Beijing: Preserving China's Identity
During the last 40 years, China's has seen enormous change and this rapid change lead to an identity crisis for some Chinese people trying to navigate modern times. During the reform and opening up period, many Chinese people didn't understand what it meant to be Chinese.
While cities, like Shenzhen and Shanghai, were building modern China, Beijing was struggling to preserve China's traditional culture and identity. 40 years on and both Shenzhen and Beijing have found their place in forging China's modern identity.
In this second part of the series, we look at how Beijing was able to overcome its own hurdles and find its voice in modern China.
Watch part one on Shenzhen here:
Beijing 4K - Walk in Old Summer Palace on Lantern Festival - China 中国北京圆明园元宵节灯会夜游行走视频
#Beijing #OldSummerPalace #LanternFestival
The Lantern Festival or the Spring Lantern Festival is a Chinese festival celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month in the lunisolar Chinese calendar. Usually falling in February or early March on the Gregorian calendar, it marks the final day of the traditional Chinese New Year celebrations. As early as the Western Han Dynasty (206 BCE-CE 25), it had become a festival with great significance. During the Lantern Festival, children go out at night carrying paper lanterns and solve riddles on the lanterns.
In ancient times, the lanterns were fairly simple, and only the emperor and noblemen had large ornate ones. In modern times, lanterns have been embellished with many complex designs. For example, lanterns are now often made in the shape of animals. The lanterns can symbolize the people letting go of their past selves and getting new ones, which they will let go of the next year. The lanterns are almost always red to symbolize good fortune.
The festival acts as an Uposatha day on the Chinese calendar. It should not to be confused with the Mid-Autumn Festival; which is sometimes also known as the Lantern Festival in locations such as Singaporeand Malaysia. The Lantern Festival has also become popular in Western countries, especially in cities with a large Chinese community. In London, the Magical Lantern Festival is held annually.
he Old Summer Palace, known in Chinese as Yuanming Yuan , and originally called the Imperial Gardens , was a complex of palaces and gardens in present-day Haidian District, Beijing, China. It is 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) northwest of the walls of the former Imperial City section of Beijing. Constructed throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries, the Old Summer Palace was the main imperial residence of Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty and his successors, and where they handled state affairs; the Forbidden City was used for formal ceremonies. Widely perceived as the pinnacle work of Chinese imperial garden and palace design, the Old Summer Palace was known for its extensive collection of gardens, its building architecture and numerous art and historical treasures. It was reputed as the Garden of Gardens in its heyday.
In 1860, during the Second Opium War, as the Anglo-French expedition force relentlessly approached Beijing, two British envoys, a journalist for The Times and a small escort of British and Indian troopers were sent to meet Prince Yi under a flag of truce to negotiate a Qing surrender. Meanwhile, the French and British troops reached the palace and conducted extensive looting and destruction. Later on, as news emerged that the negotiation delegation had been imprisoned and tortured, resulting in 20 deaths, the British High Commissioner to China, Lord Elgin, retaliated by ordering the complete destruction of the palace, which was then carried out by British troops. The palace was so large – covering more than 800 acres – that it took 4000 men 3 days of burning to destroy it. Many exquisite artworks – sculptures, porcelain, jade, silk robes, elaborate textiles, gold objects and more – were stolen and are now found in 47 museums around the world, according to UNESCO.
Beijing 4K - Walk in Old Summer Palace on Lantern Festival - China 中国北京圆明园元宵节灯会夜游行走视频
The Lantern Festival or the Spring Lantern Festival is a Chinese festival celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month in the lunisolar Chinese calendar. Usually falling in February or early March on the Gregorian calendar, it marks the final day of the traditional Chinese New Year celebrations. As early as the Western Han Dynasty (206 BCE-CE 25), it had become a festival with great significance. During the Lantern Festival, children go out at night carrying paper lanterns and solve riddles on the lanterns.
In ancient times, the lanterns were fairly simple, and only the emperor and noblemen had large ornate ones. In modern times, lanterns have been embellished with many complex designs. For example, lanterns are now often made in the shape of animals. The lanterns can symbolize the people letting go of their past selves and getting new ones, which they will let go of the next year. The lanterns are almost always red to symbolize good fortune.
