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Wu Gorge

Coordinates: 31°01′30″N 110°05′00″E / 31.02500°N 110.08333°E / 31.02500; 110.08333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wushan
Badong town
Wuxia Gorge on Yangtze
Wu Gorge
Traditional Chinese巫峽
Simplified Chinese巫峡
PostalWuxia Gorge
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWū Xiá
Wade–GilesWu1 Hsia2

Wuxia Gorge (simplified Chinese: 巫峡; traditional Chinese: 巫峽; pinyin: Wū Xiá), sometimes called Great Gorge (Chinese: 大峡; pinyin: Dà Xiá), is the second gorge of the Three Gorges system on the Yangtze River, People's Republic of China. Formed by the Wu River, it stretches 45 km (28 mi) from Wushan to Guandukou, and is located downstream of Qutang Gorge and upstream of Xiling Gorge. The gorge straddles the boundary between Wushan County of Chongqing Municipality (formerly part of Sichuan Province) and Badong County, Hubei Province.

The gorge has been known as the Wuxia Gorge since at least the Three Kingdoms period, when it was recorded in the geographical treatise Shui Jing Zhu. In 589 AD, General Lü Zhongsu of the Chen dynasty stationed troops in the Wuxia and Xiling Gorges in an attempt to stop the advancing Sui dynasty armies. Tang dynasty poet Yang Jiong wrote a classical poem entitled "Passing Wuxia Gorge" (Chinese: 過巫峽).

Among the Twelve Peaks of the Wuxia Gorge, the most spectacular is the Goddess Peak. Legend has it that this peak is the incarnation of Yaoji who assisted Yu the Great in controlling the waters.

The mountains on both sides of the Yangtze, through which the river cuts the Wuxia Gorge, are known as the Wu Mountains (巫山, Wū Shān).

References

[edit]
  • Zhongguo Gujin Diming Dacidian 中国古今地名大词典 (2005). Shanghai: Shanghai Cishu Chubanshe 上海辞书出版社. Page 1456.

31°01′30″N 110°05′00″E / 31.02500°N 110.08333°E / 31.02500; 110.08333