Yanji, Yanbian | China Travel Guide
Introduction
Location
Background
Highlights
Yanji (Mandarin: 延吉,Yánjí| Korean: 연길,yeongil) is a city in Jilin province that serves as the seat of Yanbian (Mandarin: 延边,Yánbiān| Korean: 연변,yeonbyeon), China’s Korean Autonomous Prefecture.
It is arguably the most Korean-influenced region in the world, outside of Korea itself, with an estimated one-third to one-half of the population being ethnically Korean.
Yanji houses an interesting mix of Chinese, Chinese-Korean, North Korean and South Korean culture that is not found to this extent anywhere else in the world.
The city even has two official languages to account for this – Chinese and Korean – with Korean usually being shown above Chinese on signs around the city.
However, the Korean influence is slowly weakening as residents find that acculturating to Chinese culture and society provides them with more opportunities and benefits throughout the rest of the country.
Yanji is the seat of the Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture of Jilin province, China.
Jilin province is located in China’s Dongbei (Northeast) region along with Liaoning and Heilongjiang provinces.
Yanji is located in the southeast of Jilin province very close to the border with North Korea.
Parts of Yanbian also sit along the Russian border, including Hunchun which hosts a triple border viewing area where one can stand in China while looking out into both Russia and North Korea simultaneously.
Yanji also serves as a key stopover point for those travelling to/from Rason (SEZ), North Korea.
Getting to Yanji might be slightly more tedious compared to other major cities in Dongbei but is achievable nonetheless and definitely worth the trip if you are in the area.
Yanji’s railway offers daily trips to Beijing that take 24 hours.
However, other cities in the Dongbei region can be reached with relative ease (e.g. Changchun [2.5 hours], Harbin [4 hours] and Shenyang [5.5 hours]).
The city is also home to an airport that offers domestic flights around the country as well as to South Korea.
Much like the rest of the Dongbei, the population of the region increased as the Qing Dynasty promoted migration in order to counteract Russian imperialist ambitions.
Yanji was occupied with the rest of Dongbei by the Japanese in the early-mid 1900s.
Due to its proximity to North Korea, the region was a common site of anti-imperialist cooperation between the two countries against Japanese forces.
During the time of occupation, as well as during the Korean War, a large influx of Koreans made their way to China through routes throughout Yanbian and the majority of those who stayed in China have now settled in and around Yanji and Yanbian.
The region was established as a Korean Autonomous Region in 1952 at the end of the Chinese Civil War and subsequently upgraded to an Autonomous Prefecture.
Despite the influence and encroachment of Chinese culture on the population of Yanji, the city continues to be a major hub of Korean diasporic culture and customs which can clearly be seen in any part of the city and its surrounding regions.
Today, the city hosts an annual festival to celebrate Korean culture and folk customs that takes place every year in September.
Yanji is also the host of two Korean-language TV stations that can reportedly be reached from parts of North Korea.
Yanji is now mainly known in Dongbei for its delicious foods.
The Korean influence has resulted in a love of BBQ which has been fused with Chinese cooking methods to create several locally renowned chain restaurants where visitors can cook meat skewers themselves over a tabletop BBQ.
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