The festival acts as an Uposatha day on the Chinese calendar. It should not to be confused with the Mid-Autumn Festival; which is sometimes also known as the Lantern Festival in locations such as Singaporeand Malaysia. The Lantern Festival has also become popular in Western countries, especially in cities with a large Chinese community. In London, the Magical Lantern Festival is held annually.
he Old Summer Palace, known in Chinese as Yuanming Yuan , and originally called the Imperial Gardens , was a complex of palaces and gardens in present-day Haidian District, Beijing, China. It is 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) northwest of the walls of the former Imperial City section of Beijing. Constructed throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries, the Old Summer Palace was the main imperial residence of Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty and his successors, and where they handled state affairs; the Forbidden City was used for formal ceremonies. Widely perceived as the pinnacle work of Chinese imperial garden and palace design, the Old Summer Palace was known for its extensive collection of gardens, its building architecture and numerous art and historical treasures. It was reputed as the Garden of Gardens in its heyday.
In 1860, during the Second Opium War, as the Anglo-French expedition force relentlessly approached Beijing, two British envoys, a journalist for The Times and a small escort of British and Indian troopers were sent to meet Prince Yi under a flag of truce to negotiate a Qing surrender. Meanwhile, the French and British troops reached the palace and conducted extensive looting and destruction. Later on, as news emerged that the negotiation delegation had been imprisoned and tortured, resulting in 20 deaths, the British High Commissioner to China, Lord Elgin, retaliated by ordering the complete destruction of the palace, which was then carried out by British troops. The palace was so large – covering more than 800 acres – that it took 4000 men 3 days of burning to destroy it. Many exquisite artworks – sculptures, porcelain, jade, silk robes, elaborate textiles, gold objects and more – were stolen and are now found in 47 museums around the world, according to UNESCO.
Beijing airport (PEK): International arrival at the Terminal 3
Beijing Capital International Airport (PEK) is the main international airport serving Beijing. Beijing Capital added Terminal 3 in 2008 in time for the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, the second largest airport terminal in the world. It is also the second busiest airport in the world.
This video shows the arrival process at terminal 3. It also shows the resources than are available in the arrival area.
We also show the three transportation options to reach the city center: (1) the Airport Express which connects to the subway network; (2) buses that can take you to various places in the city (cheapest option); or (3) taxis.
The Airport Express operates from 06h21 to 22h51. The fare is 25RMB, payable in cash. You can also pay using the transportation card (Yikatong). The card can be purchased at the ticket counter of the Airport Express. Here is a map of the Beijing subway:
You can also watch our video on how to use the Beijing subway:
There are many buses that can take you to various places in Beijing. This is the most economical mode of transportation. The list of bus lines as well as their stops, fares and schedules can be found on the official airport website:
Taxis are the simplest way to reach your destination in Beijing. The fare to the center of the city is about 90 to 125RMB. Taxi drivers do not speak English. You need the name of your hotel as well as the address in writing in Chinese. This can usually be found on the hotel website. Taxis in Beijing use the meter. If your driver proposes a fixed rate, get out and take another taxi. In addition to the amount shown on the meter, you may have to pay the toll. Minivans are also available for larger families.
To search live China train schedule or book train tickets in China, please check china-diy-travel.com
Check our channel for our videos that will help you understand China travel:
CHINA: BEIJING: CHINESE NEW YEAR CELEBRATIONS
Mandarin/Nat
With the Chinese New Year only a few hours away, temple fairs are in full swing all over Beijing.
Perhaps the largest and most colourful, the Ditan Park -- Temple of the Earth Park -- held opening celebrations on Monday for its 13th Spring Cultural Festival.
Crowds gathered despite the cold morning air to listen to the traditional drumming and watch the dancing lions.
One of the most important rituals of the Chinese New Year, which begins on January 28th, is the warding off of evil spirits.
It is widely believed that evil spirits are scared of loud noises such as detonating fireworks and drums.
And so, young men and women drummed and danced before the main gates of Ditan Park on Monday before the crowds filed into the fairground for a day of fun.
