[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pdr6gob.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:The city from which one-fifth of the world's population has been ruled for centuries.[[note]]Image credit to 秋田少年.[[/note]]]]

Beijing (北京) or as previously romanized, Peking, is the capital of the [[RedChina People's Republic of China]]. The name, pronounced like ''bay-jing'' and not ''beige-ing'', literally means "Northern Capital". [[note]]China has gone through a fair number of capitals in its history. Nanjing means "Southern Capital" and yes, "Eastern Capital" and "Western Capital" also existed for a time in China as well as still existing in Japan (Tokyo ("Eastern Capital") and Kyoto’s alternative name ("Western Capital") [[/note]] It has been the capital of China since Kublai's Yuan dynasty. Often noted for its Peking duck cuisine and traditional residential alleys known as hutong. One of the four municipalities alongside Tianjin, {{UsefulNotes/Shanghai}} and Chongqing.

As the capital city of the world's largest and most powerful unitary state, the actual urban area of Beijing is the political, cultural and economical center of the modern PRC and the Chinese-speaking world in general. For China's ambitious youth north of Yellow River, Beijing offers the best opportunities to advance in their career and thus climb the ladder of social classes. In a few fields such as performing arts, this situation even apply to ''all'' of China.

The population of this MegaCity is roughly 17.43 million as of 2010, an estimate based on those who have lived there for six months or more. To reside in Beijing and enjoy its full social benefits, you need a residency permit called "Hukou", which may take years to get. Thus, Beijing is ill-defined, and equating the city proper with the municipality is quite silly. The city's real population continues to grow well past 20 million, despite the high living cost and the infamous smog.[[note]] Contrary to stereotype, it is not persistent in Beijing; people from the neighboring Hebei province would actually be surprised by the frequent blue skies.[[/note]]

Many people don't have the aforementioned permit to reside in Beijing, and thus live in faraway suburban districts within the municipality, but not in the city proper. The municipality is an entity larger than 40 sovereign states and includes rural areas, other county seats and some satellite cities. Even so, urban sprawl has recently pushed the urban area beyond the municipal borders and into Hebei Province.

The central government commonly attempted to control Beijing's overcrowding, with success in the city proper, but with mixed results in the outlying parts of the city. Therefore, the Beijing Municipality has been economically integrated with neighboring areas to prevent districts from decaying into little more than commuter towns. Therefore, an entity that governs over Beijing, Heibei and Tianjin was created, called [=JingJinJi=] (named after Bei'''jing''', Tian'''jin''', and Hebei's one-character abbreviation, '''Ji'''). The Xiong'an New Area was later established in Hebei to serve as a development hub for the [=JingJinJi=] economic triangle and offload workloads of the state capital.

Due to Beijing's enormous size, enormous traffic jams are to be expected. Formerly, bicycles were commonly used; so much, actually, that traffic jams occurred in the bicycle lanes, even though they took half the street (hence Katie Melua's song "Nine Million Bicycles"). However, these days the bicycles have been replaced by myriads of cars, bringing lots of air pollution and thick smog with them. [[note]] Beijing's air quality is very bad, being ranked 13th worst in the world by the World Bank.[[/note]] The pollution had the interesting effect of causing the city to fund a truly gargantuan bike-share program and now there are probably more bicycles in Beijing than every before (so many bicycles in fact that the millions of public-use bikes clogging the sidewalks were declared a public nuisance and most of them were confiscated and junked by the government).

To fully comprehend Beijing's size, imagine yourself standing on Tian'anmen square, the center of the city. If you were to walk outwards in any direction, you would reach:
#3 to 5km away: The place where the Old City Walls once stood. Nowadays, you'll see the 2nd Ring Highway.
#10 to 15km away: The border of the modern city proper.
#25 to 35km away: The subway's termini, as well as other county-seats-turned districts, and huge cities in their own right.
#35 to 50km away: Towns of people who commute to the innermost areas on a daily basis, either by bus or UsefulNotes/HighSpeedRail (as is the case for neighboring Langfang). Some of these towns are located in Hebei Province.
#50 to 80km away: The terminus for most city buses, the new airport that's under construction, and other counties considering integration into the municipality of Beijing. [[note]]By this point, you'd have gone way past the border of it.[[/note]]
#80 to 200km away: Independent prefecture-level cities unwilling to become servants of Beijing, most of which have satellite cities of their own. At this point, the city begins to seem more chaotic, as the different bureaucracies of the many entities impede a full integrated development.
#200 to 400km away: The furthest extend of the city's direct influence, with cities like Handan, that attempt to play into the integration game, accepting industry transfers from Beijing like anyone else in Hebei.[[note]] Fears of worse pollution aren't entirely unfounded, but factories around these places have begun using more environmentally-friendly technology.[[/note]]

Tens of thousand smaller, county-level cities and county seat townships . have gained convenience, but have also been sucked out of resources and opportunities by Beijing. Thus, they are gradually integrating with Beijing to form a large metropolitan area, connected by everything: from city buses, to high-speed rail. Out of all these cities, the most important ones are:
* Tianjin: Connected to Central Beijing by a 33-minute train ride. This municipality is larger than UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity.
* Shijiazhuang: Capital of Hebei Province. Larger than UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}.
* Baoding, Tangshan: Both cities are comparable to [[UsefulNotes/DFWMetroplex Dallas]].
* Langfang, Cangzhou, Hengshui, Chengde, Zhangjiakou: All single-handedly beating UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC in population.

