuhan Group manages the Wuhan Railway Hub. Wuhan Railway Hub is considered one of the four key railway hubs of China. The city of Wuhan is served by three major railway stations: the Hankou Railway Station in Hankou, the Wuchang Railway Station in Wuchang, and the Wuhan Railway Station, located in a newly developed area east of the East Lake (Hongshan District). As the stations are many miles apart, it is important for passengers to be aware of the particular station(s) used by a particular train.
The (original) Hankou Station was the terminus for the Jinghan Railway from Beijing, while the Wuchang Station was the terminus for the Yuehan Railway to Guangzhou. Since the construction of the First Yangtze Bridge and the linking of the two lines into the Jingguang Railway, both Hankou and Wuchang stations have been served by trains going to all directions, which contrasts with the situation in such cities as New York or Moscow, where different stations serve different directions.
With the opening of the Hefei-Wuhan high-speed railway on April 1, 2009, Wuhan became served by high-speed trains with Hefei, Nanjing, and Shanghai; several trains a day now connect the city with Shanghai, getting there in under 6 hours. As of early 2010, most of these express trains leave from the Hankou Railway Station.
Wuhan Railway Station, completed in 2009

In 2006, construction began on the new Wuhan Railway Station with 11 platforms, located on the northeastern outskirts of the city. In December 2009, the station was opened, as China unveiled its second high-speed train with scheduled runs from Guangzhou to Wuhan. Billed as the fastest train in the world, it can reach a speed of 394 km/h (244.82 mph). The travel time between the two cities has been reduced from ten and a half hours to just three. The rail service has been extended north to Beijing.
As of 2011, the new Wuhan Railway Station is primarily used by the Wuhan-Guangzhou high-speed trains, while most regular trains to other destinations continue to use the Hankou and Wuchang stations.
Construction work is carried out on several lines of the new Wuhan Metropolitan Area Intercity Railway, which will eventually connect Wuhan’s three main rail terminals with several stations throughout the city’s outer areas and farther suburbs, as well as with the nearby cities of Xianning, Huangshi, Huanggang, and Xiaogan. The first line of the system, the one to Xianning, opened for passenger operations at the end of 2013. The line to Xiaogen opened on 1 December 2016 and it was extended with the opening of the Wuhan–Shiyan high-speed railway to Shiyan on 29 November 2019.
The main freight railway station and classification yard of the Wuhan metropolitan area is the extensive Wuhan North railway station, with 112 tracks and over 650 switches. It is located in Hengdian Subdistrict  of Huangpi District, located 20 km (12 mi) north of the Wuhan Station and 23 km (14 mi) from Hankou Station.
Wuhan Metro
Wuhan Metro system map

Main article: Wuhan Metro
When Wuhan Metro opened in September 2010, Wuhan became the fifth Chinese city with a metro system (after Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Guangzhou). The first 10.2 kilometers (6.3 mi)-long line (10 stations) is an elevated rail (and therefore called ‘light rail’ in Chinese terminology). It runs from Huangpu Road Station to Zongguan Station in the downtown area of the Hankou District, and it is the first one in the country to use a communication-based train control system (a Moving Block signaling system, provided by Alcatel). The designed minimum interval is only 90 seconds between two trains and it features driverless operation. Phase 2 of this line will extend the length to 28.8 km (17.90 mi) with 26 stations in total. It plans to start revenue service on July 28, 2010.
Metro Line 2 opened on December 28, 2012, extending total system length to 56.85 km (35.32 mi). This is the first Metro line crossing the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang).
Line 4 opened on December 28, 2013, connecting Wuhan Railway Station and Wuchang Railway Station. Since that date, all three main railway stations of the city are connected by the metro lines. In December 2016, the extension of Metro’s Line 2 extending to Wuhan Tianhe Airport opened as well.
By the end of 2018, Wuhan Metro includes Line 1, Line 2, Line 3, Line 4, Line 6, Line 7, Line 8, Line 11 and Yangluo Line/Line 21.
Trams
A tram in University Science Park Station

