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Citations:Hailar

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English citations of Hailar

Map including HU-LUN (HAILAR) 呼倫 (海拉爾) (AMS, 1951)
  • 1874 June 22, Henry Bartle Frere, Address to the Royal Geographical Society[1], page clxxvi:
    After visiting Hailar, the trade centre of North-Eastern Mongolia and Trans-Hingan Manchuria, Dr. Fritsche entered Russian territory at Tsurukhaitu.
  • 1922, Lien Teh Wu, “Plague in the Orient with Special Reference to the Manchurian Outbreaks”, in Addresses & Papers, Dedication Ceremonies and Medical Conference, Peking Union Medical College, September 15-22, 1921[2], Concord, New Hampshire: Rumford Press, →OCLC, page 193:
    The first outbreak continued without any interruption at Manchouli and passed on to the other cities until its suppression in the following April. The second outbreak did not show its full virulence until November, at Hailar, where I personally examined the early bubonic cases and saw the gradual evolution through the septicemic into the pulmonary form.
  • 1957, James William Morley, The Japanese Thrust into Siberia, 1918[3], Columbia University Press, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 85:
    From the time the Allies invited them into Harbin (the end of December, 1917), Chinese troops had been moving rapidly along the Chinese Eastern Railway to take over garrison duties throughout the zone.⁹ According to Semenov, it was only through a combination of force and trickery that he was able to keep Hailar and Manchouli out of their hands.¹⁰
  • [1962, Shih Ch'eng-chih, “Urban Communes and Natural Calamities”, in Urban Commune Experiments Communist China[4], Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, published 1974, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 123–124:
    Not only the larger cities are setting up urban communes, even the small, remote places are doing so, for example, Haikung city on Hainan Island set up an urban commune with four sub-communes and nineteen factories during the first ten days of June, 1960,³ while it is reported that Hailaerh city in Inner Mongolia set up three urban communes at Hsiangchun, Chengyang and Ch'iaot'ou by using educational, planning, organizational, consolidating and elevating methods to carry out the Party call for the establishment of communes and set them up in thirty-five days because, it is said, they could not wait any longer.⁴]
  • [1976, Hata Ikuhiko, “The Japanese-Soviet Confrontation, 1935–1939”, in James William Morley, editor, Deterrent Diplomacy: Japan, Germany, and the USSR, 1935-1940: Selected translations from Taiheiyō sensō e no michi: kaisen gaikō shi (Studies of The East Asian Institute)‎[5], New York: Columbia University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 134:
    Next day elements of Lieutenant-General Hasunuma Shigeru's Cavalry Group from Hailaerh (Hulun), which had been undertaking the defense of the region, moved up pursuant to orders from the Kwantung Army commander.]
  • 1985 December 25, “SOVIET AIRLINER REPORTEDLY HIJACKED TO CHINA”, in The New York Times[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 24 May 2015, section 1, page 4‎[7]:
    The aircraft was reported to have landed at Hailar, a city of about 100,000 people in Inner Mongolia about 70 miles from the Soviet border.
  • 2021 November 28, Roxanne Liu, Gabriel Crossley, “Parts of northern China tighten curbs on new COVID-19 flare-ups”, in Kim Coghill, Gerry Doyle, editors, Reuters[8], archived from the original on 29 November 2021, China[9]:
    Hailar district, an administrative division about three hours away from Manzhouli, has blocked some roads linking it to the outside and required people arriving from Manzhouli to be quarantined at centralised facilities for two weeks.