Eight Sights of Guangzhou


The Eight Views of Ram City, also known as the Eight Sights of Guangzhou is the collective name for various collections of the eight most famous tourist attractions in Guangzhou, China, during different periods of its history. Collections of "eight views" is a common trope in Chinese travel literature.

Song dynasty

The Eight Sights of Guangzhou in the Song dynasty were recorded in the Annals of Nanhai County of the Kangxi Era and the Annals of Guangzhou Prefecture of the Qianlong Era. Most of the sights were closely related to water bodies in the city, reflecting its tight cultural connection to water.
The Eight Sights of Guangzhou in the Yuan dynasty retained four sights of those in the Song dynasty while adding four new ones. The four sights from the Song dynasty were all water-related; meanwhile, the four new ones were all mountain sights. All eight sights were found outside the city walls.
The Eight Sights of Guangzhou of the Ming dynasty were recorded in Transcripts of Ancient Manuscripts on Yangcheng, which quoted Annals of Ming as well as Continued Annals of Nanhai County, compiled in 1910. The list of this era saw a radical departure from that of the Song dynasty. As the city boundaries expanded, only sights located in the urban areas were selected.
Eight Views of the Ram City were chosen through public appraisal twice in the Qing dynasty. The first election was in the Qianlong era and the second was from the Tongzhi era to the Guangxu era.

Qianlong era

Quoted from Yangcheng Guchao.
Quoted from Yuedong Biji.
The following are those chosen through public appraisal in 2001 and brought out in 2002.
The following are those chosen through public appraisal and brought out in 2011.