Main article: Trams in Wuhan
Trams were brought to the streets of Wuhan on July 28, 2017 with the first line (Auto-city T1 Line) opened that day. The trams under construction or planning in Wuhan are:
Auto-city trams, with Lines T1, T2, T6, and T8 in the Wuhan Economic Development Area, in the far western reaches on Hanyang. T1 Line is operational as of 2017.
Optics Valley trams, two lines (T1 and T2) south and east of Guanggu Circle (Guanggu Guangchang) in southeastern Wuchang. The system opened on January 18, 2018.
The Old Hankou Streetcar, a loop line around Hankou city.
Maritime transport
Wuhan is a major hub for maritime transport in central China. The Port of Wuhan provide services for the local population and shipping services.
Ferry
As a city located at bank of Yangtze River, Wuhan has long history of ferry services. Modern ferry services were established in 1900 by steam boat. In 1937, a train ferry was established to transport train cars from Hankou to Wuchang. There are numbered stops around Wuhan where people can get on and off the ferry and there is a tourist ferry in the night.
Currently, ferry services are provided by the Wuhan Ferry Company. In 2010, the company bought 10 new ships to replace the ones that had been in service for 29 years.
Airports
Main article: Wuhan Tianhe International Airport
Opened in April 1995 to substitute for the old Hankou Wangjiadun Airport and Nanhu Airport as the major airport of Wuhan, Wuhan Tianhe International Airport is one of the busiest airports in central China. It is located in Wuhan’s suburban Huangpi District 26 kilometers (16 mi) north of Wuhan city proper. The extension of Line 2 of Wuhan Metro to Tianhe Airport opened on 28 December 2016. It has also been selected as China’s fourth international hub airport after Beijing Capital International Airport, Shanghai-Pudong and Guangzhou Baiyun. A second terminal was completed in March 2008, having been started in February 2005 with an investment of CNY 3.372 billion. International flights to neighboring Asian countries have also been enhanced, including direct flights to Tokyo and Nagoya, Japan. Terminal 3 has been available for service since early 2017.
Hannan Municipal Airport is an municipal airport that serves Hannan District. It is the biggest airport in China that only handles general aviation, and the biggest municipal airport in Hubei Province. Caidian Municipal Airport is an under-construction airport which will serve Caidian District. The airport began construction on 1 December 2017.
Highways and expressways
Numerous major highways and expressways pass through Wuhan, including:
China National Highway 107
China National Highway 316
China National Highway 318
G42 Shanghai–Chengdu Expressway
G0422 Wuhan–Shenzhen Expressway
Bicycle-sharing system
As of May 2011, the Wuhan and Hangzhou Public Bicycle bike-share systems in China were the largest in the world, with around 90,000 and 60,000 bicycles respectively. In 2012 the Wuhan and Hangzhou Public Bicycle programs in China are the largest in the world, with around 90,000 and 60,000 bicycles respectively. China has seen a rise in private “dockless” bike shares with fleets that dwarf systems in size outside China. Initially, a number of traditional (third generation) docked public bike systems operated by local municipal governments opened across China, with the largest ones being in Wuhan and Hangzhou. The first was introduced in Beijing in 2007. However, third generation bike sharing is not considered successful for the majority cities in China. Bike sharing in Beijing virtually stopped and it also has encountered difficulties in Shanghai and Wuhan.

Destinations
Replica instruments of ancient originals are played at the Hubei Provincial Museum.
A replica set of bronze concert bells is in the background and a set of stone chimes is to the right.
Happy Valley Wuhan amusement park

The Yellow Crane Tower (Huanghelou) is presumed to have been first built in approximately 220 AD. The tower has been destroyed and reconstructed numerous times, and was burned last according to some sources in 1884. The tower underwent complete reconstruction in 1981. The reconstruction utilized modern materials and added an elevator while maintaining the traditional design in the tower’s outward appearance.
Wuchang has the largest and second largest lakes within a city in China, the East Lake and Tangxun Lake, as well as the South Lake. East Lake in Wuhan is six times the size of the West Lake in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. The total area is more than 80 km2 (31 sq mi) of which the lake is covering an area of 33 km2 (13 sq mi). In the springtime, the shores of East Lake become a garden of flowers with the Mei blossoms as the king and the Cherry Blossom as the queen among the species at East Lake Cherry Blossom Park. Another famous flower is the lotus. The lake has a long history and especially the Chu Kingdom is well represented around East Lake. Moreover, in the Moshan Botanic Garden there are many types of plum blossoms, as well as lotus flowers.
Bianzhong of Marquis Yi of Zeng, made in 433 B.C., now on display at the Hubei Provincial Museum in Wuhan

