Where is Dongjiaominxiang occupied by Eight-Nation Alliance during the war of aggression against China?
Dongjiaomin Lane is the embassy district of old China. Dongjiaomin Lane is an alley in Dongcheng District, Beijing. In the old society, it was originally called Dongjiang Rice Lane because it was a place for grain transportation. Hutong starts from Tiananmen Square East Road in the west and reaches Chongwenmennei Street in the east, with a total length of nearly 3 kilometers. It is the longest hutong in old Beijing. After 1928, embassies of various countries moved to Nanjing one after another, but the former site of Dongjiaominxiang was not abandoned, and the existing buildings remained basically the same, mostly for the offices of state organs. There are Beijing Public Security Bureau, the Supreme People's Court, the Supreme People's Procuratorate, China Youth Travel Service, Foreign Ministry Guest House, Xinqiao Hotel and Hongdu Fashion Company along the street. After 1949, it will still be used as the embassy area. Embassies of the GDR, Hungary, Myanmar and other countries that established diplomatic relations with People's Republic of China (PRC) continued to use the old buildings here until 1959 moved to the first embassy district in Sanlitun outside Chaoyangmen. During the Cultural Revolution, due to its historical particularity, the street name was changed to "Anti-imperialist Road" and many western-style buildings were destroyed. /kloc-since the 1980s, with the development of Beijing's urban construction, the buildings in Dongjiaomin Lane have also been impacted, and the former sites of HSBC, Jardine Matheson and Russia Pavilion have been demolished due to widening roads. Dehua Bank 1992 was demolished; The former site of the Japanese Embassy was occupied by the Beijing Municipal Government; Many high-rise buildings and modern buildings have been built on the street, and the style of the whole street has been greatly damaged. At present, Dongjiaomin Lane is a cultural relic protection block in Beijing. Protected by the cultural relics department.