Citations:Chiangling

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English citations of Chiangling

  • 1971, “Historical Relic Unearthed During the Cultural Revolution”, in Eastern Horizon[1], volume X, number 5, Hong Kong: Eastern Horizon Press, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 26, column 2:
    A group of bronzes of the late Western Chou were uncovered in Chingshan County, Hupeh Province, and 25 pieces of stone ching (musical chimes) with a painted design of the State of Chu were found in Chiangling County of the same province.
  • 1975 August 29, “A Well-Preserved 2,140-Year-Old Male Corpse Unearthed”, in Peking Review[2], volume 35, →OCLC, pages 21–22:
    The tomb was discovered this year during construction work on Fenghuangshan (Phoenix Hill) in the town of Chinancheng, Chiangling County, Hupeh Province.
  • 1975 October, “Newly-Found Han Tomb Relics and Male Corpse”, in China Reconstructs[3], volume XXIV, number 10, Peking, →OCLC, page 40, column 1:
    The tomb was discovered on Fenghuangshan (Phoenix Hill) in Chinancheng, Chiangling county, in China’s central Hupeh province. An inscription on a bamboo tablet found in it shows that the corpse was interred in the fifth moon of the 13th year of the reign of Emperor Wen, that is, in 167 B.C.