Lovely, laid-back Melbourne has something for everyone: family fare, local and international art, haute boutiques, multicultural dining, Australian and Aboriginal history, spectator sports, and pulsing, swanky nightlife. Cruise on the free City Circle Tram loop to check out unique attractions like the Royal Botanical Gardens and the Healesville Sanctuary, which buzzes with local animal species.
Restaurants in Melbourne
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Sun Yat-sen was a medical doctor, but he spent most of his life promoting revolution in China. Eventually he was successful. The Xinhai Revolution (1911) overthrew 5,000 years of imperial rule. Dr Sun was the first President of the Republic of China. He is revered by Chinese everywhere. His life-sized state can be seen in Chinatown, near the Chinese Museum. It is a good likeness.
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Chinatown is in LIttle Bourke Street, running from Spring Street to Swanston Street. Apart from restaurants, it has a range of community facilities, such as the Chinese Museum. There are lots of restaurants to choose from, from the budget dumplng restaurtant in Tattersalls Lane to the Flower Drum in Market Lane, widely regarded as one of Australiia's best restaurants of any sort. There's lots to see in Chinatown. By the way, in Chinese Chinarown is known as Han Ren Jie, or "Street of the Han people." The Han Dynasty was one of the great Chinese dynasties, it flourished around the same time as the Roman Empire.
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