The First Entrepreneurs of Beijing Walking Tour
Saturday, September 17, 2022 Beijing Postcards 97 Yangmeizhu Byway, Dashilar Area (杨梅竹斜街97号) 14:00-16:30
Price: ¥300
Saturday, September 17, 2022
Scan and Share
Beijing Postcards
Beijing Postcards
Beijing Postcards uses the cityscape of Beijing to explore Chinese thought and ideas. All of our events are themed and we aim to make them challenging, inspiring and fun. Our goal is to take you off the beaten path, in every sense, and to use our research to help you view and engage with Beijing in new ways.
Detail
008613011078680
info@beijing-postcards.com
Views: 626
Reschedule & Cancellation:
Your ticket can be refunded (minus a 4% processing fee charged by the booking platform) or rescheduled for free if cancelled more than 72 hours before the event. Any cancellation within 72 hours of the event cannot be changed or refunded, but you can transfer the ticket to others.
The walk will take place with rain, shine or pollution. But if bad weather really makes the walk impossible we will call you on the day of the tour to let you know it’s been cancelled and reschedule.
Just outside the front gate of the capital, merchants from all over the middle kingdom have sold their wares for generations. Pushing heavy wheelbarrows, riding camels or donkey carts, hopeful street-style entrepreneurs arrived hoping to make their fortunes. They traded in silk, tea, porcelain, spices, knives - if you could name it, you could find it here!
Some achieved success and became recognized as “Lao Zi Hao” or “time-honored brands”. These household names of the capital came to possess massive storefronts, their owners eager to show the world that their families now no longer belonged to the dusty streets that had brought them to Beijing in the first place.
But during the dynasties no matter how rich these merchants became they could never really belong to the finest families of the empire. Commercial transactions were deemed dirty, and it was privilege determined by the blood in your veins that was most important, not money in hand. However that changed with the end of the dynasties in 1912. A wave of unforgiving capitalism swept through the city like a tsunami, only to end just as abruptly as it had started, as the tide turned once again with the communist liberation of 1949.
The republican capitalists were now labeled as the scum of the earth, as they were accused of exploiting the working class. Factories and communal production became keywords. The old Laozihao shop fronts were seen as an unnecessary artefact of the past and only a few made it through to survive till today.
But then, as time went by, the tides turned once again. The Dashilar area experienced a revival, and over the course of the 1980s electrical fans, television sets and refrigerators suddenly became items everybody could dream of owning. “The First Entrepreneurs of Beijing” is the story of commerce in the capital told through the products that shaped its people and their lives.
Show Detail
Hide Detail
Beijing Postcards uses the cityscape of Beijing to explore Chinese thought and ideas. All of our events are themed and we aim to make them challenging, inspiring and fun. Our goal is to take you off the beaten path, in every sense, and to use our research to help you view and engage with Beijing in new ways.
www.yoopay.cn
400.1022.500