The Hubei Provincial Museum: With over 200,000 valued artifacts, this is one of the leading museums in China. Especially the artefacts from the tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng (Zeng Hou Yi), who lived in the 5th century B.C., is a world unique treasure. The bell chime of Marquis Yi of Zeng is a bronze instrument performed 2430 years ago in ancient China (Warring States Period), and was discovered in the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng in Suizhou, Hubei in 1978. The whole chime weighs 5 tons, can perfectly play sound which was heard 2430 years ago, and was considered “The Eighth Wonder of the World”.
The Wuhan Museum has a collection of more than 100,000 artifacts, including ceramic, bronze ware, paintings and calligraphy, jade, wood carving, enamel ware, seals and so on. As a modern comprehensive museum, Wuhan Museum has the function in cultural relic collection, academic reach, publicity and education, cultural exchange, and recreation and entertainment.
Happy Valley Wuhan is a theme park in Hongshan District. Opened on 29 April 2012, it is the fifth installation of the Happy Valley theme park chain.
The Rock and Bonsai Museum includes a mounted platybelodon skeleton, many unique stones, a quartz crystal the size of an automobile, and an outdoor garden with miniature trees in the penjing (“Chinese Bonsai”) style.
Jiqing Street (吉庆街) holds many roadside restaurants and street performers during the evening and is the site of a Live Show with stories of events on this street by contemporary writer Chi Li.
The Lute Platform in Hanyang was where the legendary musician Yu Boya is said to have played. This is the birthplace of the renowned legend of seeking a soul mate through “high mountains and flowing water”. According to the story behind the Chinese word ‘知音’ (zhīyīn; ‘understanding music’), Yu Boya played for the last time over the grave of his friend Zhong Ziqi, then smashed his lute because the only person able to appreciate his music was dead.
Mao’s Villa (毛澤東別墅), Mao Zedong’s villa between 1960 and 1974; includes garden, living quarters, conference room, bomb shelter and swimming pool.
Some luxury riverboat tours begin here after a flight from Beijing or Shanghai, with several days of flatland cruising and then climbing through the Three Gorges with passage upstream past the Gezhouba and Three Gorges dams to the city of Chongqing. With the completion of the dam, a number of cruises now start from the upstream side and continue west, with tourists traveling by motorcoach from Wuhan.
Wuying Pagoda or the “Shadowless Pagoda” is the oldest standing architectural feature in Wuhan, dating from the closing days of the Southern Song Dynasty.
Chu River and Han Street, a shopping district located in Wuchang with many tourist attractions, including Han Show theater, Madame Tussauds wax museum, and Movie Culture Park, etc. This project was initiated as a water connecting channel between East Lake and Shahu Lake.
Wuhan Zoo in Hanyang
Wuhan, capital city of the Hubei Province, is a shopping and culinary tourist destination for both Chinese nationals and overseas visitors.

Education
Schools and universities
Aerial view of the library in Huazhong University of Science and Technology, which has a 72% campus green rate

Wuhan National Laboratories for Opto-electronics (WNLO), Huazhong University of Science and Technology

The old library (center), dorm (below), and schools of literature and law (left and right) of Wuhan University

See also: List of universities and colleges in Hubei
There are 35 higher educational institutions in Wuhan, making it a leading educational hub for China. Prominent institutions include Huazhong University of Science and Technology and Wuhan University. Three state-level development zones and many enterprise incubators are also significant in Wuhan’s education and business development. Wuhan ranks third in China in overall strength of science and technology.
As of the end of 2013, in Wuhan there were 1,024 kindergartens with 224,300 children, 590 primary schools with 424,000 students, 369 general high schools with 314,000 students, 105 secondary vocational and technical schools with 98,600 students, and 80 colleges and universities with 966,400 undergraduates and junior college students and 107,400 postgraduate students. There are several international schools in Wuhan.
Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST), located in the Optics Valley of China near East Lake, is a Project 985 and Class A Double First Class University. HUST manages Wuhan National Laboratories for Opto-electronics (WNLO), which is one of the five national laboratories in China. HUST is also one of four Chinese universities eligible to run the national laboratory and the national major science and technology infrastructure. Founded in 1953 as Huazhong Institute of Technology, it combined with three other universities (including former Tongji Medical University founded in 1907) in 2000 to form the new HUST, and has 42 schools and departments covering 12 comprehensive disciplines. HUST has 12 Fellows of Chinese Academy of Sciences and 17 Fellows of Chinese Academy of Engineering. U.S. News’ 2019 U.S. News & World Report ranked HUST as 260th in the world, and 9th in China. More than 2,000 international students from 120 countries pursue degrees at HUST.
Wuhan University is another Project 985 university; the original Wuhan University combined with three other universities in 2000 to form a single university with 36 schools in 6 faculties. Since the 1950s it has received international students from more than 109 countries.
Scientific research
The Institute for Advanced Studies at Wuhan University

Wuhan contains three national development zones and four scientific and technological development parks, as well as numerous enterprise incubators, over 350 research institutes, 1470 high-tech enterprises, and over 400,000 experts and technicians.
Founded in 1958, the Wuhan Branch of Chinese Academy of Sciences is one of the twelve national branches of CAS. It is composed of 9 independent organizations, including the headquarters at Xiaohongshan, Wuchang. It has had a staff of 3,900, among which 8 are CAS fellows, and one is a Chinese Academy of Engineering fellow. As of 2013, the achievements gained by WHB had won 23 National Awards and 778 Provincial Awards. Wuhan Research Institute of Post and Telecommunications (now known as FiberHome Technologies Group) is the national center for optical communication research in China, and is where the first optical fiber in the country was produced.
Wuhan University of Technology is another major national university in the area. Founded in the year 2000, it was merged from three major universities, Wuhan University of Technology (established in 1948), Wuhan Transportation University (established in 1946) and Wuhan Automotive Polytechnic University (established in 1958). Wuhan University of Technology is one of the leading Chinese universities accredited by the Ministry of Education and one of the universities constructed with priority by “State Project 211” for Chinese higher education institutions. The University has three main campuses located in the Wuchang District.

