China to celebrate cultural and natural heritage day

China will mark its annual Cultural and Natural Heritage Day on Saturday with nationwide events including exhibitions, symposiums and public education programs.

This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the designation of the day, which was known as Cultural Heritage Day before 2017. Over the past two decades, annual museum visits nationwide rose from around 150 million in 2006 to 1.56 billion in 2025, while China's UNESCO World Heritage listings increased from 24 to 60.

President Xi Jinping has consistently prioritized heritage protection. In a 2016 guideline statement, he described cultural relics as a valuable legacy from ancestors and highlighted them as tangible manifestations of the fine traditional culture, or the root and soul of the Chinese nation.

The Archaeological Ruins of Liangzhu City in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, illustrate the approach. Xi ordered the closure of quarries at the site in 2003 when serving as Zhejiang's Party secretary. The site was inscribed on the UNESCO list in 2019, and Hangzhou rolled out new regulations in June to integrate heritage protection with regional development.

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Harari elders and community celebrating UNESCO's inscription of Shuwaliid Baal on the world intangible heritage list in Harar, Ethiopia.
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UNESCO inscribes Harar's Shuwaliid Baal on world intangible heritage list

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UNESCO has inscribed Harar's Shuwaliid Baal on its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Ethiopia's Ministry of Tourism congratulated the achievement, calling it a prominent cultural practice of the Harari people that boosts tourism. Deputy Prime Minister Temesgen echoed the praise.

China's National Cultural Heritage Administration announced a nationwide campaign on Wednesday, mandating piece-by-piece counts of collections in all state-owned museums this year to verify artefacts against records. The order responds directly to systemic mismanagement exposed at the Nanjing Museum, where a renowned Ming dynasty painting valued at US$12.3 million surfaced at a Beijing auction.

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A major exhibition of more than 250 sets of Han dynasty relics, with over 95 per cent shown in Hong Kong for the first time, has opened at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui. Titled “The Majestic Han: A Golden Age of Vigour and Cultural Integration”, it runs until September 20 with free admission. Development chief Bernadette Linn Hon-ho called it a “sequel” to last year’s Tang dynasty showcase.

The “Hong Kong Story” permanent exhibition at the Hong Kong Museum of History reopened on Wednesday after a major revamp emphasising the city's roots in Chinese culture, with visitors expressing mixed reactions. It has been reduced from two storeys to one floor but expanded from eight to 10 galleries, featuring more than 2,800 exhibits. The exhibition's preface states that “shifting tides across China’s vast territory” have “inevitably affected” Hong Kong.

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China recorded an estimated 845.38 million passenger trips during the three-day Qingming Festival holiday, up 6 percent year on year, according to the Ministry of Transport. Memorial services saw nearly 19.29 million visits, while tourism revenue surged in multiple provinces. The overlap with school spring breaks fueled long-distance family travel.

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