Reflections | Quanzhou, Unesco World Heritage city in China that gave us ‘satin’, and its storied place in history

  • Marco Polo called Quanzhou ‘one of the two greatest havens in the world for commerce’, and fellow global traveller Ibn Battuta was just as effusive
  • A new addition to the Unesco World Heritage List, the city was devastated by an uprising among some of its thousands of foreign residents

Residents pass the Bell Tower early in the morning in Quanzhou, in southeast China’s Fujian province, recently inscribed by Unesco on its World Heritage List. Photo: Xinhua

On July 25, Unesco placed Quanzhou on its World Heritage List for its historical role as an “emporium of the world in Song-Yuan China”. Quanzhou (“chu-anne zhoh” for the Pinyin-challenged) is a coastal city in the southeastern province of Fujian. It does not often make the news but centuries ago, it was a bustling and prosperous “world city” that hosted ships and merchants from all over the world.

The entire south-eastern region of China had been inhabited by non-Han Chinese peoples since ancient times before it was colonised and incorporated into the Chinese empire more than 2,000 years ago. By the time of the Sui and Tang dynasties (AD581-907), the region had become as Chinese as the US west coast is American today. It was also then than Quanzhou became well known for the quality of its silks, ceramics and metals, as well as the excellence of its shipbuilders.

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