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==History==
 
==History==
Some notable settlement existed in the area since at least the [[Sui Dynasty]], when the first version of the [[Grand Canal]] connected this area to the capital region of [[Luoyang]] and [[Chang'an]] to the west. The city gained greater significance in [[1264]] or [[1271]] when it was named capital of the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan Dynasty]], called at that time [[Dadu]] ("great metropolis"). The Mongol city fell to the rebel [[Hongwu Emperor|Zhu Yuanzhang]] in [[1368]], who then established the Ming Dynasty, naming [[Nanjing]] his capital.
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Some notable settlement existed in the area since at least the [[Sui Dynasty]], when the first version of the [[Grand Canal]] connected this area to the capital region of [[Luoyang]] and [[Chang'an]] to the west. The city gained greater significance in [[1264]] or [[1271]] when it was named capital of the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan Dynasty]], called at that time Khanbaliq or [[Dadu]] (大都, "great metropolis"). The Mongol city fell to the rebel [[Hongwu Emperor|Zhu Yuanzhang]] in [[1368]], who then established the Ming Dynasty, naming [[Nanjing]] his capital.
    
Renovations or expansion of the [[Grand Canal]], completed in [[1415]], connected Beijing more fully and effectively with [[Hangzhou]] and other major cities of the south; this marked the beginning of a significant shift in Ming trade patterns and attitudes, with the country turning inwards to a considerable extent; domestic trade networks connecting with the canal thrived while overseas ventures declined.
 
Renovations or expansion of the [[Grand Canal]], completed in [[1415]], connected Beijing more fully and effectively with [[Hangzhou]] and other major cities of the south; this marked the beginning of a significant shift in Ming trade patterns and attitudes, with the country turning inwards to a considerable extent; domestic trade networks connecting with the canal thrived while overseas ventures declined.
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