It was a bright autumn afternoon in London. At Imperial College's Huxley Building, home to the Department of Computing, new students filled the corridors while graduates posed for photographs in the courtyard.
Last month, Wang Weilian, 43, won the 21st Baihua Literature Award in the science fiction category for the short story Yige Xiezuo Biaoyanzhe De Zuihou Aiqing (literally, The Last Love of a Writing Performer).
The performance of Kunqu Opera classics from the Imperial Palace at Shanghai Grand Theatre on Friday night marked the opening of the 24th China Shanghai International Arts Festival.
A single spectacular view swoops from forest to shrubland to desert to snowcaps, Erik Nilsson reports.
Ahigh-speed train specially chartered for basketball fans arrived in Taizhou from Hangzhou in Zhejiang province last month, part of a joint initiative by rail and tourism authorities to stimulate regional economic activity through sport.
Two volumes of an ancient Chinese silk manuscript illegally taken overseas 79 years ago have returned to their home in Changsha, Central China's Hunan province.
Beyond the misty peaks and lush valleys that define its picturesque landscape, Lushan Mountain in Jiangxi province offers a rich, tangible tapestry of history woven from ancient temples, villas, and inscriptions left by scholars and monks.
In the sun-drenched vineyards of Rizui village, nestled along the banks of the Lancang River in Dechen county, five young women move briskly between rows of ripened grapes. The harvest season has arrived, marking the culmination of a year's worth of labor and care.
Four villages in China were honored as Best Tourism Villages by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UN Tourism) at an award ceremony held in Huzhou city, East China’s Zhejiang province, on Friday.
On the occasion of the 235th anniversary of Huiju Opera's arrival in Beijing, a new generation of performers is stepping forward to carry the centuries-old art form into the future, infusing it with youthful vigor and creative passion.
For 25-year-old Pang Zheng from Hunan province, a cherished childhood memory is dining with her parents while watching News and Science, a program on Hunan Satellite TV that verifies and interprets phenomena through experiments and data.
Strolling through bustling blocks, relaxing at massage parlors, or killing time at a roadside tea or coffee shop, such leisurely practices of "slow living" are gaining popularity among locals and tourists in Southwest China's Chongqing municipality.