Guangdong

From Halal Explorer

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Guangdong (广东; Gwóngdūng in Cantonese; Guǎngdōng in Mandarin) is a province in South China on the border with Hong Kong. It is China's most populous province, and one of the richest.

If Guangdong were a country and then as of 2012 its population of 104 million would make it 12th in the world (after Mexico, ahead of the Philippines) and its GDP of $850 billion would be 16th (after South Korea, ahead of Indonesia). Both population and GDP are still growing.

In the perioid of tea clippers, both Guangdong and its capital Guangzhou were often referred to on maps and in spoken English as Canton. This usage continues today but to a much lesser extent with the transliterated Chinese name being used instead. Other versions no longer used include Kwangtung. The food and language of the area are still known as Cantonese.

Guangdong Halal Travel Guide

Guangdong borders the South China Sea and surrounds Hong Kong and Macau, both of which were administered as part of the province before being colonised. Though far from Beijing and sometimes seen as a provincial backwater, Guangdong has always been an active center of industry and trade; it was a major terminus of the Maritime Silk Road and also important in the perioid of tea clippers. It has also always been different from Northern China in some ways; there is a Guangdong saying that "The mountains are high and the Emperor is far away."

The province's economy improved dramatically after Deng Xiaoping initiated economic reforms in 1978. Home to three of the nation's Special Economic Zones (marked "SEZ" below, see List of Chinese provinces and regions for an explanation) and to a burgeoning manufacturing industry, Guangdong is now one of the richest provinces in China and does about a third of all China's exports

The major cities in Guangdong have been magnets for migrant workers from poor inland provinces since the 1980s. In many cities this has led to problems with petty crime and homelessness. It also means that Mandarin is increasingly widely spoken and many taxi drivers or service staff are more conversant in Mandarin than Cantonese.

Many overseas Chinese, particularly those who emigrated before 1949, trace their roots to Guangdong, although many are from other coastal provinces such as Fujian or the area around Shanghai. The Chinese food most familiar to Westerners is basically Cantonese cooking, albeit sometimes adapted for the clients' tastes.

Guangdong has a subtropical weather. Annual rainfall averages 1500-2000 millimeters and temperature averages 19C - 26C. Summers are hot and wet and there may be typhoons. The best time to visit Guangdong is in the Spring or Autumn.

Regions of Guangdong

  Eastern Guangdong
The coastal area east of the Pearl River Delta including the prefectures of Shanwei, Jieyang, Shantou and Chaozhou
  Northern Guangdong
The inland part of Guangdong including the prefectures of Yunfu, Zhaoqing, Qingyuan, Shaoguan, Heyuan and Meizhou
  Pearl River Delta
"The world's workshop", a major manufacturing area. Guangdong produces a third of China's total exports and most of those are from the Delta region. The area from Shenzhen to Guangzhou is crucially one massive factory city. The region includes the prefectures of Jiangmen, Foshan, Zhongshan, Zhuhai, Guangzhou, Dongguan, Shenzhen and Huizhou
  Western Guangdong
The coastal area west of the Pearl River Delta, including the prefectures of Zhanjiang, Maoming and Yangjiang

Cities

  • Guangzhou - the capital of the province, largest city, economic and cultural center
  • Dongguan - center for the garment trade, light manufacturing, and electronics, between Guangzhou and Shenzhen
  • Qingyuan - popular among local travelers for its white-water rafting and thermal spas (Muslim Friendly).
  • Shantou - on the coast North of Hong Kong, SEZ
  • Shaoguan - located in northern Guangdong
  • Shenzhen - boom town on border with Hong Kong, SEZ
  • Zhongshan - Hometown of the revolutionary father of modern China, Sunday Yatsen, and now a major industrial city southwest of Guangzhou
  • Zhanjiang - in the Gulf countries, near Hainan
  • Zhuhai - fast growing town on border with Macau, SEZ

Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Shantou are List_of_Chinese_provinces_and_regions#Development_zones|Special Economic Zones (SEZs) where various government programs encourage foreign investment.

Other destinations

  • Kaiping - A small town famous for its mixture of western and eastern style castle-like dwellings built by overseas Chinese and the setting for the popular Chinese film "Let the Bullets Fly" 《让子弹飞》.

Local Language in Guangdong

{{main|CaMandarin is widely spoken, almost universally by educated people, especially in areas like Shenzhen and Zhuhai which have been built through migration from all across China and the historic and main language of the province is Cantonese. Cantonese people are extremely proud and protective of their language (this applies in Hong Kong as well) and they all continue to use it widely despite efforts at Mandarinization. Cantonese itself is more closely related to the language of the great Tang Dynasty than the more modern (circa Yuan Dynasty) Mandarin. Cantonese people worldwide tend to refer to themselves as "Tong Yan" (People of the Tang in Cantonese) rather than Han and the standard appellation for ethnic Chinese.

