Postal System Pinyin (original) (raw)

In the early twentieth century, China (starting with the dying Qing Empire) used Postal System Pinyin (郵政式拼音 Hanyu Pinyin: Y�uzh�nsh� Pīnyīn) (unrelated to the modern Hanyu Pinyin), based on Wade-Giles (in particularly, Herbert Giles's A Chinese-English Dictionary) for postal purposes, especially for placenames on letters and stamps, and was not for universal usage. It uses some already common European names of Chinese places that override the Wade-Giles system, and incorporate some dialectalal pronunciations.

The postal system was decided after the Imperial Postal Joint-Session Conference (帝國郵電聯席會議) in spring 1906 in Shanghai.

Main differences with Wade-Giles include:

See also: Romanization