Setting aside the story of the five immortals who long ago descended upon the site of Guangzhou on rams and planted sheaves of grain in the name of peace, the city's history begins some time in the 3rd century B.C
Originally known as Panyu, the city quickly became a key trading center, with visiting merchants arriving from distant lands as far-flung as Rome showing up in the historical record as early as the 2nd century A.D
By the 8th century, Middle Eastern traders had established themselves in Guangzhou, and by 1511 the Portuguese were a major factor, though they would soon be displaced to nearby Macau, where their influence is still strongly felt
Ships from around the world followed and throughout the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, Dutch, English, French, American, Danish, Swedish and Australian flags could be seen flying above trading vessels in the harbor
Foreign influence helped make Guangzhou a focal point of change in Qing Dynasty China, as commercial, social and political pressures from abroad combined with the imposition of military force to wrest one concession after another from a weakening Beijing
Things came to a boil with the Opium Wars, which officially began after Qing Commisioner Lin Zexu ordered the seizure of all opium in the possission or British traders in Guangzhou and then destroyed over a year's worth of shipments. The British responded with military force, forcing the cession of Guangzhou and other "treaty ports," including long-term rights to Hong Kong, to the Crown in 1843 with the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing
In the 20th century as in Lin Zexu's day, Guangzhou was key to the assertion of China's soveriegn rights, as the locally born and raised revolutionary Sun Yatsen organized resistance to both the feeble Qing and the predations of foreign powers in Guangzhou, which also attracted its share of communist revolutionaries in the years leading up to the 1949 victory of Mao Zedong and his comrades
Today, capitalism has returned to this city of savvy entrepreneurs and traders in a major way, sheparding a healthy portion of the world's consumable goods out of Guangdong's factories and down the Pearl River to the sea.
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