Skip to content

Along the Grand Canal

The Grand Canal (大运河) is in China, an engineering work comparable to the Great Wall. Like the Wall, it is very old and parts of it were built by different dynasties. Unlike the Wall, it is still heavily used and actively maintained today.

At Suzhou

The Canal runs roughly North-South for 1800 kilometers (1100-odd miles) from Beijing in the north to Hangzhou (south of Shanghai) in the south. On the way it crosses two of China’s great rivers, the Yangtze and the Yellow River, and passes through many cities. The oldest parts of the canal date to the 5th century BCE, and the various sections were combined during the Sui Dynasty (581–618 AD).

The Canal is now on the UNESCO World Heritage List with this listing.

While the Grand Canal has been a major transport artery for centuries, there are now no scheduled intercity passenger boat services on the canal at all. The Hangzhou-Suzhou passenger line was the last major service to go, in 2006. A small stub line remains, but you can only take it along the portion of the Canal that is within Hangzhou city limits.

Modern route

The main canal runs:

In the Suzhou/Wuxi area, Lake Tai is connected to the canal.

  • 1 Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal Museum (中国京杭大运河博物馆) (Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province).  (updated Feb 2024)
  • 2 China Grand Canal Museum (中国大运河博物馆) (Yangzhou, Jiangsu Province).  (updated Feb 2024)
  • 3 China Water Transport Museum (中国漕运博物馆) (Huai’an, Jiangsu Province). Huai’an has long been an important port on the Grand Canal. This museum tells the story of Huai’an’s role in the transportation of grain to the imperial capital. (updated Feb 2018)
  • 4 Sui and Tang Dynasties Grand Canal Culture Museum (隋唐大运河文化博物馆) (Luoyang, Henan Province). When most people think of the Grand Canal, they usually think of the Beijing-Hangzhou canal. In fact, during the Sui and Tang dynasties, the Grand Canal ran all the way to Luoyang. It was only during the Yuan Dynasty, after the capital was moved to Beijing, that Luoyang was cut from the route. This museum displays artifacts from the time when Luoyang was the northern terminus of the canal. The main highlight is two sunken ships that were discovered in 2013. (updated Feb 2024)

NewPP limit report Parsed by mw‐api‐ext.eqiad.main‐fd8c9f585‐mxjmc Cached time: 20260429063226 Cache expiry: 2592000 Reduced expiry: false Complications: [prevent‐selective‐update] CPU time usage: 0.118 seconds Real time usage: 0.272 seconds Preprocessor visited node count: 708/1000000 Revision size: 3682/2097152 bytes Post‐expand include size: 13219/2097152 bytes Template argument size: 816/2097152 bytes Highest expansion depth: 8/100 Expensive parser function count: 2/500 Unstrip recursion depth: 0/20 Unstrip post‐expand size: 8179/5000000 bytes Lua time usage: 0.078/10.000 seconds Lua memory usage: 2284590/52428800 bytes Number of Wikibase entities loaded: 3/500

Transclusion expansion time report (%,ms,calls,template) 100.00% 179.856 1 -total 53.21% 95.709 1 Template:Pagebanner 40.01% 71.955 1 Template:CountryData2HTML 33.67% 60.552 4 Template:See 7.49% 13.471 1 Template:Outlineitinerary 6.79% 12.207 1 Template:Stbox 5.39% 9.699 1 Template:Article_status 4.33% 7.790 1 Template:PartOfItinerary 2.74% 4.932 1 Template:GPX_indicator 2.28% 4.105 1 Template:BASICPAGENAME

Render ID 3004c1c7-4395-11f1-999b-47ed376f3214 Saved in parser cache with key enwikivoyage:pcache:767:|#|:idhash:canonical and timestamp 20260429063226 and revision id 4829508. Rendering was triggered because: api-parse


Content adapted from Wikivoyage, used under CC BY-SA 3.0.