The centuries-old Lion Dance is yet another way to keep monsters and devils at bay.
Considered to be very ferocious creatures, lions sway their heads, bodies and tails in an effort to scare evil away but the effect is often quite lighthearted.
Today's dancing lions certainly did not frighten this grandmother and grand-daughter.
Once the evil spirits were warded off, crowds of Beijingers entered the temple grounds.
As the year of the ox gives way to the year of the tiger, representations of this other regal animal can be found everywhere.
Unlike a real tiger this giant plastic version smiled and welcomed the crowds.
The third of the Chinese zodiac's twelve animals, the tiger represents health and vigour and is the second most respected animal after the dragon.
Activities at the fair are numerous and varied.
Success at getting a coin through a hole in a metal plate should bring lots of good luck.
Traditional food also plays an important role during the celebrations... and there is plenty to choose from.
Objects such as this traditional teapot - widely used during the Qing dynasty - decorate the street food stands.
You Cha -- a gruel of sweetened, fried flour mixed with tea -- and candied fruit on sticks satisfy the sweet tooths roaming through the fair.
Chinese minority folk art -- like these hats from Xinjiang -- is also on sale.
And... as the Lunar New Year approaches, people are up to predictions and hopes.
VOXPOP: (Mandarin)
(The year of the tiger represents) strength and vigor which should mean a happy new year for everyone.
SUPER CAPTION: Voxpop
VOXPOP: (Mandarin)
I would like this year to be better and better.
SUPER CAPTION: Vox-pop
VOXPOP: (Mandarin)
I hope my father will buy me a computer.
SUPER CAPTION: Vox-pop
As the Year of Tiger gets closer, the Chinese entertain dreams of prosperity.
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Courtyard | Uniting Chinese families (Hello China #71)
The courtyard of a Chinese building is a communal area that traditionally creates harmonious living among the family.
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The video is part of our “Hello China” series, a selection of 100 Chinese words that represent the essence of traditional Chinese culture, reflect its extensive and profound nature from different angles, and help people overseas better understand China and Chinese culture.
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Custom Bamboo Garden
Kalo joins Bob to create a Zen bamboo garden.
BEIJING & SHANGHAI VLOG 2019
Shanghai: Yuyang Gardens, Old Shanghai, the Bund
Beijing: Olympic Park, Forbidden City, Jingshan Park, Lama Temple, Temple of Heaven, Dashilan, Hutongs, Great Wall of China at Badaling
Music: Wander by Atom
北京胡同HuTong--Bystreet in BeiJing
HuTong--Bystreet in Beijing. Hutong is a word from Mongolian. means a residential area(in northern china, especialy in BiJing). It's a meeting-point of culture, custom and history that need us protect it earnestly.
Naadohdi 过渡,在北京,中国 - Beijing, China
Landed in Beijing early morning and had to catch the connecting flight in the evening. I thought it would be a shame to spend the time in the airport, which by the way was as grand as any other airport. The immigration and customs was easy to clear and found something interesting in the immigration officers desk. It is a polling machine to be used by us, it has buttons to say whether the service given by the officer is good, bad and ugly sort of a thing. What we vote cannot be seen by the officer and all the votes during the shift are added and play a role in their performance appraisal. You would think the experience with the officers in a communist country such as China would be difficult, and it is far from it. In addition to this voting gadget, they also have a thermal scanner to check the body temperatures of the passengers, it glows green or red based on your temperature and it helps to sort out passengers in crisis such as SARs.
I had communicated with a driver via eMail and he was to pick me up in the airport and drive me around for the whole day. I did not pay him any advance deposit for the service, so was not sure whether he will show up. I had a plan on using public transit as well just in case, but Xin was right there.
The first stop was Tiananmen Square. Many of us have watched the protests in TV and the bloody result in this square. Today it was quiet, and seems to truly represent its meaning, gate of heavenly peace. I saw a number of cops and the tourists started pouring in and could very well imagine how crowded it would be later in the day. From the square, passed the Tiananmen gates and proceeded to the Forbidden City.
