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Russian Manchuria
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/28 22:07 UTC 版)
固有名詞
Russian Manchuria
- The part of Russia near northeastern China (including Primorsky Krai and other nearby areas) which was annexed by the Russian Empire in the mid 19th century and understood as part of Manchuria. [from mid-19th c.]
- 1898, Isabella Bird Bishop, Korea and Her Neighbors, Yonsei University Press, published 1970, →OCLC, pages 223, 242-243:
THE chief object of my visit to Russian Manchuria was to settle for myself by personal investigation the vexed question of the condition of those Koreans who have found shelter under the Russian flag, a number estimated in Seoul at 20,000. […]
When China ceded to Russia in 1860 the region which we call Russian Manchuria, she probably did so in ignorance of its vast agricultural capacities and mineral wealth. […]
Grass, timber, water, coal, minerals, a soil as rich as the prairies of Illinois, and a climate not only favorable to agriculture but to human health, all await the settler, and the broad, unoccupied, and fertile lands which Russian Manchuria offers are clamoring for inhabitants. - 1980, Russell Warren Howe, “"Disarmament": More Poker Than Stripping”, in Weapons: The International Game of Arms, Money and Diplomacy, 1st edition, Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 243:
- 2015, Michael E. O'Hanlon, “Conflicts Real, Latent, and Imaginable”, in The Future of Land Warfare, Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 55:
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Russian Manchuria.
- 1898, Isabella Bird Bishop, Korea and Her Neighbors, Yonsei University Press, published 1970, →OCLC, pages 223, 242-243:
- The part of Manchuria (in northeast China) controlled during some periods by Russia or the USSR.
- 2015, Michael Meyer, “To the Manchuria Station!”, in In Manchuria: A Village called Wasteland and the Transformation of Rural China, Bloomsbury Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 115–116:
Simpson’s visit left him “thoughtful and a little sad. Harbin is the very center of Manchuria ... a place which will be reached for at all costs by the enemy. Who is to conquer in the climax of national anger, hatred and greed, which must come some day and tear this fair country?” He hoped the battle would be won by numbers alone: 30,000 Russians lived in Harbin alongside 250,000 Chinese. “Russian Manchuria is something of a myth made possible by a gigantic bluff,” he wrote. “It is a remnant of 1900 and China under foreign occupation. Even if there is no force used, Chinese ingenuity alone may push Russia back to the Amur [River].”
Instead it was the Japanese who did the pushing, at least from Port Arthur, at the southern tip of Manchuria, to Harbin in the far north. After the armies of eight Western nations occupied Beijing in 1901 to break a siege of foreign embassies by rebels known as the Boxers, Russia kept an enormous force—177,000 soldiers—in Manchuria long after the other armies had withdrawn. In 1903, Bertram Lenox Simpson arrived in Jilin city to see the Russian tricolor flying and Russian troops patrolling the streets and running the telegraph office. Simpson predicted that Russia’s position in Manchuria would overextend the czar’s army and drain his treasury. - For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Russian Manchuria.
- 2015, Michael Meyer, “To the Manchuria Station!”, in In Manchuria: A Village called Wasteland and the Transformation of Rural China, Bloomsbury Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 115–116:
参考
- Dauria
- Outer Manchuria
- Primorsky Krai
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