Classroom lesson 路 The Great Wall of China馃嚚馃嚦 China

The Great Wall of China

One of the most amazing pieces of building work ever made by people

The Great Wall winding over green mountains at Jinshanling

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Great Wall of China is an enormous wall that snakes across mountains, deserts and grasslands in northern China. If you stretched it out into a straight line, it would be over 21,000 kilometres long - more than halfway around the whole Earth. It was built and added to over hundreds of years.

Tell me more

The Great Wall is not one wall. It is many walls, joined and rebuilt across more than 2,000 years by different rulers. The most famous parts that visitors see today were built about 500 years ago, during the Ming dynasty, using huge grey bricks and stone.

People often think the Wall is one smooth ribbon, but really it climbs over the tops of mountains and dips down into valleys. Walking it would mean climbing thousands of stone steps. Some sections are so steep you almost have to use your hands.

Building it was an incredible job. Workers carried each brick up the mountains by hand or with the help of donkeys. There were no diggers, no cranes and no trucks. Every brick was lifted into place by people.

Watchtowers sit along the Wall, roughly every few hundred metres. People used to light fires in them at night so messages could be passed quickly from one end of the Wall to the other - a kind of slow-motion text message, made of smoke and flame.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What would it have felt like to be a worker carrying bricks up a mountain, day after day?
  2. 02Before phones, how did people send messages over long distances? What clever ideas can you think of?
  3. 03Why do you think a building so big and so old still matters to people today?
Try this

Classroom activity

On the playground, mark out 100 metres with chalk. The Great Wall is over 21,000 km - work out, as a class, how many times you would have to walk that 100 metres to match the length of the whole Wall.