The forbidden city is a vast complex and could take a day on its own. It was the palace of the Ming emperors. It has a number of halls inside, each for a specific purpose, prayer, reading etc. The palace also has a manmade canal inside the complex as well as imperial gardens. As you would expect there are happy and sad stories of marriages and suicides inside the complex and the tour guides could make it dramatic. The hill on the Northern exit has a wonderful view of the Forbidden City. Unfortunately the thick fog would not let the camera see that beauty.
The next stop was great wall. The wall is long enough to be seen from few areas north of Beijing. Each one seem to have their value, I went to the Mutianyu section as it is less commercial and the wall in this section stretches without any break. It took about an hour to reach the base of the wall and then a cable car whisked away to the spot from where the great wall could be experienced. The wall seem to go way high into the mountains and one can walk as long as they wish. I was told that it is quite possible to walk up and then camp overnight. As I climb down, started to think the amount of hard work that must have gone into building this wall as it is located out of now where, right inside a mountain and then started appreciating the experience even more.
I was there in early December and it was quite cold, the terrain was barren, saw snow on the cliffs and would like to think that late fall when the cherry blossoms around the wall must be a great a time to vist, something to remember while planning another trip.
Soundtrack
Dance of the Yi Tribe in traditional Chinese music
Wang Huiran
Played by Xuefei Yang
Marking the end of the Chinese New Year celebrations
(10 Feb 2017) LEAD IN
Millions of Chinese people are preparing to celebrate the Lantern Festival - the traditional end of the Lunar New Year holiday.
The Lantern Festival falls on the 15th day of the Chinese lunar calendar, and residents of Beijing celebrate by hanging red lanterns across the city and visiting public displays.
STORY-LINE
Several hundreds of people have rushed to visit a large lantern show at Beijing's Garden Expo Park on the eve of the Lantern Festival.
About 70 sets of large scale lanterns, lit up by thousands of small LED lights, are on display to celebrate the Lantern Festival on Saturday, which traditionally marks 15 days after the start of the Chinese New Year and the end of the New Year festivities.
The lantern festival is one of the most important festivals in the Chinese lunar calendar.
Gathering with one's family and eating sweet glutinous rice dumpling soup is one of the many traditions involved.
Lighting up dragon or phoenix-shaped lanterns is another one, as it shows the optimistic nature of the Chinese people for the year ahead.
The entire Chinese folk culture, including the lantern festival, expresses the hospitable character of the Chinese people, and their expectations, their wish for a happy life, says Liu Ruibo, head of Beijing Beiao Grand Cultural and Sports Events Co., organizer of the Beijing Lantern Festival expo.
Organizing the lantern show took six months of preparation, and he invited 300 craftsmen from Sichuan, in central China, to come to Beijing for a month to make the biggest sets of lanterns.
At the centre of the lantern expo, is a set of lanterns depicting several dragons surrounding a phoenix.
Each lantern is made of silk, iron wires and LED light bulbs. Further away, another installation depicts an old Beijing tea house. Another one, further, is a stage for Beijing opera.
Couples and families navigate their way among the lantern installations, snap pictures and try to stay warm as a bright blue day makes way to a crisp cold night.
Liu Ruibo is keen to show the part of the expo dedicated to the upcoming Winter Olympics that Beijing will organize in 2022. Several lanterns, this time entirely made of LED lights, depict skiers and ice skaters in action.
Which part did I enjoy the most? Wonders Jing Jing, who came with her boyfriend. Each is distinctive. For example, this one, it design is based on the theme of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, she says .
LED lights also help maintain the expo in the realm of the eco-friendly, a word that's become paramount in China as the authorities are trying to turn China into a leader in renewable energy.
I believe that today, every Chinese, every foreign friend who works in China, can follow an environmentally friendly and green lifestyle, says Liu enthusiastically. I believe they can make a contribution in building up a green China. Not just us, but I believe every category of Chinese can adhere to this attitude, he says .
Liu predicts that it will be the busiest on Saturday, the actual day of the Lantern festival.
However, even the night before, families took advantage of the start of the weekend to pay a visit. Such as little Wang Chenxi, 4, who today ate three sweet dumplings at school, and since then is calling the Lantern Festival the Sweet dumpling festival.
