Antiquity , located in the southernmost area of the
Erligang culture The Wuhan area has been settled for 3,500 years.
Panlongcheng, an archaeological site primarily associated with the
Erligang culture ( BC) (being sparsely populated during the earlier
Erlitou period), is located in modern-day
Huangpi District of Wuhan. During the
Western Zhou the
State of E, which gives its name to the single character abbreviation for Hubei province, controlled the present-day Wuchang area south of the Yangtze River. After the conquest of the E state in 863 BC, the present-day Wuhan area was controlled by the
State of Chu for the rest of the Western Zhou and
Eastern Zhou periods. After the
State of Huang was conquered by State of Chu in the summer of 648 BC, the people of Huang were moved into the area in and around present-day Wuhan. Local geographical terms including the name of Wuhan's Huangpi District were named after the State of Huang. Chu was in turn conquered by
Qin in 223 BC.
Imperial China During the time of the
Han dynasty, Hanyang became a fairly busy port. The
Battle of Xiakou in AD 203 and
Battle of Jiangxia five years later were fought in the region over control of
Jiangxia Commandery, territories of which included much of present-day eastern Hubei. In the winter of 208/9, one of the most famous battles in
Chinese history and a central event in the
Romance of the Three Kingdoms—the
Battle of Red Cliffs—took place near the
Yangtze River, with the cliffs near Wuhan identified as one of the potential locations. Around that time, walls were built to protect Hanyang (AD 206) and Wuchang (AD 223). The latter event marks the foundation of Wuhan. In AD 223, the
Yellow Crane Tower, one of the
Four Great Towers of China, was constructed on the Wuchang side of the Yangtze River by order of
Sun Quan, leader of the
Eastern Wu. The tower became a sacred site of
Taoism. Due to tensions between the
Eastern Wu and
Cao Wei kingdoms, in the autumn of 228,
Cao Rui, grandson of
Cao Cao and the second emperor of the state of
Cao Wei, ordered the general
Man Chong to lead troops to Xiakou (; in present-day Wuhan). In 279,
Wang Jun and his army conquered strategic locations in Wu territory such as
Xiling (in present-day
Yichang, Hubei), Xiakou (; present-day Hankou) and Wuchang (; present-day
Ezhou, Hubei). During the
Northern and Southern dynasties period, the Wuhan area was part of the successive Southern dynasty states
Liu Song (420–479),
Southern Qi (479–502),
Liang, and
Western Liang. In fall 550,
Hou Jing sent Ren Yue to attack both Xiao Daxin and Xiao Fan's son Xiao Si (). Ren killed Xiao Si in battle, and Xiao Daxin, unable to resist, surrendered, allowing Hou to take his domain under control. Meanwhile, Xiao Guan, who had by now settled at Jiangxia (, in modern Wuhan), was planning to attack Hou, but this drew Xiao Yi's ire—believing that Xiao Guan was intending to contend for the throne—and he sent Wang to attack Xiao Guan. In summer 567, Chen Xu commissioned
Wu Mingche as the governor of Xiang Province and had him command a major part of the troops against Hua, along with Chunyu Liang (). The opposing sides met at Zhuankou (, in modern Wuhan). The city has long been renowned as a center for the arts (especially poetry) and for intellectual studies.
Cui Hao, a celebrated poet of the
Tang dynasty, visited the Yellow Crane Tower in the early 8th century; his poem made it the most celebrated building in southern China. In spring 877,
Wang Xianzhi captured E Prefecture (, in modern Wuhan). He then returned north, joining forces with Huang again, and they surrounded Song Wei at Song Prefecture (, in modern
Shangqiu,
Henan). In winter 877,
Huang Chao pillaged Qi and Huang (, in modern Wuhan) Prefectures. Before
Kublai Khan arrived in 1259, word reached him that
Möngke had died. Kublai decided to keep the death of his brother secret and continued the attack on the Wuhan area, near the
Yangtze. The present-day
Wuying Pagoda was constructed at the end of the
Song dynasty between attacks by the Mongolian forces. Under the
Mongol rulers (
Yuan dynasty) (after 1301), the Wuchang
prefecture, headquartered in the town, became the capital of
Hubei province. Hankou, from the
Ming to late
Qing, was under the administration of the local government in
Hanyang, although it was already one of the four major national markets () of the Ming dynasty. Hanyang's
Guiyuan Temple was completed in the 15th year of Shunzhi (1658). By the dawn of the 18th century, Hankou had become one of China's top four
trading centers. In the late 19th century,
railroads were extended on a north–south axis through the city, making Wuhan an important
transshipment point between rail and river traffic. Also during this period foreign powers extracted mercantile concessions, with the riverfront of Hankou being divided up into foreign-controlled merchant districts. These districts contained trading firm offices, warehouses, and docking facilities. The French had a
concession in Hankou. During the
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, the Wuhan area was controlled for many years by rebel forces and the Yellow Crane Tower,
Xingfu Temple,
Zhuodaoquan Temple and other buildings were repurposed or damaged. During the
Second Opium War (known in the West as the Arrow War, 1856–1860), the government of the Qing dynasty was defeated by the western powers and signed the
Treaties of Tianjin and the
Convention of Peking, which stipulated eleven cities or regions (including Hankou) as trading ports. In December 1858,
James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, High Commissioner to China, led four warships up the
Yangtze River in Wuhan to collect the information needed for opening the trading port in Wuhan. In the spring of 1861, Counselor
Harry Smith Parkes and Admiral Herbert were sent to Wuhan to open a trading port. On the basis of the
Convention of Peking, Parkes concluded the Hankou Lend-Lease Treaty with Guan Wen, the governor-general of Hunan and Hubei. It brought an area of along the Yangtze River (from latter-day Jianghan Road to Hezuo Road) to become a British Concession and permitted
Britain to set up its consulate in the concession. In 1862, Russian tea merchants arrived in the treaty port of Hankou. Russians in Hankou established four factories using assembly lines and machinery to produce brick tea, and became the city's richest industrialists in what would become the Russian concession. Japanese immigrants, mainly traders, also started arriving in 1874. On April 23, 1894, construction was completed and the arsenal, occupying some , could start production of small-caliber cannons. It built magazine-fed rifles, Gruson quick fire guns, and cartridges. In 1896, the
Russian Empire also acquired a concession in Hankou.
Wuchang Uprising ,
Hanyang and
Hankou) separated by the
Yangtze River and the
Han River. The three cities merged in 1927 to form Wuhan. By 1900, according to
Collier's magazine, Hankou, the Yangtze River boom town, was "the
St. Louis and
Chicago of China." which led to the collapse of the Qing state and 2,000 years of dynastic rule, as well as the establishment of the
Republic of China. The Wuchang Uprising of October 1911, which overthrew the Qing dynasty, originated in Wuhan. On September 14 the Literary Society () and the Progressive Association (), two local revolutionary organizations in Hubei, The proclamation for the uprising, beadroll and the revolutionaries' official seal fell into the hands of Rui Cheng, the governor-general of Hunan and Hubei, who demolished the uprising headquarters the same day and set out to arrest the revolutionaries listed in the beadroll. Under the guidance of Wu Zhaolin, Cai Jimin and others, this revolutionary army seized the official residence of the governor and government offices. Li founded the Hubei Military Government, proclaimed the abolition of the Qing rule in Hubei, the founding of the Republic of China and published an open telegram calling for other provinces to join the revolution. Through the Wuchang Uprising, Wuhan is known as the birthplace of the Xinhai Revolution, named after the Xinhai year on the Chinese calendar. The city has several museums and memorials to the revolution and the thousands of martyrs who died defending the revolution.
Republic of China With the northern extension of the
Northern Expedition, the center of the Great Revolution shifted from the Pearl River basin to the Yangtze River basin. On November 26, the
Kuomintang Central Political Committee decided to
move the capital from Guangzhou to Wuhan. In mid-December, most of the KMT central executive commissioners and national government commissioners arrived in Wuhan, set up the temporary joint conference of central executive commissioners and National Government commissioners, performed the top functions of central party headquarters and National Government, declared they would work in Wuhan on January 1, 1927, and decided to combine the towns of Wuchang,
Hankou, and Hanyang into Wuhan City, called "Capital District". The new national government, later known as "
Wuhan nationalist government", was based in the Nanyang Building in Hankou, while the central party headquarters and other organizations chose their locations in Hankou or Wuchang. The split was partially motivated by the
purge of the Communists within the party, which marked the end of the
First United Front, and
Chiang Kai-shek briefly stepped down as the commander of the National Revolutionary Army. In June 1927,
Stalin sent a telegram to the Communists in Wuhan, calling for the mobilization of an army of workers and peasants. This alarmed Wang Jingwei, who decided to break with the Communists and come to terms with Chiang Kai-shek. The
Wuhan coup was a political shift made on July 15, 1927, by Wang Jingwei towards Chiang Kai-shek, and his
Shanghai-based rival in the Kuomintang. The Wuhan Nationalist Government was established in Wuhan on February 21, 1927, and ended by August 19, 1927. After the end of the Northern Expedition, Hankou was elevated to a centrally-controlled municipality. In the
1931 China floods, one of the deadliest flood disasters in world history, Wuhan was a refuge for flood victims from outlying areas, who had been arriving since the late spring. But when the city itself was inundated in the early summer, and after a catastrophic dike failure just before 6:00 AM on July 27, an estimated 782,189 urban citizens and rural refugees were left homeless. The flood covered an area of 32 square miles and the city was flooded under many feet of water for close to three months. Jin Shilong, Senior Engineer at the Hubei Flood Prevention Agency, described the flooding:There was no warning, only a sudden great wall of water. Most of Wuhan's buildings in those days were only one story high, and for many people there was no escape – they died by the tens of thousands. ... I was just coming off duty at the company's main office, a fairly new three-story building near the center of town ... When I heard the terrible noise and saw the wall of water coming, I raced to the top story of the building. ... I was in one of the tallest and strongest buildings left standing. At that time no one knew whether the water would subside or rise even higher. In 1936, when natural disaster struck
Central China with widespread flooding affecting
Hebei,
Hunan,
Jiangxi, Wuhan and
Chongqing caused by the
Yangtze and
Huai Rivers bursting their banks,
Ong Seok Kim, as Chairman of the Sitiawan Fundraising and Disaster Relief Committee, raised money and materials in support of the victims. During the
Second Sino-Japanese War and following the
fall of Nanking in December 1937, Wuhan had become the provisional capital of China's Kuomintang government, and became another focal point of pitched air battles beginning in early 1938 between modern
monoplane bomber and fighter aircraft of the Imperial Japanese forces and the
Chinese Air Force, which included support from the
Soviet Volunteer Group in both planes and personnel, as U.S. support in war materials waned. As the battle raged on through 1938, Wuhan and the surrounding region had become the site of the
Battle of Wuhan. After being taken by the Japanese in late 1938, Wuhan became a major Japanese logistics center for operations in southern China. In early October 1938, Japanese troops moved east and north in the outskirts of Wuhan. As a result, numerous companies and enterprises and large numbers of people had to withdraw from Wuhan to the west of Hubei and Sichuan. The KMT navy undertook the responsibility of defending the Yangtze River on patrol and covering the withdrawal. On October 24, while overseeing the waters of the Yangtze River near the town of Jinkou (Jiangxia District in Wuhan) in Wuchang, the KMT
gunboat Zhongshan came up against six Japanese aircraft. Though two were eventually shot down, the
Zhongshan sank with 25 casualties. Raised from the bottom of the Yangtze River in 1997, and restored at a local shipyard, the
Zhongshan has been moved to a purpose-built museum in Wuhan's suburban
Jiangxia District, which opened on September 26, 2011. As a key center on the Yangtze, Wuhan was an important base for Japanese operations in China. On December 18, 1944, in a planned strategic move, and as revenge for the torture and execution of three captured American pilots by Japanese soldiers in the city, Wuhan was bombed by 77 American bombers with the approval of Chiang Kai-Shek. This set off a firestorm that destroyed much of the military resources of the city. For the next three days, Wuhan was bombed by the Americans, destroying all of the docks and warehouses of Wuhan, as well as the Japanese air bases in the city. The air raids also killed thousands of Chinese civilians. Wuhan returned to Chinese control in September 1945. Administratively, Wuchang and Hanyang were initially combined into a new City of Wuchang, but in October 1946 were separated into the City of Wuchang (including Wuchang only) and the County of Hanyang. Hankou became a centrally controlled municipality in August 1947. Militarily, the Wuhan Forward Headquarters was established in Wuhan, headed by
Bai Chongxi. troops at Zhongshan Avenue, Hankou on May 16, 1949 During the later stages of the Chinese Civil War, Bai sought to broker peace, proposing that the Communist Party could rule northern China while the Nationalist government retained southern China. This was rejected, and on May 15, 1949, Bai and the Wuhan garrison retreated from the city. People's Liberation Army troops entered Wuhan on the afternoon of Monday, May 16, 1949.
People's Republic of China Memorial in Wuhan,
Mao Zedong envisions "walls of stone" to be erected upstream.|left The Communists redeveloped industry in Wuhan, which had been damaged by war. During the PRC's first decade, it became an important center of industry again. As the
Third Front campaign shifted the focus of industrial development to China's hinterlands, Wuhan's development slowed. Economic development was further disrupted by the Cultural Revolution. During the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests, students in Wuhan blocked the
Yangtze River Railway bridge and another 4,000 gathered at the railway station. About one thousand students staged a railroad 'sit-in'. Rail traffic on the Beijing-Guangzhou and Wuhan-Dalian lines was interrupted. The students also urged employees of major state-owned enterprises to go on strike. On June 22, 2000, a
Wuhan Airlines flight from
Enshi to Wuhan was forced to circle for 30 minutes due to thunderstorms. The aircraft eventually crashed on the banks of
Han River in
Hanyang District, all on-board perished (there were varying accounts of number of crews and passengers). In addition, the crash also killed 7 people on the ground.
Chinese protesters organized boycotts of the French-owned retail chain
Carrefour in major Chinese cities including
Kunming,
Hefei and Wuhan, accusing the French nation of pro-
secessionist conspiracy and
anti-Chinese racism. The BBC reported that hundreds of people demonstrated in Beijing, Wuhan, Hefei, Kunming and
Qingdao.) was hit on the chest by a shoe thrown at him by a
Huazhong University of Science and Technology student who calls herself "hanjunyi" (, or ) while Fang was giving a lecture at
Wuhan University. The city has been subject to devastating floods, which are now intended to be controlled by the ambitious
Three Gorges Dam, a project which was completed in 2008. The
2008 Chinese winter storms damaged water supply equipment in Wuhan: up to 100,000 people were out of running water when several water pipes burst, cutting the supply to local households. The
2010 Northern Hemisphere summer heat wave hit Wuhan on July 3. In the
2010 China floods, the
Han River at Wuhan experienced its worst flooding in twenty years, as officials continued sandbagging efforts along the Han and Yangtze Rivers in the city and checked reservoirs. In the
2011 China floods, Wuhan was flooded, with parts of the city losing power. In the
2016 China floods, Wuhan saw of rainfall during the first week of July, surpassing the record that fell on the city in 1991. A
red alert for heavy rainfall was issued on July 2, the same day that eight people died after a section of a tall wall collapsed on top of them. The city's subway system, the
Wuhan Metro was partially submerged as was the
main railway station. At least 14 city residents were killed, one was missing, and more than 80,000 were relocated. The
2019 Military World Games were hosted in Wuhan in October. In December 2019,
SARS-CoV-2, a novel coronavirus that caused the
COVID-19 pandemic, was first discovered in Wuhan, On April 8, 2020, the Wuhan lockdown officially came to an end after no new domestic cases were reported in Hubei province. SARS-CoV-2 is believed to have resulted from the
zoonotic spillover of a virus that existed in bats, and the
Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan has been identified as a potential site for the initial animal-to-human transmission. Although no bats were sold at the market, some 38 other species of animals were offered at wet markets in the city, one of which could have served as an intermediary species. ==Geography==