Media
Tortoise Mountain TV Tower

The headquarters of Hubei Television is located in Wuchang District. Tortoise Mountain TV Tower is China’s first self-developed TV tower, opened in 1986. The modern newspapers in Wuhan can be dated back to 1866, when Hankow Times, a newspaper in English, was founded. Before 1949, more than 50 newspapers and magazines were published by foreigners in Wuhan. Chao-wen Hsin-pao, founded by Ai Xiaomei in 1873, was the first Chinese newspaper to appear in Hankou (one of the cities that was merged into Wuhan). During the Northern Expedition era (1926–1928), journalism in Wuhan came to a climax; more than 120 newspapers and periodicals, including national newspapers such as Central Daily News and Republican Daily News, were founded or published during this time. Chutian Metropolis Daily and Wuhan Evening News are two major local commercial tabloid newspapers. Both of them have entered the list of 100 most widely circulated newspapers of the world.

Culture
The plum blossom is the city’s emblem, chosen partly because of the long history of local plum cultivation and use, and partly to recognize the plum’s current economic significance in terms of cultivation and research. Local wild plums were used medicinally during the Qin and Han dynasties. Cultivation of the fruit began during the Song dynasty. Some traditional new year customs revolve around the planting of plums.
Language
Main article: Wuhan dialect
Wuhan natives speak a variety of Southwestern Mandarin Chinese referred to as Wuhan dialect which differs slightly between the districts of Wuhan, including Wuchang dialect in Wuchang District, Hankou dialect in the Hankou districts, Hanyang dialect in Hanyang District, and Qingshan dialect in Qingshan District.
Cuisine
Fried hongshan caitai (洪山菜薹)

Main article: Hubei cuisine
Hubei cuisine is one of China’s ten major styles of cooking. With a history of more than 2,000 years, Hubei cuisine, originating in ancient Chu cuisine, has developed a number of distinctive dishes, such as steamed blunt-snout bream in clear soup, preserved ham with flowering Chinese cabbage, and others. On the third day of the third month of the lunar calendar, many in Wuhan eat dìcài zhǔ jīdàn (地菜煮鸡蛋), an egg dish which is supposed to prevent illness in the coming year.
“No need to be particular about the recipes; all foods have their own uses. Rice wine and tangyuan are excellent midnight snacks, while fat bream and flowering Chinese cabbages are great delicacies.” This attitude expressed in Hankou Zhuzhici reflects indirectly the eating habits and a wide variety of distinctive snacks with a long history in Wuhan, such as Qingshuizong (a pyramid-shaped dumpling made of glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo or reed leaves) in the Period of the Warring States, Chunbinbian in Northern and Southern dynasties, mung bean jelly in the Sui dynasty, youguo (a deep-fried twisted dough stick) in the Song and Yuan dynasties, rice wine and mianwo in the Ming and Qing dynasties, as well as three-delicacy stuffed skin of bean milk, tangbao (steamed dumpling filled with minced meat and gravy) and hot braised noodles (reganmian) in modern times.
Guozao (過早) is a popular way to say ‘having breakfast’ in Wuhan, and a part of the city’s culture. As a hub for land transport in China, Wuhan has gathered and mixed together various habits and customs from neighboring cities and provinces in all directions, which gives rise to a concentration of diverse cuisines from different places. The most famous place to guozao (have breakfast) is Hubu Street (戶部巷), a 150-meter-long street in the neighborhood of Simenkou (司门口). Along its short length one can find nearly all the traditional foods of Wuhan, such as:
Doupi on the left and Re-gan mian on the right

