place

Zhongxing Road station

Line 8, Shanghai MetroRailway stations in China opened in 2007Railway stations in ShanghaiShanghai Metro stations in Jing'an DistrictShanghai Metro stubs
Zhongxing Road Station
Zhongxing Road Station

Zhongxing Road (simplified Chinese: 中兴路; traditional Chinese: 中興路; pinyin: Zhōngxīng Lù) is the name of a station on Shanghai Metro Line 8. It began operation on December 29, 2007. Lines 3 and 4 pass by without stopping.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Zhongxing Road station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Zhongxing Road station
North Xizang Road, Jing'an District

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Zhongxing Road stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.2553 ° E 121.464 °
placeShow on map

Address

西藏北路

North Xizang Road
200071 Jing'an District
China
mapOpen on Google Maps

Zhongxing Road Station
Zhongxing Road Station
Share experience

Nearby Places

Defense of Sihang Warehouse
Defense of Sihang Warehouse

The Defense of Sihang Warehouse (Chinese: 四行倉庫保衛戰) took place from October 26 to November 1, 1937, and marked the beginning of the end of the three-month Battle of Shanghai in the opening phase of the Second Sino-Japanese War. Defenders of the warehouse held out against numerous waves of Japanese forces and covered Chinese forces retreating west during the Battle of Shanghai. The successful defense of the warehouse provided a morale-lifting consolation to the Chinese army and people in the demoralizing aftermath of the Japanese invasion of Shanghai. The warehouse's location just across the Suzhou Creek from the foreign concessions in Shanghai meant the battle took place in full view of the western powers. It was across from the foreign concessions in Shanghai, and the Japanese did not dare to call naval artillery strikes on the area, since a stray shot might land in the concessions and provoke an incident with the Europeans and Americans, whom the Japanese wanted to keep out of the war. Moreover, the Japanese dared not use mustard gas here as they did elsewhere in Shanghai, in full view of the foreign powers. This proximity drew the attention, if only briefly, of the international community to Chiang Kai-shek's bid for worldwide support against Japanese aggression.In Chinese, the 452 defenders are known as the Eight Hundred Heroes, because commander Xie Jinyuan, not wanting to reveal their true strength to the Japanese, provided an exaggerated number to girl guide Yang Huimin to announce to the public.