Education of Hubei

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://mainten.top/place/Hubei
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: Hu-pei, Hupeh
Wade-Giles romanization:
Hu-pei
Conventional:
Hupeh

The educational pattern in Hubei is similar to that in the rest of the country. From 1949 onward determined efforts have been made to overcome illiteracy. By 1970 it was estimated that nearly two-thirds of the people were literate, and this proportion has steadily grown. Wuchang, which was the early capital of the ancient province of Huguang, has remained the educational and cultural heart of Hubei. Under the Nationalist government (1928–49), the former Ziqiang Institute (1893) was designated a national university (now Wuhan University; 1928) and built on one of the three large lakes outside the old walled city, and a Christian university (eventually called Huachung University; 1922) was established inside the city itself. After 1949 both these institutions were incorporated into the new educational system, which now includes several dozen institutions of higher learning throughout the province.

Cultural life

In common with all other provinces, Hubei has experienced considerable change in its cultural life since 1949. The great extension of education and the increase in literacy have had a far-reaching effect. In the cities, museums and libraries have been opened and are much patronized. Large stadia, sports halls, and swimming pools have also been built. The theatre still retains great popularity, particularly the regional operatic form known as Chu opera.

The rural areas, no less than the towns, have undergone great cultural change. Electricity has been extended to villages and hamlets. Every village of any size now has its own stores, its library, and its hall, in which meetings are convened, health clinics are held, and table tennis is played. Being probably better lighted than individual homesteads, the hall has become the place where villagers assemble to chat or listen to the radio or watch television. Storytelling—an agelong profession, which is still very popular—serves to preserve folklore. Country life is enlivened by occasional visits of professional players, entertainers, and acrobats.

Hubei province is rich in natural and historical sites that are draws for a growing number of tourists. The imposing Three Gorges region of the Yangtze is world-renowned. Shennongjia Nature Reserve, in the western Daba Mountains, is celebrated for its dense woods and abundant and highly varied plant and animal life. Other popular tourist destinations include Dong (East) Lake and Huanghe (Yellow Crane) Pavilion in Wuhan and the collection of ancient religious and secular buildings on Mount Wudang (also in the Daba Mountains), which collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1994.

History

When Chinese civilization was slowly evolving in the Henan-Shanxi region during the Shang and Zhou dynasties (17th to mid-3rd century bce), Hubei formed part of the kingdom of Chu. Hubei was subjugated by Shihuangdi (reigned 221–210 bce), founding emperor of the Qin dynasty (221–207 bce), who created the first united empire of China; it was finally assimilated into the Chinese state under the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce). Hubei at that time was described by the ancient Chinese historian Sima Qian as:

a large territory, sparsely populated, where people eat rice and drink fish soup; where land is tilled with fire and hoed with water; where people collect fruits and shellfish for food; where people enjoy self-sufficiency without commerce. The place is fertile and suffers no famine and hunger. Hence the people are lazy and poor and do not bother to accumulate wealth.

From this time on, the facility of communications afforded by its river system has caused Hubei to figure prominently in Chinese history.

Since the mid-19th century it has been the centre of many momentous events, sometimes to its sorrow. The Taiping Rebellion, led by a Hakka, Hong Xiuquan, broke out in Guangxi in 1850, after which the rebel armies moved north, taking Wuchang in 1852. During the succeeding decade the central plains of Hubei and Hunan were devastated by fighting and banditry. After China’s defeat in the second Opium, or Arrow, War of 1856–60, the Hubei cities of Hankou and Yichang were opened to Western nations as commercial ports; a third city, Shashi, was opened to trade in the 1890s. From this time on, European influence in central China steadily increased. Hankou became the head of international oceangoing traffic. In the first 20 years (i.e., until 1880) trade was based almost exclusively on tea, but, with increasing competition from India and Ceylon (Sri Lanka), Hankou became the centre for the collection and processing of other central Chinese raw materials, notably vegetable oils, egg products, and tobacco.

Hubei’s industrialization began with the establishment of the Hanyeping ironworks in Hanyang by Zhang Zhidong, the governor of the province, who also established a cotton mill in Wuchang opposite Hankou. The ironworks had a checkered career. At first it enjoyed some government protection and tax exemption but later suffered from internal political unrest and instability, lack of capital, and poor management. Subsequently a Japanese concern gained financial control with a view to securing ore from Hubei for its ironworks in Japan. The Hanyang works were allowed, even induced, to fall into decay. They were destroyed by bombing during the Sino-Japanese War of 1937–45 and were restored only after the advent of the communist government in 1949.

The Chinese Revolution of 1911–12 began in Hubei. The army in Hankou mutinied, and the soldiers took the cities of Hankou, Hanyang, and Wuchang. Yuan Shikai led his northern troops, on behalf of the emperor, against them and retook Hankou but was unable to cross the Yangtze and eventually retired from the field. This was the only significant fighting during the revolution. The province was ruled by a warlord (dujun) from 1916 to 1927, but from 1928 to 1938 there was some attempt at local government of a democratic Western pattern. When Nanjing was taken by the Japanese in 1937, Hankou became a temporary headquarters for the Nationalists; after the Nationalist retreat to Chongqing in 1938, much of Hubei came under Japanese control. A period of near-chaos after the Japanese defeat in 1945 ended with the establishment of the People’s Republic in 1949.

Thomas R. Tregear Victor C. Falkenheim The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica