Citations:Nanking

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English citations of Nanking

US Army Map of Nan-ching (Nanking) 南京
  • 1655, F. Alvarez Semedo, “Bellum Tartaricum”, in The History of That Great and Renowned Monarchy of China[1], E. Tyler, page 256:
    Wherefore he firſt placed his Court at Nanking nee to the bank of that great River of Kiang, which the Chineſſes,in reſpect of the hugh Mountains of water which it diſcharges into the Ocean, call the Son of the Sea :
  • 1693, Robert Morden, “Of China”, in Geography Rectified; or a Description of the World[2], 3rd edition, →OCLC, page 441:
    The Province of Nanking, by the Tartars called Kiangnan, is the ſecond in honour, in magnitude and fertility in all China : It is divided into 14 great Territories, having Cities and Towns an hundred and ten; Nanking, or Kiangning being the Metropolis; a City, that if ſhe did not exceed moſt Cities on the Earth in bigneſs and beauty, yet ſhe was inferior to few, for her Pagodes, her Temples, her Porcelane Towers, her Palaces and Triumphal Arches. Fungiang, Sucheu, Sunkiang, Leucheu, Hoaigan, Ganking, Ningue, Hoeicheu, are alſo eminent places, and of great Note and Trade.
  • 1706, Dionysius Kao, A Short Description of the Vaſt Empire of China[3], London, page 163:
    In China the quantity of Ships is innumerable, as the Sand of the Sea : Thoſe which carry Corn only to Peking amounting to 9999 (*) large Ships, ſufficient to carry above thirty or forty thouſand weight : and their paſſage from Nanking to Peking, being ſeven or eight hundred (†) (Italian) Miles, mostly through Artificial Channels, takes up full ſix Months time.
    . . .
    (†)That our Author muſt here be underſtood to intend Italian Miles is beyond all question : For the extent of the whole Empire from the moſt remote part of it the Iſland of Hainan, to that part of it which borders on the Muſcovian Empire, doth not contain about 8 or 900 Leagues or Hours ; nor is the fartheſt part of Nanking, where the River falls into the Sea, above 250 French or common Dutch Miles ; which according to our Author's account make 7 or 800 (Italian) Miles, which word I have therefore ventured to inſert in a Parentheſis.
  • 1912, Herbert A. Giles, China and The Manchus[4], Cambridge History Press, →OCLC, →OL, page 86:
    By 1857, Imperialist troops were drawing close lines around the rebels, who had begun to lose rather than to gain ground. An-chʻing and Nanking, the only two cities which remained to them, were blockaded, and the Manchu plan was simply to starve the enemy out.
  • 1936, H. Hessell Tiltman, The Far East Comes Nearer[5], Jarrolds, page 250:
    Again, while divided counsels no longer exist at Canton, and both Kwangtung and Kwangsi are now under the control of Nanking, the agreement between Nanking and the Kwangsi war lords depends for its success on the spirit in which it is carried out.
  • 1939, Virgina Holton, The Beeps[6], New York: John Day Company, page 133:
    As my husband's ship stopped for a day or two at Kiu-kiang, Anking, and Wu-hu, enroute to Nanking, I arrived three days before his ship anchored off the bund.
  • 1942 [1942 February 21], Kai-shek Chiang, “One half of the world's people”, in All We Are and All We Have[7], New York: Chinese News Service, →OCLC, page 11:
    As regards barbarities committed by the Japanese army since our war of resistance, the fall of Nanking in December 1937 is a case in point. Over 200,000 civilians were massacred within one week.
  • 1971, Dick Wilson, “Home and Dry in Shensi”, in The Long March 1935: The Epic of Chinese Communism's Survival[8], New York: Viking Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 227:
    At the end of 1927 the Communists were "purged" from the Kuomintang, and although in 1928 a short-lived soviet government had been proclaimed at Hsunyi, it was crushed by General Feng Yu-hsiang's pro-Nanking troops.
  • 1975, Frederic Wakeman, Jr., The Fall of Imperial China[9], page 152:
    On February 18, 1853, Chiu-chiang fell to the rebels, who went on to take Anking. Less than a month later, on March 19, the Taiping forces captured the beautiful city of Nanking, which was renamed T'ien-ching (Heavenly Capital) to commemorate the occasion.
  • 1983 March 20, “Hainan protest over Teng's economic plans”, in Free China Weekly[10], volume XXIV, number 11, Taipei, page 3:
    Wang also accused Hsu of instigating ranking officers in the Nanking Military District to disobey transfer orders....
    On Feb. 22, Hsu attended a “Conference on the Development of Socialist Civilization” in Nanking.
  • 1996 March 15, Michael Evans, “China offensive cannot be ruled out, experts say”, in The Times[11], number 65,528, →ISSN, →OCLC, Overseas News, page 14, column 3:
    The third option would be to mount a missile attack on key targets in Taiwan. Chinese missiles have sufficient range and they would cause considerable damage. They have already demonstrated that their M9 missiles, fired without explosive warheads from a base in the Nanking military district, have been launched successfully, landing inside the two designated target "boxes" northeast and southwest of Taiwan.