City Comparison
Compare two incredible cities side by side — culture, food, local tips, and immersive 4K virtual walks.
Country
🇨🇳 Guizhou
China
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
China
Continent
🇨🇳 Guizhou
Asia
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
Asia
Best Season
🇨🇳 Guizhou
April–October (dragon boat festivals, Miao festivals, mild mountain climate) — Guizhou rarely exceeds 28°C in summer
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
October–April (mild subtropical winter and spring, avoiding summer typhoon season)
Currency
🇨🇳 Guizhou
Chinese Yuan / Renminbi (CNY ¥)
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
Chinese Yuan / Renminbi (CNY ¥)
Greeting
🇨🇳 Guizhou
你好 (Nǐ hǎo); Miao greeting: 嗯哦 (Ǹg ó); Dong greeting: 侬好 (Nong hao)
🇨🇳 Quanzhou
你好 (Nǐ hǎo); locals speak Minnan (闽南语 Hokkien dialect) — the same language spoken by many overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia
Xijiang Miao Village (西江千户苗寨) is best experienced at sunrise or at night — over 1,200 wooden stilt houses (吊脚楼) blanketing a hillside light up after dark like a living constellation. The Long Table Banquet (长桌宴) is offered to visitors during festivals — if you're there during Lusheng Festival (正月十五), the musical horn performances are extraordinary.
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.
🇨🇳 Guizhou Fun Fact
Guizhou is home to over 18 recognised ethnic minorities — more than any other Chinese province. The Miao people of Guizhou maintain the world's most elaborate traditional silver jewellery culture: a Miao bride's headdress can weigh over 15 kg and a full festival costume represents a family's wealth accumulated over generations. Guizhou is also the birthplace of Moutai (茅台) — China's most prestigious and expensive baijiu spirit.
🇨🇳 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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