Hot and dry noodles, re-gan mian (热干面), consists of long freshly boiled noodles mixed with sesame paste. It is considered to be the most typical local food for breakfast.
Duck’s neck or Ya Bozi (鸭脖子) is a local version of this popular Chinese dish, made of duck necks and spices.
Bean skin or doupi (豆皮) is a local dish with a filling of egg, rice, beef, mushrooms and beans cooked between two large round soybean skins and cut into pieces, structurally like a stuffed pizza without enclosing edges.
Soup dumpling or xiaolongtangbao (小笼汤包) is a kind of dumpling with thin skin made of flour, steamed with very juicy meat inside, hence the name: tang (soup) bao (bun) – every time one takes a bite from it the “soup” inside is liable to spill out.
A salty doughnut or mianwo (麪窩) is a kind of savory donut with a salty taste. It is much thinner than a common donut and is a typical Wuhan local food.
Opera
Han opera, which is the local opera of Wuhan area, was one of China’s oldest and most popular operas. During the late Qing dynasty, Han opera, blended with Hui opera, gave birth to Peking opera, the most popular opera in modern China. Thus Han opera has been called the “mother of Peking opera.”
Sports
Wuhan has a professional football team, Wuhan Zall F.C., that plays in the Chinese Super League. Xinhua Road Sport Center, the team’s home stadium, with a capacity of 32,137, is located in the heart of the city next to Zhongshan Park. For the 2013 season, Wuhan Zall was promoted to the top tier league of Chinese football, Chinese Super League, and relocated its home to Wuhan Sports Center Stadium, a modern stadium with 54,357 seats located in the suburbs of the city. However, the team did not play well in the ensuing season and was demoted back to China League One as the 2013 season ended. For financial and transportation reasons, the team moved back to Xinhua Road Sport Center in 2014.
The Wuhan Gators are a professional arena football team based in Wuhan. They are members of the China Arena Football League (CAFL).
The 13,000-seat Wuhan Gymnasium held the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship and was one of the venues for the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup. The 7th Military World Games were hosted in Wuhan from Oct. 18 to 27, 2019.
The city has been the venue for the women’s tennis tournament, the Wuhan Open, one of the WTA’s Premier 5 tournaments, since 2014.

Architecture
Bridges
The First Bridge at Wuhan. This view is upstream, toward the distant Three Gorges and Chongqing.

Wuhan has eleven bridges and one tunnel across the Yangtze River. The Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, also called the First Bridge, was built over the Yangtze in 1957, carrying a railroad directly across the river between hills known as Snake Hill and Turtle Hill. Before this bridge was built it could take up to an entire day to barge railcars across. Including its approaches, it is 5,511 feet (1,680 m) long, and it accommodates both a double-track railway on a lower deck and a four-lane roadway above. It was built with the assistance of advisers from the Soviet Union.
The Second Bridge, a cable-stayed bridge built of prestressed concrete, has a central span of 400 meters (1,300 feet); it is 4,678 meters (15,348 feet) in length (including 1,877 meters (6,158 feet) of the main bridge) and 26.5 to 33.5 meters (86.9 to 109.9 feet) in width. Its main bridgeheads are 90 meters (300 feet) high each, pulling 392 thick slanting cables together in the shape of double fans so that the central span of the bridge is well poised on the piers and the bridge’s stability and vibration resistance are ensured. With six lanes on the deck, the bridge is designed to handle the daily passage of 50,000 motor vehicles. The bridge was completed in 1995.
Second bridge

The Third Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, also called Baishazhou Bridge, was completed in September 2000. Located 8.6 kilometers (5.3 miles) southwest of the First Bridge, construction of Baishazhou Bridge started in 1997. With an investment of over 1.4 billion yuan (about US$170,000,000), the bridge, which is 3,586 meters (11,765 feet) long and 26.5 meters (86.9 feet) wide, has six lanes and has a capacity of 50,000 vehicles a day. The bridge is expected to serve as a major passage for the future Wuhan Ring Road, greatly easing the city’s traffic and aiding local economic development.
The Yangluo Bridge carries Wuhan’s Ring Road across the Yangtze in the city’s eastern suburbs (connecting the Hongshan District with the Xinzhou District). It was opened on December 26, 2007.
The Wuhan Tianxingzhou Yangtze River Bridge crosses the Yangtze in the northeastern part of the city, downstream of the Second bridge. It is named after Tianxing Island (Tianxingzhou), above which it crosses the river. Built at a cost of 11 billion yuan, the 4,657-meter cable suspension bridge was opened on December 26, 2009, in time for the opening of the Wuhan Railway Station. It is a combined road and rail bridge, and carries the Wuhan–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway across the river.
Skyscrapers
Wuhan Center, tallest building in Wuhan since 2014

See also: List of tallest buildings in Wuhan
The Yellow Crane Tower, historically one of the tallest buildings in Wuhan, is considered one of the Four Great Towers of China and was destroyed twelve times, both by warfare and by fire. The tower is classified as an AAAAA scenic area by the China National Tourism Administration. At 438 meters (1,437 ft) in height, the Wuhan Center skyscraper, the tallest structure in Wuhan and in Central China, is the eighth tallest structure in China. The Minsheng Bank Building, the second tallest structure in Wuhan, was the tallest building in Wuhan when it was completed in 2007. It retained the title until Wuhan Center surpassed it in 2014. Wuhan World Trade Tower is a 273-meter (896 foot) tall skyscraper located in Wuhan. It became the tallest building in Wuhan after its completion in 1998. However, it was surpassed by the Minsheng Bank Building in 2007.
The Wuhan Greenland Center is a planned 636-meter (2,087 ft), 126-floor mixed-use skyscraper currently under construction and scheduled for completion in 2019. If completed as planned, it will be among the world’s tallest structures, and one of the world’s tallest buildings by occupiable floor height. The Phoenix Towers are proposed supertall skyscrapers planned for construction in Wuhan. At 1 kilometer (3,300 ft) high, the towers would also be among the tallest structures in the world when completed.

