Hankow - Weblio 英和・和英辞典 (original) (raw)
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Hankow
固有名詞
Hankow
- Alternative form of Hankou
- 1883, George H. Preble, A Chronological Study of the Origin and Development of Steam Navigation[1], Philadelphia: L. R. Hamersly & Co., page 225:
In February, 1860, the Yang-tse was for the first time opened by treaty to the ships of other nations, and the “Scotland,” commanded by Captain A. D. Dundas, R. N., and belonging to W. S. Lindsay, an auxiliary screw steamship of 1,100 tons gross register, was the first foreign merchant vessel which loaded a cargo from Shanghai to Hankow, bringing back teas for transshipment to Europe and America; but it was not until 1863 that any English vessel loaded a cargo direct from Hankow for Great Britain. - 1922, Bertrand Russell, The Problem of China[2], London: George Allen & Unwin, OCLC 470194205, OL 7131502M, page 75:
Hankow, a very important Treaty Port, is almost exactly in the centre of China. North and South China are divided by the Yangtze; East and West China are divided by the route from Peking to Canton. These two dividing lines meet at Hankow, which has long been an important strategical point in Chinese history. From Peking to Hankow there is a railway, formerly Franco- Belgian, now owned by the Chinese Government. From Wuchang, opposite Hankow on the southern bank of the river, there is to be a railway to Canton, but at present it only runs half-way, to Changsha, also a Treaty Port. The completion of the railway, together with improved docks, will greatly increase the importance of Canton and diminish that of Hong-Kong. - Besides engaging in regular evangelistic activity, Rev. Meyer taught for some time in the Chinese Lutheran Theological seminary in Hankow. From 1937 to 1940 he was acting superintendent of the Luthern orphanage at Enshih in southwest Hupeh.
- 1974, D. E. H. Russell, Rebellion, Revolution, and Armed Force[5], Academic Press, →ISBN, LCCN 74-7205, OCLC 869935340, OL 5046760M, page 111:
- In the winter of 1926 my mother, eldest sister, Madame K'ung and I left Shanghai for Hankow to visit our brother T.V. and our other sister. Hankow and Wuchang, the twin cities in eastern Central China, often shortened to the acronym Wuhan, made ever famous in Chinese history and folklore by the tales of the Three Kingdoms, are situated on the opposite banks of the Yangtze River. Wuchang in that year became the provisional situs of the Nationalist Government while Hankow was where most of the executive government offices were located.
- 1883, George H. Preble, A Chronological Study of the Origin and Development of Steam Navigation[1], Philadelphia: L. R. Hamersly & Co., page 225:
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