Chengde is 220 kilometers away from Beijing and takes 3 hours by car.
Summer resort, Eight Outer Temples, Bangchui Mountain and other attractions.
Qinhuangdao is 280 kilometers away from Beijing.
Attractions within a 3.5-hour drive include Beidaihe, Nandaihe, Pigeon Nest, and the place where Emperor Qin entered the sea to seek immortality.
Shijiazhuang is 280 kilometers away from Beijing and takes 3 hours by car.
Attractions include Baoduzhai, Xibaipo, Tiangui Mountain, and Zhangjiakou is 200 kilometers away from Beijing and takes 2.5 hours by car.
Dajingmen, grassland road.
The Eight Outer Temples are the collective name for the eight Tibetan Buddhist temples in the northeastern part of the Chengde Summer Resort in Hebei Province.
The Eight Outer Temples were built successively from the 52nd year of Emperor Kangxi's reign (1713) to the 45th year of Emperor Qianlong's reign (1780).
At that time, there were forty temples directly under the Lifanyuan in Beijing and Chengde, 32 in the capital and eight in Chengde. Because Chengde was located outside Beijing and the Great Wall, it was called the Eight Outer Temples; including Puren Temple,
Pushan Temple (now gone), Puning Temple, Anyuan Temple, Putuo Zongcheng Temple, Shuxiang Temple, Xumi Fushou Temple, Guangyuan Temple.
Xibaipo is located in the middle of Pingshan County, Shijiazhuang City, Hebei Province, with a total area of ??16,440 square meters. It was once the seat of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. The Party Central Committee and Chairman Mao commanded the three major battles of Liaoshen, Huaihai, and Pingjin here that shocked China and foreign countries.
The Second Plenary Session of the Seventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the National Land Conference were held with great historical significance to liberate the whole of China. Therefore, it has the reputation of "New China came from here" and "China's destiny is determined in this village".
It is one of the holy places of revolution in my country, a national key cultural relic protection unit and a national AAAAA-level tourist attraction.
The center of Beijing is located at 39 degrees 54 minutes 20 seconds north latitude and 116 degrees 25 minutes 29 seconds east longitude.
Located in the northern part of the North China Plain.
It is adjacent to the Bohai Bay, the Liaodong Peninsula above, and the Shandong Peninsula below.
Beijing is adjacent to Tianjin and, together with Tianjin, is surrounded by Hebei Province.
To the west is the Xishan Mountains, the remnants of the Taihang Mountains, and to the north is the Jundu Mountains of the Yanshan Mountains. The two mountains intersect at Nankou Guangou, forming a large semicircular mountain bend that expands to the southeast. People call it the "Beijing Bend".
The small plain is the Beijing small plain.
As the ancients said: "The land of Youzhou is surrounded by the sea on the left, Taihang on the right, Juyong on the north, and Heji on the south. It is a land of abundance."
The average altitude of Beijing is 43.5 meters.
The altitude of Beijing plains ranges from 20 to 60 meters, while the mountains generally range from 1,000 to 1,500 meters above sea level.
Climate environment Beijing's climate is a typical north temperate zone semi-humid continental monsoon climate, with hot and rainy summers, cold and dry winters, and short spring and autumn.
The frost-free period lasts 180 to 200 days throughout the year, and is shorter in the western mountainous areas.
The average rainfall in 2007 was 483.9 mm, making it one of the areas with the highest rainfall in North China.
The seasonal distribution of precipitation is very uneven. 80% of the annual precipitation is concentrated in the three months of June, July and August in summer, and there are heavy rains in July and August.