Notable Wuhanese
Li Na, a professional tennis player, serving at Wimbledon 2008, 1st round against Anastasia Rodionova

President Li Yuanhong

Politics
Li Yuanhong – former President of the Republic of China (1916–17, 1922–23).
Wu Yi – former Vice-Premier and Minister of Health of the People’s Republic of China
Business
Wei Brian – Chinese entrepreneur
Science
Chang-Lin Tien – seventh Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley (1990–1997) and a major founder of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering (NAE). Professor Tien is the first Asian to head a top university in the United States.
E Dongchen – “father of polar surveying and mapping” in China
Weiping Zou – Charles B. de Nancrede Professor of Pathology, Immunology, Biology, and Surgery at the University of Michigan, American Association for Cancer Research Cancer Immunology (CIMM) Chairperson 2018–2019, Abstract Programming Chair for the American Association of Immunologists
Sports
Deng Zhuoxiang – professional football player, scored many impressive goals for Chinese national team in important games including 3:0 South Korea and 1:0 France in 2010.
Fu Mingxia – female diver, four-time Olympic Gold Medalist (one in Barcelona 1992, two in Atlanta 1996, one in Sydney 2000), the only diver that has won gold medals at three Olympics as well as one of the very few divers in the world who is able to win world championships in both platform diving and springboard diving.
Gao Ling – professional badminton player, two-time Olympic gold medalist (Sydney 2000, Athens 2004).
Hao Junmin – professional football player, played for Schalke 04 in the German League.
Hu Jia – Chinese diver who won the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in the men’s 10 meter platform.
Mei Fang – Chinese footballer who currently plays for Guangzhou Evergrande in the Chinese Super League.
Li Na – female tennis player, champion of the French Open 2011 and Australian Open 2014.
Li Ting – female tennis player, Olympic gold medalist (in women’s doubles, Athens 2004).
Qiao Hong – female table tennis player, two-time Olympic gold medalist (in women’s doubles, Barcelona 1992, Atlanta 1996).
Rong Hao – professional football player, with six Chinese Super League titles and two AFC Champions League champion titles.
Tang Jieli – AIBA Women’s Boxing World Champion.
Xiao Hailiang – Chinese diver, Olympic gold medalist (in 3-meter (9.8-foot) springboard synchronized diving, Sydney 2000).
Zeng Cheng – professional football player, with six Chinese Super League titles and two AFC Champions League champion titles.
Zhou Jihong – female diver, Olympic gold medalist (Los Angeles 1984), the first Chinese athlete to win an Olympic gold medal in diving.
Tian Tao – Olympic weightlifter
Lü Xiaojun – Olympic weightlifter
Arts
Chi Li – modern writer
Ying Chang Compestine, a Chinese American author, speaker, television host and chef
Liu Yifei – actress and singer. Childhood friend with Yao Beina
Peng Xiuwen – composer and conductor
Tian Yuan – singer and actress
Paula Tsui – a singer who spent most of her singing career in Hong Kong
Wang Kai – actor
Zhou Mi – musician, member of the band Super Junior M
Zhu Yilong – actor
Yao Beina – Top female singer (during 2005-2015), known as the “Voice of China”, spiritual leader of organ donation and charity (1981-2015).
Xu Fan – actress
Yan Wenjing – writer whose work is included as one of the literary selections on the Putonghua Proficiency Test.
Wang Xiaosong – artist who studied in Germany and is now professor at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou
Han Dong – Musician, member of the Kpop group Dreamcatcher
Other fields
Saint Francis Regis Clet, who was martyred here
Hua Mulan – Ancient Chinese heroine whose story has been passed through ages in China and has been presented in a great number of books and motion pictures, including the Disney animated feature Mulan (1998)
Samuel David Hawkins – American soldier in the Korean War who was captured by the North, subsequently defected to China at the time of the Korean Armistice Agreement. He worked as a mechanic in Wuhan before returning to the US in 1957.
Wu Shuqing – female revolutionary and militia leader during the Xinhai Revolution
Xiong Bingkun (熊秉坤) – the soldier who started and led the Wuhan Uprising in the Chinese Revolution of 1911 which gave birth to the Republic of China, Asia’s first republic country.
Zhong Ziqi – The best friend of Yu Boya, an ancient Chinese musician whose musical composition “Flowing Water” was included on the Voyager Golden Record

