PreeChina · City Guide
Ma’anshan
The city of Li Bai’s final years — where China’s greatest poet drank wine at the Yangtze River’s edge, where the Battle of Red Cliffs’ prelude played out at Caishi Ji, and where the river still carries the weight of two thousand years of literary imagination.
At a Glance
Ma’anshan Quick Facts
Why Ma’anshan
Why Visit Ma’anshan?
Ma’anshan occupies a peculiar and privileged position in Chinese literary history: it was the city where Li Bai — widely considered the greatest poet in the Chinese language — spent the last years of his life, and where he died in 762 AD. The Li Bai Cultural Park and the Caishi Ji scenic area, built around the cliff where Li Bai repeatedly sat drinking wine and watching the Yangtze River, are the primary pilgrimage destinations for lovers of Tang Dynasty poetry — and for any traveler with an appreciation for the intersection of landscape and literary imagination.
Caishi Ji is not simply a memorial site — it is a genuinely dramatic landscape in its own right: a rocky cliff rising directly from the Yangtze River bank, with views across the broad river that have remained essentially unchanged since Li Bai sat here 1,260 years ago. The poet’s celebrated last poem — describing a heron taking flight from the cliff above the river — was written at this exact location. Downstream, the same river carries the legends of the Three Kingdoms period; the Battle of Caishi in 208 AD, a prelude to the decisive naval battle at Red Cliffs, was fought in these waters.
Ma’anshan’s Tianmen Mountain — not to be confused with the more famous Tianmen in Zhangjiajie — offers a pleasant forested mountain park with river views and Buddhist temples on the city’s outskirts. Combined with the Yangtze River waterfront and the city’s excellent freshwater fish culture, it makes for a full and satisfying day trip from Nanjing, or a comfortable overnight stay for travelers seeking a quieter alternative to the major Yangtze Delta destinations.
Top Attractions
Best Attractions in Ma’anshan
Caishi Ji — Li Bai Scenic Area (采石矶·李白文化园)
The most important Li Bai heritage site in China, Caishi Ji is the rocky cliff above the Yangtze River where the great Tang Dynasty poet spent his final years, writing poems that describe the cliff, the river, and the cranes that nested in its rocky face. The Li Bai Memorial Hall documents the poet’s life with original manuscripts and historical artifacts; the cliff itself provides the same view of the Yangtze that inspired his final works; and the Taibai Tower — rebuilt multiple times but always on the site of the original — is the most traditionally significant viewpoint above the river. For anyone who has read Li Bai’s poetry, standing at this cliff is an experience of immediate and powerful literary resonance.
Tianmen Mountain Scenic Area (天门山风景区)
Ma’anshan’s Tianmen Mountain rises 321 meters above the Yangtze plain on the city’s western edge, offering forested hiking trails, Buddhist temple complexes, and panoramic views across the river and the Anhui lowlands. The mountain’s name — “Heavenly Gate Mountain” — refers to a natural gateway formation in the rock face that frames views of the river below. Li Bai himself wrote a celebrated poem about the Tianmen Mountain view (“Two Heavenly Gate peaks part to let the Chu River through”), and visiting the viewpoint where the poem was written provides a specifically literary encounter with the Yangtze landscape that few mountains in Anhui can match.
Yangtze River Waterfront (长江风光带)
Ma’anshan’s position on the Yangtze River bank gives it a riverside character that most Anhui cities lack — a broad waterfront promenade with views across the great river that genuinely evoke the landscape Li Bai described in his poetry. The river at Ma’anshan is wide, slow, and immensely powerful; watching the cargo ships pass and the sun set over the far bank while standing on the same riverbank where Li Bai composed his final poems creates a connection between literary imagination and physical reality that the reader of Chinese poetry will find deeply satisfying. The waterfront is most beautiful at dawn and dusk.
Zhuque Lake Park & City Gardens (朱雀湖公园)
Ma’anshan’s urban green spaces reflect the city’s ambition to combine its industrial identity — it is one of China’s major steel producers — with a livable garden character that its proximity to the Yangtze Delta enables. Zhuque Lake Park, with its lotus ponds, willow-lined paths, and traditional pavilion architecture, is the city’s most popular recreational space; in spring (when the cherry blossoms on the lakeside paths flower) and autumn (when the lotus seed pods stand above the water), it provides a pleasant complement to the literary and historical sites outside the city center.
Eat Like a Local
Ma’anshan Food You Should Try
Yangtze River Shad (长江鲥鱼)
The Yangtze shad (Tenualosa reevesii) — once the most prized freshwater fish in China, historically presented as tribute to the imperial court — is celebrated in Ma’anshan as the definitive spring delicacy, though wild stocks have declined dramatically and the fish now served is primarily farmed from Yangtze stock. Steamed with only ham, mushroom, and rice wine in a sealed clay pot, the shad’s fat-rich flesh cooks in its own moisture to a silky richness that no other preparation can achieve. The scales are left on during steaming — the fat beneath them bastes the flesh as they cook. Available in specialist restaurants from April through June, priced at a premium that reflects the fish’s legendary status.
Yangtze River Hairy Crab (长江大闸蟹)
The Yangtze River hairy crab (Chinese mitten crab) from the Ma’anshan section of the river is considered a peer of the famous Yangcheng Lake crabs — the same species, the same clean cold water, with a golden roe of remarkable richness in the autumn (October–November) season. Steamed whole and eaten with a dipping sauce of black vinegar and julienned ginger, the Yangtze hairy crab is one of those seasonal Chinese foods whose brief availability makes each eating an event: fingers stained with orange crab roe, a cup of warm Shaoxing rice wine, and the river visible through the restaurant window.