His father, Wang Xiaojian, explains that during Lantern Festival, people eat sweet dumplings because the pronunciation of sweet dumplings and family reunion similar in Mandarin.
Chinese people eat sweet dumplings during the Lantern festival. The dumpling is round, it implies a family reunion, which is the best wish for Chinese families. The Chinese wish to get together with their family and live a happy life, says Wang Xiaojian.
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Beijing: City life, gay apps, and live streaming girls | VPRO Documentary
In Beijing, city life takes often more place online than offline. You can still not come out of the closet in real life, but live as a gay online. In Beijing gays meet via app and girls live stream when they sing or just talk to the audience. How are gays experiencing life in a city as Beijing, where being gay is still not accepted? And what is it, that makes young girls live streaming?
In the past 30 years, life for people in China has changed drastically. The third world country has become one of the world leaders and still, most of us don´t know a lot about China and their population. Where is this gigantic country headed? And what do ordinary Chinese appreciate or value?
In the second episode Ruben Terlou arrives in Beijing, where he watches a number of popular live streamers and meets the man behind China's largest internet platform for homosexuals.
Without a smartphone life in the big city has become virtually impossible: it is your debit card, your city card, your ID, your entertainment. And more importantly, your smartphone puts you in touch with like-minded people. Gay people no longer have to go to shadowy parks to find a partner. But the question is how long the government allows this online freedom.
In the big city of Beijing Ruben hires a golden bicycle and meets the fighting mother of a Chinese lala (lesbian). The city is overwhelming so that you can easily disappear. Oddly, that´s also what makes it so special. But where you can disappear, you can be yourself. As long as you don´t stand out.
Original title: Dubellevens (2/7)
Maaik Krijgsman
© VPRO January 2018
On VPRO broadcast you will find nonfiction videos with English subtitles, French subtitles and Spanish subtitles, such as documentaries, short interviews and documentary series.
This channel offers some of the best travel series from the Dutch broadcaster VPRO. Our series explore cultures from all over the world. VPRO storytellers have lived abroad for years with an open mind and endless curiosity, allowing them to become one with their new country. Thanks to these qualities, they are the perfect guides to let you experience a place and culture through the eyes of a local. Uncovering the soul of a country, through an intrinsic and honest connection, is what VPRO and its presenters do best.
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English, French and Spanish subtitles by Ericsson and co-funded by the European Union.
A day in Beijing
Dury and Jerry chilling in old Beijing over Chinese New Year
Music: Quantic - Transatlantic
Hitachi Touch Sensitive Traction Service Elevators @Hotel Kunlun, Beijing China
Installed in 1986. Awesome bell.
Lumion+SU:visualization-Chinese Courtyard
中式庭院-可视化设计。
acocopy@icloud.com
Century-old Chinese Restaurant Gets A Koubei Makeover
The Chinese restaurant chain Wu Fang Zhi is famous for its rice dumplings. See how Alibaba’s Koubei, a local services platform, transformed a traditional restaurant to keep up with modern consumers.
China - Market for parrots
T/I: 10:36:28
Speculators eager to turn a fast profit have created a new market in Beijing and investors are flocking to grab a piece of China's latest money-making opportunity...rainbow-coloured parrots. The Phoenix birds are the hottest new commodity at the Guangyuan Bridge open-air market where hundreds of traders gather, hoping to turn a quick profit. The parrots, originally natives of Africa, are now being bred by the dozen in specially heated apartment blocks in suburban Beijing. Prices for the parrots are doubling every few months. A green-faced Phoenix parrot which sold for 120 yuan (US $15) two years ago can now fetch 1,500 yuan (US $187.50).