Sister cities
See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in China
Wuhan is twinned with:
Wuhan is located in Earth
Wuhan
Wuhan
Ōita
Ōita
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
6
6
1
1
Galați
Galați
Kiev
Kiev
Khartoum
Khartoum
8
8
4
4
5
5
Cheongju
Cheongju
7
7
Christchurch
Christchurch
Markham
Markham
Borlänge
Borlänge
Kópavogur
Kópavogur
Ashdod
Ashdod
3
3
İzmir
İzmir
Tijuana
Tijuana
Saratov
Saratov
Concepción
Concepción
Bishkek
Bishkek
Chalcis
Chalcis
Izhevsk
Izhevsk
2
2
Entebbe
Entebbe
Bangkok
Bangkok
Sister cities of Wuhan
1. Manchester 2. Swansea 3. Essonne 4. Bordeaux 5. Arnhem 6. Duisburg 7. Sankt Pölten 8. Győr

City Country Since
Symbol of Oita Oita.svg Ōita  Japan September 7, 1979
Pittsburgh city coat of arms.svg Pittsburgh  United States September 8, 1982
Stadtwappen der Stadt Duisburg.svg Duisburg  Germany October 8, 1982
Arms of the City of Manchester.svg Manchester  United Kingdom September 16, 1986
ROU GL Galati CoA.png Galați  Romania August 12, 1987
COA of Kyiv Kurovskyi.svg Kiev  Ukraine October 19, 1990
Khartoum  Sudan September 27, 1995
Győr COA.png Győr  Hungary October 19, 1995
Coat of arms of Bordeaux, France.svg Bordeaux  France June 18, 1998
Coat of arms of Arnhem.svg Arnhem  Netherlands September 6, 1999
Cheongju City logo(without text).png Cheongju  South Korea October 29, 2000
AUT Sankt Poelten COA.svg Sankt Pölten  Austria December 20, 2005
Chch COA.JPG Christchurch  New Zealand April 4, 2006
Markham  Canada September 12, 2006
Borlänge vapen.svg Borlänge  Sweden September 28, 2007
Kópavogur COA.svg Kópavogur  Iceland April 25, 2008
Coat of arms of Ashdod.png Ashdod  Israel November 8, 2011
Blason département fr Essonne.svg Essonne (not a city but a department)  France December 21, 2012
İzmir  Turkey June 6, 2013
Tijuana, Mexico, COA, Escudo.jpg Tijuana  Mexico July 12, 2013
Coat of Arms of Saratov.svg Saratov  Russia August 7, 2015
Escudo de Concepción (Chile).svg Concepción  Chile April 7, 2016
Coat of arms of Bishkek Kyrgyzstan.svg Bishkek  Kyrgyzstan November 15, 2016
Flag of Chalcis.svg Chalcis  Greece May 11, 2017
Coat of Arms of Izhevsk (Udmurtia).svg Izhevsk  Russia June 16, 2017
Swansea  United Kingdom January 31, 2018
Entebbe  Uganda April 13, 2018
Seal of Bangkok Metro Authority.png Bangkok  Thailand November 16, 2018

And Wuhan has friendly exchange relationships with:

