Citations:Taiyuan
Appearance
English citations of Taiyuan
- [1693, Robert Morden, “Of China”, in Geography Rectified; or a Description of the World[1], 3rd edition, →OCLC, page 439:
- Weſtward beyond the Province of Peking lies Xanſi on the North whereof lies the great Wall, and behind that the Tartar Kingdom of Tangu and the Deſert Xamo. This Province is divided into five Counties, having eighty ſix Cities, and tho not very big, yet is pleaſant. The City Taiyven is the Metropolis, which for its Antiquity of Building, ſtately and brave Edifices, is accounted amongſt the beſt Cities of China : At the City Pingiany the Emperor Jau kept his Court within the Walls ; and without the Gates of Fuencheu ſtands two ſtately, ancient, and magnificent Buildings.]
- [1903 [1901 August 9], “Appendix”, in Fire and Sword in Shansi: The Story of the Martyrdom of Foreigners and Chinese Christians[2], Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier, →OCLC, page 318:
- "On Wednesday 7th August 1901 a party from T'ai Yüan Fu, consisting of Mr. Duncan, Dr. Creasy Smith, Major Pereira, and Dr. Edwards, arrived to take part in the memorial service ; Mr. Hoste and Mr. Ernest Taylor of the China Inland Mission having arrived a day or two earlier.]
- 1978 April 9, “Freedom-seekers vow to defeat Reds”, in Free China Weekly[3], volume XIX, number 14, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 1:
- The commitment was made at a meeting held in commemoration of Tomb-Sweeping Day and the third anniversary of President Chiang’s passing on April 5, at Yuanshan in front of the Shrine of the 500 Heroes (dedicated to those who fought to the end at Taiyuan, Shansi province, against the Communists in April 1949).
- 1983, William Hinton, “Introduction: Shansi, Land of the Oxhide Lanterns”, in Shenfan[4], New York: Vintage Books, published 1984, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page xxxiv:
- Taiyuan, the capital of the province, lies on the upper reaches of the Fen surrounded by irrigated ricelands, orchards and vineyards on the mountain slopes, with enormous seams of coal underground. In Shansi all roads lead to Taiyuan, but the roads that radiate out of Taiyuan in every direction lead nowhere.