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Jiangjiatuan Destination Guide

Discover Jiangjiatuan in China

Jiangjiatuan in the region of Shandong Sheng is a town located in China - some 349 mi or ( 562 km ) South-East of Beijing , the country's capital .

Interactive map of Jiangjiatuan

Local time in Jiangjiatuan is now 10:44 AM (Saturday) . The local timezone is named " Asia/Shanghai " with a UTC offset of 8 hours. Depending on your flexibility, these larger cities might be interesting for you: Yuanyaocun, Lianyungang, Wenquantang, Wangtuan, and Dachangshandao. When in this area, you might want to check out Yuanyaocun . We found some clip posted online . Scroll down to see the most favourite one or select the video collection in the navigation. Are you looking for some initial hints on what might be interesting in Jiangjiatuan ? We have collected some references on our attractions page.


Videos

Hydroponic in Weihai City, Shandong Province

0:47 min by feifei06
Views: 9552 Rating: 5.00

Found this system in one of the local resturant ..

Weihai, Shandong, China

5:59 min by wormster33
Views: 816 Rating: 5.00

Hanging out around Weihai with Guang Wei Composites - 2010 + some Beijing & Tang Gu & Tianjin ..


Weihai: Opportunities for UK Businesses

5:41 min by UKTIWeb
Views: 184 Rating: 0.00

Weihai is situated on the eastern tip of Shandong Province. It has a very good business environment: one of the most favourable of all China's regional cities. Weihai is China's largest centre for sea ..

Luigong Dao & The Sino-Japanese War Museum Eddakath's photos around Weihai, China (travel pics)

2:38 min by TripAdvisorTRIPWOWu
Views: 150 Rating: 0.00

Preview of Eddakath's blog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here: www.travelpod.com This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator. Learn more about these vid ..


Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.


Interesting facts about this location

Weihai

Weihai is a city in eastern Shandong province, People's Republic of China. It is the easternmost prefecture-level city of the province and a major seaport. Weihai borders Yantai to the west and the Yellow Sea to the east. Weihaiwei's population is 2,804,800 at the 2010 census. Of those, 591,982 live in the built up area. Rongcheng, a county level city within Weihai, has a built up area with 1,006,795 inhabitants. The minor planet 207931 Weihai is named after this city.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 37.50 122.12 (Lat./Long.); Less than 7 km away
Tags: Cities in Shandong, Prefecture-level divisions of Shandong

Chengshan Stadium

Chengshan Stadium or Weihai City Stadium is a multi-use stadium in Weihai, China. It is currently used mostly for football matches and athletics events. It hosts the home games of Weihai Aisen. The stadium has a capacity of 31,800 people. and opened in March 2002.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 37.52 122.08 (Lat./Long.); Less than 7 km away
Tags: Football venues in China, Sports venues in Shandong

Huancui District

Huancui is a county-level district in Weihai, Shandong province, in eastern China.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 37.38 122.12 (Lat./Long.); Less than 10 km away
Tags: Cities in Shandong

Battle of Weihaiwei

The Battle of Weihaiwei (Japanese: Ikaiei-no-tatakai was a battle of the First Sino-Japanese War. It took place between 20 January and 12 February 1895 in Weihai, Shandong Province, China between the forces of the Empire of Japan and Empire of China.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 37.50 122.17 (Lat./Long.); Less than 10 km away
Tags: 1895 in China, 1895 in Japan, Battles of the First Sino-Japanese War, Conflicts in 1895, Naval battles of the First Sino-Japanese War

Chinese cruiser Laiyuan

Laiyuan was an armored cruiser in the late Qing Dynasty Beiyang Fleet. Its sister ship was the Jingyuan.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 37.50 122.17 (Lat./Long.); Less than 10 km away
Tags: 1887 ships, Cruisers of the Beiyang Fleet, First Sino-Japanese War cruisers of China, Maritime incidents in 1895, Ships built in Stettin, Shipwrecks in the Yellow Sea, Victorian-era naval ships of China