Similar areas would be [[BritainIsOnlyLondon Greater London]]/UsefulNotes/{{Moscow}}/[[{{UsefulNotes/Paris}} Île-de-France]]/[[UsefulNotes/{{Seoul}} Seoul Capital Area]]. However if everything goes well in the eyes of the CPC, and the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integration plan is successfully carried out, the resulting conurbation would effortlessly surpass [[UsefulNotes/{{Tokyo}} Tokyo-Yokohama]] as the largest and most populous metropolitan area in the world, dwarfing any other city and having around 50 million people being called "Beijinger".

While there are other metroplexes in China that can easily rival the aforementioned cities, like the Yangtze River Delta[[note]] Nowadays, Shanghai and its adjacent cities, which have historically been better with their urban and economic development, could easily rival Tokyo's population[[/note]], most of the cities within the area have rich cultural and political assets that keep their identity fiercely independent. In contrast, inhabitants of the capital region can feel the centrality of Beijing in every aspect of their lives, and while prefecture-level cities such as Tianjin aren't at such a great risk of losing their identity, the Beijing Municipality continues to expand into and assimilate Hebei's counties. [[Music/JohnLennon And somebody will comment that China has become the Roman Empire and Beijing is Rome itself.]]


The most famous location in Beijing is Tiananmen Square. The first word translates to “Gate of Heavenly Peace”, and was the name of the gate to the Forbidden City. The square itself was first built in 1651 and was expanded after UsefulNotes/MaoZedong and the Chinese Communist Party took power on October 1st 1949, an event still celebrated annually in China. Due to its history, it has a lot of cultural significance. The most notable locations in the square include:
* Great Hall of the People: The official meeting place of various government bodies. The biggest is the “National People's Congress” (NPC) which meets every year for 2 weeks. It is the largest legislature in the world at 2,980 members, though it acts as little more than a rubber stamp for the current leadership.
* Monument to the People's Heroes: Dedicated to the many who died during 8 revolutionary movements in the 19th and 20th centuries.
* National Museum of China: A history museum containing various artifacts from Chinese history. It is the the 2nd most visited museum in the world.
* Chairman Mao Memorial Hall, AKA Mausoleum of Mao Zedong: The final resting place of Mao Zedong's body, which has been preserved and may be viewed by visitors. [[note]]Much like UsefulNotes/VladimirLenin, Mao did not wish for his body to be preserved, but it was embalmed anyways.[[/note]]
[[OvershadowedByControversy However]], those outside of China most likely associate Tiananmen Square with the 1989 protests and subsequent crackdown by the Chinese Communist Party. Started in response to the demise of the then popular Hu Yaobong, a former CCP leader that achieved some and sought more reforms to the Chinese Communist Party before being forced out by party hardliners in 1987 and died 2 years later. In the run-up to his funeral, protests started in Tiananmen Square and spread through China for the next month and a half [[note]]You read correctly, it wasn’t just in Beijing, it was simply the one that got all the attention due to being in China’s capital, and the only one that ended violently[[/note]]. After internal power struggles were won by hardliners again, a brutal crackdown followed on June 4th 1989, with [[UsefulNotes/ChineseWithChopperSupport People’s Liberation Army]] forces shooting at protesters, with many protesters retaliating, resulting in hundreds and perhaps thousands killed. The most infamous incident being the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_Man Tank Man]] who stood in front of and atop a tank as several began leaving the square the day after the shootings[[note]]Contrary to popular belief though, the tank man was escorted away by the crowd, and was not ran over[[/note]]. The crackdowns earned fierce condemnations abroad and still haunts the Chinese Communist Party to this day, as it remains one of most heavily censored topics on the Chinese internet. Even the slightest reference or thing that could be construed to reference the event are subject to [[{{BannedInChina/China}} strict censorship]].

A culturally important city, Beijing recently hosted the 2008 UsefulNotes/OlympicGames, with most games taking place in the city proper, as well as some in the municipality.[[note]]Some events are held elsewhere, even including [[{{UsefulNotes/HongKong}} Hong Kong]][[/note]] This provoked massive controversy beforehand, particularly in regards to China's human rights violations and UsefulNotes/{{Tibet}} as well as food safety issues. However, the Games themselves, unlike Moscow in 1980, were largely peaceful.

This also helped Beijing win the rights to host the 2022 Winter UsefulNotes/OlympicGames, making them the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Olympics. However, controversy sparked over the [[SuspiciouslySimilarSong striking similarities]] between the first [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h53LxHelYCk official Olympic song]] and ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'''s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0MK7qz13bU Let It Go]] [[note]]which is HilariousInHindsight as ''Frozen''s "Do You Want To Build a Snowman?" has been noted to sound a lot like Film/{{Yentl}}'s "Papa Can You Hear Me?" before[[/note]] and as mentioned before, gross human rights violations, to the point of drawing [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concerns_and_controversies_at_the_2022_Winter_Olympics#Diplomatic_boycotts diplomatic boycotts from many nations]], while other diplomats and leaders did not attend due to UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic restrictions.

!! Beijing in fiction

* ''Literature/MomentInPeking'', a novel by Lin Yutang depicting the changes that took place in Chinese society between the end of the Qing dynasty and the Japanese invasion.
* ''Film/BeijingBicycle''
* ''Film/TheLastEmperor''
* The main setting for the 2010 reboot of ''Film/{{The Karate Kid|2010}}'' ([[ArtifactTitle which isn't about karate, but rather kung fu]]).
* ''Film/CurseOfTheGoldenFlower''
* ''VideoGame/MarioAndSonicAtTheOlympicGames''
* ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'': The game begins with the terrorist Global Liberation Army detonating a nuclear bomb in front of the Forbidden City. The geography is all off, however; Tiananmen Square and 14 Chang'an Street are missing.
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