City Comparison
Compare two incredible cities side by side — culture, food, local tips, and immersive 4K virtual walks.
Country
🇨🇳 Dalian
China
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
China
Continent
🇨🇳 Dalian
Asia
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
Asia
Best Season
🇨🇳 Dalian
May–October (mild coastal climate, seafood at its peak) or January–February (frozen sea, snow on European-style squares)
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
October–April (mild subtropical winter and spring, avoiding summer typhoon season)
Currency
🇨🇳 Dalian
Chinese Yuan / Renminbi (CNY ¥)
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
Chinese Yuan / Renminbi (CNY ¥)
Greeting
🇨🇳 Dalian
你好 (Nǐ hǎo); Dalian locals speak Northeastern Mandarin (东北话) — a cleaner, accent-free variety
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
你好 (Nǐ hǎo); locals speak Minnan (闽南语 Hokkien dialect) — the same language spoken by many overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia
Dalian's downtown was designed by Russian and Japanese urban planners in the early 1900s and has a distinctly European character — wide circular plazas, tree-lined boulevards, and colonial-era buildings that make it unique among Chinese cities. Xinghai Square is the world's largest city square by area (176 hectares). The coastal road from Xinghai Bay to Bangchuidao Island at sunset is one of the most scenic urban drives in Northeast China.
Quanzhou's old city centre around Tumen Street and Zhongshan Road preserves a remarkable density of temples, mosques, churches, and ancestral halls within a few blocks — testifying to the centuries when it was the world's most cosmopolitan port. The Qingjing Mosque (清净寺) — built in 1009 AD — is one of the oldest functioning mosques in China; the Kaiyuan Temple (开元寺) with its twin Song-dynasty pagodas is the most spectacular Buddhist complex in Fujian.
🇨🇳 Dalian Fun Fact
Dalian was founded as a Russian naval port (Dalny) in 1898 and then captured and rebuilt by Japan (Dairen) from 1905–1945 — it is one of the few Chinese cities with significant Russian and Japanese urban planning imprints simultaneously. The city has no bicycles by local tradition (too hilly and windy) but has one of China's most functional tram networks, with antique trams still running along the seafront.
🇨🇳 Quanzhou Fun Fact
Quanzhou was the world's largest trading port from the 10th–14th centuries — Marco Polo called it 'Zayton' and described it as the greatest port he had ever seen, larger than Venice and Alexandria combined. It sent out China's Maritime Silk Road across Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and East Africa. The city has 22 UNESCO World Heritage monuments recognising its role as the starting point of the Maritime Silk Road, inscribed in 2021.
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