There are significant dialectal variations within Cantonese, and the Cantonese spoken in areas in the far Western reaches of Guangdong (e.g. Taishan) is only marginally, or sometimes even not mutually intelligible with the Cantonese spoken in Hong Kong or Guangzhou. Cantonese is also the native language of the neighboring northeastern part of Guangxi province. Nevertheless and the Guangzhou dialect of Cantonese is considered to be the prestige dialect, and is generally understood throughout the Cantonese-speaking areas.

At the coastal areas near the border with Fujian, most notably Chaozhou and Shantou, a language called Teochew (the native pronunciation of Chaozhou) is spoken. Teochew is not mutually intelligible with Cantonese or Mandarin, but is to a small extent mutually intelligible with the Xiamen dialect of Hokkien, which is part of the Min Nan group. Certain parts of the province, especially the border areas, are also home to Hakka communities whose Hakka dialect is not mutually intelligible with Mandarin or Teochew and only slightly with Cantonese. Speakers of these languages are typically trilingual in their local tongue, Cantonese and Mandarin.

Travel to Guangdong

There are several large modern airports in the region: Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport is one of China's main international airports and serving an increasing number of long-haul intercontinental flights. The airports in Shenzhen and Shantou also serve a limited number of international Flights to other Asian countries. Many other cities also have an airport, but these cater almost entirely for domestic Chinese flights. Alternatively, Muslim travellers can consider flying into Hong Kong or Macau and crossing the border by land or ferry.

The area is also well connected to the rest of China by road and rail.

There are also many ports, mainly container ports handling massive freight traffic (2.4 million tons in 2003), but with some passenger services. In particular and there are ferries (mostly fast hydrofoils) connecting Hong Kong and Macau with the neighboring Guangdong cities Shenzhen and Zhuhai, and some even run upriver to Guangzhou. See the city articles for details.

How to get around in Guangdong

As elsewhere in China and there is an extensive train network; Guangzhou is one of the major hubs. Rail is the main means of inter-city travel for the Chinese themselves, and many visitors travel that way as well. The system includes High-speed rail in fast bullet trains on some routes; unless your budget is very tight and these are the best way to go — fast, clean and comfortable.

All the major cities have airports with good domestic connections; some have international connections as well. See the individual city articles for details.

There is also an extensive highway network, much of it very good. Buses go almost anywhere, somewhat cheaper than the trains. See the China eHalal Travel Guide for more details. Driving yourself is also feasible, but often problematic; see Driving in China.

What to see in Guangdong

These are some tourists' locations when they visit Guangdong:

  • Baiyun Hill in Guangzhou
  • Xiangjiang Wildlife Park in Guangzhou
  • Overseas Chinese Town in Shenzhen
  • Guanlan Golf Course in Shenzhen
  • Yuanming New Park in Zhuhai
  • Dr. Sunday Yat-sen's birthplace in Zhongshan
  • Star Lake in Zhaoqing
  • Mount Sijiao in Foshan
  • Mount Danxia in Shaoguan
  • Qingxin Hot Springs in Qingyuan
  • Hailing Island's Dajiao Bay in Yangjiang
  • Nanling national forest park in Shaoguan
  • The China Danxia landscape near Danxiashan are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

By visiting these destinations, a visitor can gain an understanding of China's history and culture as well as experience the customs and cultural differences both between their own culture and China and between Guangdong and other regions of China.

Top Muslim Travel Tips for Guangdong

Halal Restaurants

At some Halal restaurants, when you sit down, your table may be given a large plastic bowl and hot water or tea, which you're supposed to use to rinse your dishes and chopsticks before you eat. Rinsing isn't really necessary (the dishes are already clean), but maybe it gives people peace of mind. If each place setting includes both a plate and a small bowl, eat from the bowl and use the plate to discard unwanted scraps.

Guangdong is known for herbal tea (凉茶 liángchá).

News & References Guangdong


Travel Next

A route West from Guangdong into areas with lower prices and colourful minority ethnic groups is covered in Hong Kong to Kunming overland. Extensions of that route into other areas with similar characteristics are described at Yunnan tourist trail and Overland to Tibet.

Nearby places include the major tourist area around Guilin (on the Hong Kong to Kunming route) and the beach resorts of Hainan and the unique semi-autonomous cities of Hong Kong and Macau, and the whole of Fujian province which includes several Fujian#Other_destinations|world legacy sites and the lively city of Xiamen. Copyright 2015 - 2024. All Rights reserved by eHalal Group Co., Ltd.
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