Ma’anshan Soup Dumplings (马鞍山小笼包)
Ma’anshan’s proximity to both Nanjing and the Anhui interior has produced a dumpling culture that blends the refined soup dumpling tradition of the Yangtze Delta with the more robust fillings of Anhui cooking. The local xiaolongbao — thin, pleated wrappers enclosing a pork and crab roe filling with a concentrated broth that erupts on the first bite — are smaller and slightly thicker-skinned than the Shanghai version, with a filling that is richer and more intensely flavored. Eaten at a Ma’anshan breakfast restaurant with a bowl of rice congee, they represent the city’s culinary identity at its most approachable and most locally specific.
Li Bai’s Rice Wine (太白酒·黄酒)
Ma’anshan’s most culturally resonant beverage: the local huangjiu (yellow rice wine) that Li Bai himself drank while sitting at Caishi Ji cliff above the Yangtze River — a tradition of consuming warm, amber-colored rice wine at the cliff’s edge that has continued, in various forms, for 1,260 years since the poet’s death there in 762 AD. The Ma’anshan huangjiu, slightly sweeter and less acidic than Shaoxing’s more famous equivalent, is best drunk warm from a small ceramic cup at a riverside restaurant overlooking the Yangtze — a self-consciously literary pleasure that the city’s restaurants actively facilitate for visitors who arrive knowing the poetry.
Immersive Experiences
Cultural Experiences in Ma’anshan
Caishi Ji at Sunset
Stand at the cliff where Li Bai wrote his final poems as the Yangtze turns gold below — the same view, the same river, unchanged in the 1,260 years since China’s greatest poet sat here.
Tianmen Mountain River View
Climb to the viewpoint where Li Bai watched “Two Heavenly Gate peaks part to let the Chu River through” — the exact landscape of a Tang Dynasty poem, still recognizable 1,300 years later.
Yangtze Riverfront at Dawn
Walk the Ma’anshan waterfront as the Yangtze catches the first light — the broad river, the cargo ships, and the distant bank creating the landscape that produced some of the finest poetry in Chinese literary history.
Li Bai Memorial Hall
Walk through the memorial documenting China’s greatest poet — manuscripts, historical artifacts, and the story of a life that ended at this cliff above this river, leaving behind a literary legacy unequalled in Chinese poetry.
Hairy Crab by the River
Eat steamed Yangtze hairy crab at a riverside restaurant in October as the river flows past outside — warm rice wine, golden roe, and the landscape that inspired a thousand years of Chinese poetry.
Trip Planning
Best Time to Visit Ma’anshan
| Season | Highlights | Weather |
|---|---|---|
| 🌸 Spring (Mar–May) |
Yangtze shad season (April–June) — the most prized seasonal fish; cherry blossom at Zhuque Lake (March); Caishi Ji most atmospheric in spring mist; Tianmen Mountain wildflowers; river at spring high water; most beautiful season overall | 8–22 °C (46–72 °F). Mild and occasionally rainy. Light layers. Spring mist on the Yangtze creates an atmospheric landscape that perfectly suits the literary character of the city’s heritage. |
| ☀️ Summer (Jun–Aug) |
Yangtze River at summer high water — most dramatic; Zhuque Lake lotus in bloom; evening riverfront walks; Caishi Ji most accessible; river cruise culture most active; Li Bai Memorial Hall most visited | 24–34 °C (75–93 °F). Hot and humid. Morning visits recommended for outdoor sites. The Yangtze at summer flood provides the most powerful impression of the river’s scale and force. |
| 🍂 Autumn (Sep–Nov) |
Best overall season; hairy crab season (October–November); Caishi Ji most beautiful in autumn light; Tianmen Mountain forest in color; Yangtze River most calm and most scenic; warm rice wine culture most appropriate; clear skies for river photography | 10–24 °C (50–75 °F). Crisp and clear. The finest season — hairy crab, autumn foliage, and the river at its most photogenic combine into an experience of considerable pleasure. |
| ❄️ Winter (Dec–Feb) |
Caishi Ji most solitary and most atmospheric; Yangtze River mist in cold weather; warm huangjiu rice wine at riverside restaurants; fewest visitors; literary heritage sites accessible without crowds; winter river scenery stark and beautiful | 2–12 °C (36–54 °F). Cool to cold. Light to medium winter layers. Chuzhou winters are mild — the river in winter mist creates the most atmospheric landscape photography conditions of the year. |
Travel with Confidence
Why Choose PreeChina
Local Expert Guides
Our Ma’anshan specialists provide Caishi Ji visits with Li Bai poetry readings at the cliff — bringing the literary landscape alive in a way that independent visits rarely achieve — and know the riverside restaurant with the finest Yangtze hairy crab in October.
Flexible Itineraries
Ma’anshan works perfectly as a day trip from Nanjing (40 km) or as a stop on an Anhui Yangtze River itinerary combining Ma’anshan, Wuhu, and Tongling — following the river through its most literarily significant stretch.
24/7 English Support
From first inquiry to final farewell, our English-speaking team is always available to assist, advise, and troubleshoot — before, during, and after your Ma’anshan journey.
Private Transportation
Comfortable vehicles for Nanjing–Ma’anshan transfers and for combining Caishi Ji, Tianmen Mountain, the Yangtze waterfront, and Zhuque Lake Park in a well-paced single-day itinerary.
Authentic Experiences
We arrange Li Bai poetry readings at Caishi Ji cliff, Tianmen Mountain sunrise hikes, Yangtze River autumn hairy crab dinners, warm huangjiu tastings at riverside restaurants, and dawn waterfront photography walks.
Plan Your Customized Trip to Ma’anshan
Tell us your interests, travel dates, and preferences, and our local Ma’anshan experts will design a personalized China journey — just for you.
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