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During
the Ming and Qing, a curfew was frequently imposed at
night. Barriers (zhalan) erected at both ends of streets
and alleys were closed as soon as the curfew came into
effect, making passage impossible. According to the Imperially
commissioned Record of the Major Events of the Great Qing
Dynasty, there were more than 1,090 barriers erected in
the Inner City area as well as 196 inside the Imperial
(Manchu) City. Dazhalan was one of these 1,200-old structures,
and although the barrier itself is gone, its name has
remained.
Dazhalan,
literally the “ Great Fence,” was from early
times the site of a busy market. In the years of Emperor
Yongle (reigned 1403-1424), it was crowed with shops,
and as trading in the city became concentrated around
the Zhengyangmen area, Dazhalan developed into a popular
market. In 1900, when the Eight-Power Allied Forces attacked
Beijing, Dazhalan was reduced to a heap of rubble, although
it was quickly rebuilt as it stands today.
Dazhalan Street, only 270 meters long and nine meters
wide, has 37 shops and service establishments. Many of
the specialty shops still exist, for example, the Tongrentang
Traditional Medicine Shop, which has manufactured pills,
powders and ointment since 1669; the old Juyuan Hat Shop,
now called the Dongsheng Hat Shop, opened in 1811 and
specialized in producing official’s hats and satin
boots for the nobility; and the famous Ruifuxiang Satin,
Silk and Fur Shop, which opened in 1893. There are also
the Neiliansheng Shoemaker’s and the Nanyufeng Tobacco
Shop, both more than 100 years old. The Xinrong General
Store has a history of 80 years.
These old shops enjoy a high reputation among local residents.
Their continued prosperity can be traced not only to their
worked to develop specialties sold at fair prices. Tongrentang,
for example, having supplied medicinal herbs to the imperial
court, was later appointed to make up prescriptions for
the emperor. During the reign of Emperor Guangxu (1875-1908).
Empress Dowager Cixi ordered the shop to produce all the
medicines used by the imperial court. During the Qing
Dynasty, the Neiliansheng Shoemaker’ s kept careful
records of boot sizes and preferred styles of all the
military and civil officials who shopped there. If an
official wished to have a pair of boots made, he merely
sent a note to the shop and a pair of perfectly fitting
footwear would be made to order. After the fall of the
Qing, this market disappeared, but the shop quickly adapted
by making cotton shoes out of the layered cloth soles
previously used for the court boots.
Another reason for Dazhalan’ s popularity was the
great number of public amusements concentrated here. There
were five large theaters, the Qingleyuan (Celebrating
Happiness Playhouse), Sanqingyuan (Three Celebrations
Playhouse), Guangdelou (Extensive Virtue Playhouse), Guangheyuan
(Extensive Harmony Playhouse) and the Tongleyuan (Common
Happiness Playhouse). When Qing rules made a law prohibiting
“uproarious noises in the Inner City areas close
to the palace,” gentry and rich merchants passed
through Qianmen (Front Gate or Zhengyangmen) Gate in the
evenings to see plays and operas.
After 1949, state-run enterprises were established here,
Two department stores, a women’ s clothing shop
and children’s shop enabled Dazhalan to supply an
even wider range of consumer goods. Nowadays Dazhalan
bustles with crowds from morning to night. |