City Country Since
Emblem of Kobe, Hyogo.svg Kobe  Japan February 16, 1998
Symbol of Hirosaki Aomori.svg Hirosaki  Japan October 17, 2003
St. Louis  United States September 27, 2004
Seal of Atlanta.png Atlanta  United States September 9, 2006
Daejeon  South Korea November 1, 2006
Gwangju  South Korea September 6, 2007
Kolkata  India July 24, 2008
Suwon  South Korea December 5, 2008
Taebaek  South Korea December 5, 2008
Seal of Columbus, Ohio.svg Columbus  United States October 30, 2009
Grosses Wappen Bremen.png Bremen  Germany November 6, 2009
Coat of arms of Port Louis, Mauritius.svg Port Louis  Mauritius November 10, 2009
Cebu City  Philippines August 19, 2011
Seal of the City of Yogyakarta.svg Yogyakarta  Indonesia November 12, 2011
Coat of Arms of Perm.svg Perm  Russia September 10, 2012
Seal of Chicago, Illinois.svg Chicago  United States September 20, 2012
Kosice Coat of Arms.svg Košice  Slovakia November 6, 2012
CoA Città di Napoli.svg Naples  Italy September 18, 2012
Blason département fr Moselle.svg Moselle  France July 16, 2013
Seal of San Francisco.svg San Francisco  United States November 21, 2013
Siem Reap Province  Cambodia November 21, 2013
Biratnagar    Nepal November 21, 2013
Seal of Bangkok Metro Authority.png Bangkok  Thailand November 21, 2013
POL Częstochowa COA.svg Częstochowa  Poland March 14,2014
OAZ.png Oliveira de Azeméis  Portugal April 11, 2014
Sydney COA.gif Sydney  Australia May 30, 2014
DurbanCoatOfArms.jpg Durban  South Africa June, 2014
Seal of Burlingame, California.png Burlingame  United States June 23, 2014
Menlo Park California Logo.gif Menlo Park  United States June 23, 2014
Seal of Cupertino, California.png Cupertino  United States June 23, 2014
East Palo Alto California seal.png East Palo Alto  United States June 23, 2014
Hayward  United States June 23, 2014
Citysealmillbrae.png Millbrae  United States June 23, 2014
Moraga  United States June 23, 2014
Flag of Morgan Hill, California.svg Morgan Hill  United States June 23, 2014
Mountain View  United States June 23, 2014
Oakley California Logo.png Oakley  United States June 23, 2014
Union City  United States June 23, 2014
Seal of Betong.png Betong  Thailand June 25, 2014
Halikko vaakuna.svg Salo  Finland August 25, 2014
Gävle vapen.svg Gävle  Sweden August 27, 2014
Patan    Nepal October 20, 2014
Pattaya seal.png Pattaya  Thailand October 24, 2014
BeraneCoatOfArms.png Berane  Montenegro October 24, 2014
Escudo ciudad de cordoba argentina.svg Córdoba  Argentina October 24, 2014
Blason liege.svg Liège  Belgium October 29, 2014
Blason ville fr Lille (Nord).svg Lille  France November 3, 2014
Coat of arms of Holbæk.svg Holbæk  Denmark November 24, 2014
Seal of Heraklion.svg Heraklion  Greece December 11, 2014
Cape Town  South Africa December 9, 2014
Brasão de São Luís.svg São Luís  Brazil April 29, 2015
Varaždin (grb).gif Varaždin  Croatia May 7, 2015
Seal of Kota Kinabalu.svg Kota Kinabalu  Malaysia May 20, 2015
HUN Erdőkertes COA.jpg Erdőkertes, HUN Pest megye COA.png Pest Megye  Hungary July 4, 2015
Gold Coast  Australia September 29, 2015
Blason ville fr Le Mans (Sarthe) (orn ext).svg Le Mans  France November 1, 2015
Flag of the Southern Province (Sri Lanka).PNG Southern Province  Sri Lanka December 3, 2015
Galle  Sri Lanka December 5, 2015
Mungyeong  South Korea December 22, 2015
Daegu  South Korea March 25, 2016
Tacoma  United States April 5, 2016
Coat of arms of Lima.svg Lima  Peru April 8, 2016
Tabriz  Iran May 28, 2016
Marrakesh  Morocco June 3, 2016
Seal of Phnom Penh.svg Phnom Penh  Cambodia July 11, 2016
Coat-of-arms-of-Dublin.svg Dublin  Ireland September 5, 2016
Seal of Houston, Texas.svg Houston  United States September 10, 2016
Jinja  Uganda September 20, 2016
Escudo de Pucallpa.svg Pucallpa  Peru September 20, 2016
Maribor  Slovenia September 23, 2016
Montego Bay  Jamaica September 28, 2016
Victoria  Seychelles October 17, 2016
Kemi.vaakuna.svg Kemi  Finland November 25, 2016
Sannicolas arroy escudo.png San Nicolás de los Arroyos  Argentina December 16, 2016
Brasão de Armas do Município de Foz do Iguaçu.png Foz do Iguaçu  Brazil March 9, 2017
Greater Coat of Arms of Dunkerque.svg Dunkirk  France March 20, 2017
Jihlava (CZE) – coat of arms.gif Jihlava  Czech Republic May 10, 2017
Coat of Arms of Brest, Belarus.svg Brest  Belarus August 29, 2017
Coat of Arms of Zhytomyr.svg Zhytomyr  Ukraine November 14, 2017
Armoiries de Marseille.svg Marseille  France November 20, 2017
Blason Herstal.svg Herstal  Belgium May 21, 2018
Fergana  Uzbekistan October 14, 2018

Nature and wildlife
In Chinese mythology, the Baiji (“Yangtze River dolphin”) has many origin stories. In one legend, the Baiji was the daughter of a general who was deported from the city of Wuhan during a war. During his duty, the daughter ran away. Later, the general met a woman who told him how her father was a general, and when he realized that she was his daughter, he threw himself into the river out of shame. The daughter ran after him and also fell into the river. Before they were drowned, the daughter was transformed into a dolphin, and the general a porpoise.