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Also known as: Shan-tung, Shantung
Wade-Giles romanization:
Shan-tung
Conventional:
Shantung

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Constitutional framework

Shandong is divided into 17 prefecture-level municipalities (dijishi). At the next lower administrative level there are districts under municipalities (shixiaqu), counties (xian), and county-level municipalities (xianjishi). The Shandong Provincial Revolutionary Committee, the chief provincial administrative body from 1967, was replaced in 1980 by the People’s Government, which is the administrative arm of the People’s Congress. Until the early 1980s the rural “people’s communes,” made up of production teams and brigades, served as the lowest administrative units. With the institution of family farms as the primary production units, commune labour allocation, production, and marketing have virtually ceased to be important. In many areas, county seats operate as coordinating centres for the production and distribution of commodities produced in the areas under their administrative jurisdiction.

Health and welfare

Before 1949 Shandong was particularly hard-pressed by the pressure of population on the land; by the common occurrence—especially since the latter half of the 19th century—of floods, droughts, dust storms, excessive soil salinization and alkalinization, and insect infestations; and by frequent military and civil disturbances. Few serious attempts were made by officials of either the Qing (Manchu) dynasty (1644–1911/12) or, later, by the Republic of China to ameliorate the difficult social conditions of the peasant population. With the exception of missionary-financed and missionary-controlled undertakings in areas under foreign influence or administration, such as Qingdao, Yantai, and Jinan, modern intensive health care facilities were virtually nonexistent, and there was only token support for public higher education. Water supplies, sanitation facilities, and public housing were similarly inadequate to the needs of the populace, and public health services were neglected and understaffed.

Since 1949 the public health services in both rural and urban areas have been improved, and formerly common ailments such as kala-azar (a severe infectious disease transmitted by the sand fly), leprosy, and a variety of nutritional-deficiency diseases have been eliminated. All large and medium-size cities now have adequate water-supply systems, often built in conjunction with multipurpose water-conservancy schemes to improve and stabilize the watersheds of nearby rivers. Along with water supply, the construction of sewage-treatment facilities in many cities has helped raise public health standards. The commercialization of health care systems in the 1990s caused difficulties for many rural people who could not afford the services. More recently, efforts have been made to reestablish public health care and social security systems.

Not only has extensive tree planting enhanced the beauty of most Shandong cities, but “greening” has been officially designated a primary task of urban reconstruction in order to ameliorate the effects of the harsh climate and to improve health conditions. Afforestation efforts in Qingdao have been especially extensive; tree coverage in and around the city now exceeds one-third of the municipality’s total land area. In Jinan a greenbelt has been built on the site of some dilapidated sections of the ancient city wall. Along with urban reforestation, recreational facilities have been expanded, improved, and made readily available for public use.

Education

Most of Shandong’s institutions of higher education are located in the provincial capital, Jinan, with smaller or special-purpose schools scattered widely throughout the province. Among those in Jinan are Shandong University (established 1901), Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine (1958), and Shandong Normal University (1950). Qingdao is China’s major centre for research training in marine science and technology; institutions include the Institute of Oceanology of the Academia Sinica (Chinese Academy of Sciences) and the Ocean University of China (1924), which is under the jurisdiction of the national-level Ministry of Education. Other major institutions include the China University of Petroleum (1953, East China campus) in Dongying, the Shandong Agricultural University (1906) in Tai’an, and the Shandong University of Technology (1956) in Zibo.

Cultural life

Shandong is the ancestral home of both Confucius and Mencius. Its rich cultural and folklore tradition is most clearly evidenced in the temples, shrines, legends, and cults associated with Mount Tai and with the temple, tomb, and ancestral home of Confucius and the Kong family (Confucius’s lineal descendants) at Qufu, northeast of Jining. Most of the temples, shrines, and their surrounding areas either have survived or have been restored, renovated, and converted to public parks so as to assure their preservation as important symbols of the national cultural heritage. Both Mount Tai and the Qufu sites were designated UNESCO World Heritage sites, in 1987 and 1994, respectively.

Mount Tai—known also as Dongyue, or “Eastern Mountain,” to distinguish it from the southern Mount Heng (in Hunan), the central Mount Song (Henan), the western Mount Hua (Shaanxi), and the northern Mount Heng (Shanxi)—is the most prominent of these five sacred mountains where the emperors once offered sacrifices to Heaven and Earth. It was also the place where for centuries Buddhists, Daoists, and Confucianists built more than 250 temples and monuments to honour deified historical personages and to immortalize the sacred presence and supernatural powers of the supreme mountain deity of Mount Tai. The mountain was deified at least as early as Han times, and in the Song dynasty (960–1279) it was elevated by the Zhenzong emperor to the position of “Equal with Heaven.” Incantations and prayers offered to the deity of Mount Tai by countless emperors are inscribed in stelae along the ascent to the summit, and temples are distributed in Tai’an and on the mountain itself.

The Temple of Confucius, Confucius’s tomb, and the residence of the Kong at Qufu are also maintained as national historic monuments. Both the temple and the Kong residence are laid out with elaborate temples, monuments, pavilions, and gates and have collections of stelae dating in some cases from the Han dynasty.

Many famous temples, hot springs, shrines, parks, lakes, and museums are frequented by the populace in other locales. In Jinan—a city famous for its hot springs, where for centuries poets, scholars, and officials enjoyed diverse pleasures—several new parks have been built and old buildings restored. Qingdao, known as the most pleasant beach resort in North China, is also famous for its parks and for Mount Lao, which lies a short distance to the east-northeast along the coast. Coastal resorts also sprang up on the northern shore of the Shandong Peninsula—for example, at Penglai (with its renowned Penglai Pavilion complex) northwest of Yantai, Yantai itself, and Liugongdao Island at Weihai.

Shandong’s cuisine constitutes one of the distinctive cooking styles of the country. It is notable for its use of a wide variety of seafood, especially in coastal areas, as well as onions and salt. Inland, in the Jinan area, dishes tend to feature meats and soups. Whereas coastal cooking typically consists of quick stir-frying or deep-frying, Jinan-style dishes commonly are stewed or slow cooked. Another notable feature of Shandong cuisine are its steamed breads, which often are served in lieu of rice.