Cangshan, Fuzhou


Cangshan District is one of 6 urban districts of the prefecture-level city of Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian Province, China.

History

  • Cangshan District was formerly known as "Guatengshan", also known as "Tengshan", with a watchtower at the top of the mountain. Therefore, it was also called the Yan Tai Mountain, named after the Zhongzhou barbette. Because a salt warehouse was built there in Ming dynasty, the place was also called Cangqianshan, abbreviated to Cangshan, which is where the modern name comes from.
  • The Treaty of Nanking in 1842 listed Fuzhou as one of the Five Ports of Treaty, which made Cangshan District become the historic district for consulates. In 1844–1903, there built consulates of the United Kingdom, the United States of America, France, Russia, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, etc. At the same time, many Christian churches, schools, hospitals, newspaper offices, western firms were built there. Because of this history, there still exist some Gothic-style buildings and Romanesque-style buildings today, which become the iconic style of Cangshan District. Since the year 2005, because of the "transformation of the old district" project, some characteristic buildings were torn down and rebuilt, which triggered some social opposition.

Geography

Administrative divisions

Subdistricts:
Towns:
  • Cangshan
  • Chengmen
  • Gaishan
  • Jianxin
  • Luozhou

Tourist attractions