Citations:Jhongshan
Appearance
English citations of Jhongshan
In Taipei, Taiwan
[edit]- 2008, Nick French, Asian Ways: A Westerner's Guide to Asian Business Etiquette[1], Aardvark Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 59:
- Many trendy and expensive restaurants can be found in and around Taipei 101. The Jhongshan district is full of nightclubs and Karoake bars and has remnants of Japanese forms of entertainment.
- 2008, Li-ling Huang, “Taipei — Post-industrial Globalisation”, in Gavin W. Jones, Mike Douglass, editors, Mega-Urban Regions in Pacific Asia: Urban Dynamics in a Global Era[2], Singapore: NUS Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 221–222:
- The core is Taipei Municipality and includes the 12 districts of Beitou, Shihlin, Neihu, Jhongshan, Wanhua, Songshan, Datong, Daan, Sinyi, Nangang, Wunshan, and Jhongjheng. All residents are classified as urban. The inner ring crosses the boundaries of three cities and counties. It covers the seven wards of Keelung City (Jhongshan, Jhongjheng, Sinyi, Renai, Anle, Nuannuan and Cidu), a few more urbanised townships within Taipei Prefecture (Danshuei, Sijhih, Shidian, Jhonghe, Yonghe, Banchiao, Tucheng, Shulin, Shingjhuang, Sanchong, Lujhou, Wugu, Taishan, and Yingge); Taoyuan City, Jhongli City, Gueishan, Bade, and Pingjhen townships of Taoyuan Prefecture.
- n.d., “Locations and Directions”, in 六福居 [Leofoo Residences][3], archived from the original on 15 May 2019[4]:
- The Leofoo Residences is situated in the vibrant center of the Jhongshan District, in the heart of downtown Taipei.
In Keelung, Taiwan
[edit]- 2008, Li-ling Huang, “Taipei — Post-industrial Globalisation”, in Gavin W. Jones, Mike Douglass, editors, Mega-Urban Regions in Pacific Asia: Urban Dynamics in a Global Era[5], Singapore: NUS Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 221–222:
- The core is Taipei Municipality and includes the 12 districts of Beitou, Shihlin, Neihu, Jhongshan, Wanhua, Songshan, Datong, Daan, Sinyi, Nangang, Wunshan, and Jhongjheng. All residents are classified as urban. The inner ring crosses the boundaries of three cities and counties. It covers the seven wards of Keelung City (Jhongshan, Jhongjheng, Sinyi, Renai, Anle, Nuannuan and Cidu), a few more urbanised townships within Taipei Prefecture (Danshuei, Sijhih, Shidian, Jhonghe, Yonghe, Banchiao, Tucheng, Shulin, Shingjhuang, Sanchong, Lujhou, Wugu, Taishan, and Yingge); Taoyuan City, Jhongli City, Gueishan, Bade, and Pingjhen townships of Taoyuan Prefecture.
- 2018 February 23, Shih Hsiao-kuang, Lu Hsien-hsiu, “KMT urges Taipei mayoral aspirants to replicate Ma’s feat”, in Taipei Times[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on February 22, 2018, Taiwan News, page 3[7]:
- Separately yesterday, Keelung City Council Speaker Sung Wei-li (宋瑋莉) said she has resigned as director of the KMT’s Keelung chapter and vowed to support KMT Immigrant Affairs Committee chairman Hsieh Li-kung (謝立功), who was nominated by the KMT on Feb. 7 as its Keelung mayoral candidate after beating Sung in the primary.
Sung said she would instead run for city councilor in Keelung’s Jhongshan District (中山).
- 2021 March 8, Lin Hsin-han, William Hetherington, “Keelung Islet to be opened to tourism next week amid high domestic demand”, in Taipei Times[8], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on March 10, 2021, Taiwan News, page 3[9]:
- Keelung would also promote visits to Fairy Cave (仙洞巖) — a natural sea cave in the city’s Jhongshan District (中山) — the Cave of Buddha’s Hand (佛手洞), the scenic Waimushan (外木山) coastal area and Cingren Lake (情人湖), among other sites, she added.
- 2022 October 29, Yuan-ting Yang, William Hetherington, “Mask mandate to be lifted in phases: CECC”, in Taipei Times[10], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 28 October 2022, Taiwan News, page 2[11]:
- Children play at a park in Keelung’s Jhongshan District yesterday.
- 2023 February 22, Johnson Kung [拱祥生], “A better approach to LNG projects”, in Taipei Times[12], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on February 22, 2023, Editorials, page 8[13]:
- As part of an effort to improve the northeastern section of the nation’s power grid, state-owned Taiwan Power Co (Taipower) plans to build a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal off Keelung’s Jhongshan District (中山) to convert the oil-fired Hsieh-ho Power Plant into a gas-fired facility.