SHOWS:
BEIJING, CHINA 11/02
Wide of busy street,
PAN to crowded bird market,
old man nuzzling his parrot,
people shopping for parrot peripherals,
people looking at cages full of parakeets,
CU of parakeets,
people counting money;
SOT Mr Yang: It's fun and I am making money too!;
POV shot walking behind Mr Yang with cage in hand,
Mr Yao Jinyou walking into the courtyard of this home,
Mr Yao with numerous cages full of birds;
CU man checking gender of bird;
Mr Yao Jinyou: These birds aren't just a hobby for Chinese anymore, they are at the same time a business opportunity. If you have what it takes you can make a fair amount of money from selling them. More and more people are getting into the business though In Beijing and greater China it is not a new thing. Right now, I get from every area and city of the country I get at least 7 letters a day, sometimes 30 or more... the phone is even worse... there are extended periods where I just leave the phone off the hook... just too many to answer sometimes 100 or more.;
CA to most expensive birds,
letters of interest he has received and phone left off the hook (due to too many bird fanciers calling);
People looking at cages,
CU baby bird in Yao's hand;
Exterior of Mr Yao Jinyou's house;
CU of parakeets in bird store,
boy imitating bird,
people feeding cockatoo;
SOT boy: If you raise a bird, you can protect it and it won't be hurt by people;
WS interior of store.
2.32
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Explore Historic Beijing
Let Jason Poon from the InterContinental hotel there take you on an 'in the know' tour of this city full of new and old.
Ms.Sun's furniture workshop Beijing, China
Ms.Sun collects antique pieces of furniture from all over the Chinese countryside back to her Hutong in Beijing, where she restores them.
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Rise of Chinese middle class fuels interest in craft beers
(18 May 2018) LEADIN:
The rise in China's middle class is fueling an interest in craft beers.
Hundreds of craft beer enthusiasts are attending an exhibit in Shanghai, dedicated to expanding the palette of Chinese consumers and promoting sales of high-end brews.
STORYLINE:
Craft beer is causing a buzz in China.
International and local brewers are attending Shanghai's 2018 Craft Beer of China Exhibition (CBCE) to share tips on the latest technology and sales trends.
And, naturally, taste a few of the latest brews too.
Beer consumption in China is growing beyond legacy brews to more experimental, refined and expensive flavours.
After drinking it (craft beer), it feels much better than the domestic industry beer, and then you just can't leave it, says 40-year-old visitor Yu Shiqi, who hopes to brew his own beer soon.
From the taps pour a creative mix of flavours and traditions, a swirling cocktail of Chinese ingredients combined with barley, hops and spices from around the world.
After drinking industry beer, normally you have to go to the bathroom, says 22-year-old craft beer bar owner Sun Chengmin.
But after drinking good ones, you want to drink more. I have tried 500 to 600 different beer in one year, it feels good, so I started to make my own beer and drink homemade beer.
Panda Beer, ''Little General, ''Flying Fist IPA, and Mandarin Wheat are among the offerings on tap.
Laurel Liu, sales director of Beijing-based Jing-A brewery, says she gets calls from small towns asking how to start up a craft brewery.
What's interesting now is you get inquiries from small, very small, cities or maybe even just a small town, she says.
And people will just come just say; 'Hey, I really want to start a craft beer business here, but I need your help.'
And as a craft beer brewery, sometimes you're not just selling your beer, you have to provide beer service as well.
There's money to be made in China, which drinks a quarter of all beer worldwide. Small-batch brewers and giant multinationals are cashing in.
Though craft beer is far from upstaging local beer behemoths like Tsingtao, that dominate the $28 billion USD national beer market, it is rising in popularity.
Small breweries are opening in China's major metropolitan areas, like Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.
Craft beers are typically more expensive than mass-market, low-alcohol content brews like Budweiser and China's Yanjing.
But as China's middle class grows, so too does its tastes for new products.
The CBCE expects 30 percent growth in the craft beer market every year until 2020.
Craft beer, a couple of years ago, was only 0.3 percent and now we just like about five percent, says Darren Guo, one of the exhibition's organizers.
The Chinese beer market is the biggest, but not because the Chinese beer culture is the richest or the oldest, no, it's because the population is the biggest.
Actually, the beer culture is pretty much on the beginning, starting level.
According to beer industry research firm Drink Sector, more money was spent on beer in China than the US last year.
While craft breweries were rapidly increasing, foreign imports continued to dominate the high-end beer sector.
Chinese companies, on the other hand, dominate the global beer industry's manufacturing sector.
Exhibitors at CBCE boast customers from Argentina to New Zealand, using Chinese-made vats, mashers, mills, taps, beer mats, and kegs.
Boxing Cat claims to be one of the first microbreweries in China.
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