Peking to Paris

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The Peking to Paris motor race is an automobile race, originally held in 1907, between Peking (now Beijing), then Qing China and Paris, France, a distance of 9,317 miles or 14,994 km.
The idea for the race came from a challenge published in the Paris newspaper Le Matin on 31 January 1907, reading:
"What needs to be proved today is that as long as a man has a car, he can do anything and go anywhere. Is there anyone who will undertake to travel this summer from Peking to Paris by automobile?"

Map of the route travelled

1907 teams

There were forty entrants in the race, but only five teams ended up going ahead with shipping the cars to Peking. The race was held despite the race committee cancelling the race.

The 1907 race


Hazards of the road: Borghese & Barzini's Itala having fallen through a bridge
There were no rules in the race, except that the first car to Paris would win the prize of a magnum of Mumm champagne. The race went without any assistance through countryside where there were no roads or road-maps. For the race, camels carrying fuel left Peking and set up at stations along the route, to provide fuel for the racers. The race followed a telegraph route, so that the race was well covered in newspapers at the time. Each car had one journalist as a passenger, with the journalists sending stories from the telegraph stations regularly throughout the race.
It was held during a time when cars were fairly new, and the route traversed remote areas of Asia where people were not familiar with motor travel. The route between Peking and Lake Baikal had only previously been attempted on horseback. The race was won by Italian Prince Scipione Borghese of the Borghese family, accompanied by the journalist Luigi Barzini, Sr. He was confident and had even taken a detour from Moscow to St Petersburg for a dinner which was held for the team, and afterwards headed back to Moscow and rejoined the race. The event was not intended to be a race or competition, but quickly became one due to its pioneering nature and the technical superiority of the Italians' car, a 7,433 cc (453.6 cu in) Itala 35/45 hp.[1]
Second in the race was Charles Goddard in the Spyker; he had no money, had to ask others for petrol, and borrowed his car for the race. He was arrested for fraud near the end of the race. Some of the other cars had difficulties in going up ravines, across mud, quicksand and bridges across rivers not designed for vehicles. The Contal cyclecar became bogged down in the Gobi desert and was not recovered, with the crew lucky to be found alive by locals. Barzini published the book Peking to Paris in 1908, filled with hundreds of pictures.

Re-enactments


The Itala being pulled across unnavigable terrain
Several races have been held to re-enact the event, including the Great Auto Race of 1908 which raced from New York, west to Paris (by sea for part of the way). During most of the twentieth century other re-enactments could not be held, because of the establishment of the USSR after the 1917 Russian Revolution. After glasnost in the early 1990s, racers were again allowed on this race.

1990

In 1990 the London To Peking Motor Challenge was held, which raced in the opposite direction to the original race, from London to Beijing.

1997

In 1997 there was "The Second Peking to Paris Motor Challenge", consisting of 94 vintage cars, which took a more southerly route through Tibet, India, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, Greece and Italy. It was won by the British pair Phil Surtees and John Bayliss, driving a 1943 Willys Jeep. Rosie Thomas, a British novelist, took part in this and funded her team's car by writing a detailed book listing her gruelling but exhilarating rally experience ('Border Crossing', ISBN 1-86049-811-6 ).

2005

On April 18, 2005 a 1973 Fiat 500 made it from Bari, Italy, to Beijing in a 16,000-kilometre (9,900 mi) journey across the whole of Russia and passing through Vladivostok. The route was partially similar to the original one. Driven for 100 days by Danilo Elia and Fabrizio Bonserio, the old and tiny car was followed along its journey by newspapers and television from all over the world. After the long journey, Elia wrote a book entitled La bizzarra impresa (ISBN 88-7480-088-6), in Italian, also available in German by the National Geographic Deutschland (Echt Abgefahren, ISBN 978-3-89405-834-0).
On May 15, 2005 five cars led by Lang Kidby departed Beijing for Paris, retracing the original route with very similar cars to the originals; a 1907 Spyker, a 1907 and a 1912 De Dion-Bouton, a 1907 Itala and a Contal Cycle-car replica. This journey was televised by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in a four-part documentary series entitled Peking to Paris. The show was hosted by Warren Brown, one of two drivers on the Itala and a cartoonist with Sydney newspaper The Daily Telegraph. The Australian crew (driving westward) ran across the Italian Fiat 500 (driving eastward) in a non-planned meeting, somewhere around Krasnojarsk, Russia.

2007

In 2007 the Endurance Rally Association staged a rally to celebrate the centenary of the original 1907 race. Unlike the 1997 event, also staged by Philip Young, which took a southerly route, this event followed more closely the route taken by Prince Borghese in 1907 in the winning Itala. From Beijing competitors went north to the Mongolian border at Zamyn-Üüd and,, as with his original route, north to Ulaan Bataar. The route then went west across Mongolia, crossing the Russian border at Tsagaannuur through Siberia to Moscow, on to St Petersburg (where Prince Borghese attended “a great banqet”) and then through the Baltic states to finish in Paris. 126 veteran, vintage and classic cars took part, the oldest being a 1903 Mercedes. The major challenge of the rally proved to be Mongolia and the Gobi desert with no conventional roads, merely rutted tracks at best. Despite this, no fewer than 106 crossed the finishing line. The rally covered 10,000 miles in 36 days.

2013

The fifth race started at Beijing on 28 May 2013.[2] It was for vintage cars, and was to last 33 days. In the third week, the race was marred by the death of a British participant,[3] mother-of-two Emma Wilkinson, aged 46, in a head-on collision with a vehicle unconnected with the event.

See also

Bibliography

  • Peking to Paris - The Ultimate Driving Adventure - Veloce Publishing
  • The Great Peking to Paris Expedition - Harper Collins - 2005 ISBN 0-7322-8253-5

References

External links