Citations:Jia
Appearance
English citations of Jia
In Shaanxi
[edit]- 2002 [1995], Ni Zhen, translated by Chris Berry, Memoirs from the Beijing Film Academy: the Genesis of China's Fifth Generation[2], Duke University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 179:
- After passing through Mizhi and Yulin, the group eventually reached Jia County by the Yellow River.
- 2002, Dazhang Sun, “The Qing Dynasty”, in Nancy S. Steinhardt, editor, Chinese Architecture[3], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 339, column 2:
- Syncretism, however, was the main attraction of Daoism for Qing China. In some instances, Buddhist rites were adopted by Daoist monasteries. In other cases, Buddhist monasteries merged with Daoist ones. Such blending could result in primarily Buddhist temple complexes where certain elements of Daoist worship were retained, as was the case at Baiyunshan in Jia county, Shaanxi; half-Buddhist, half-Daoist settings such as Gaomiao in Zhongwei; or fully syncretic monasteries in which Buddhas, Laozi, and Confucius were all worshiped, such as the Xuankongsi in Hunyuan, Shanxi.
- [2022 April 7, Mandy Zuo, “Trafficking of mentally disabled woman in China’s Shaanxi province reflects ‘weak links’ in local governance, investigation finds”, in South China Morning Post[4], archived from the original on 07 April 2022, Social Welfare[5]:
- Thirteen cadres in Yulin City’s Jiaxian county have been disciplined for their “neglect of duty in population management”, the report said, without specifying the punishment.]
In Henan
[edit]- 2020 April 1, Colin Qian, Ryan Woo, “Chinese county says in lockdown after coronavirus cases”, in Catherine Evans, editor, Reuters[6], archived from the original on 01 April 2020, World News[7]:
- Henan province reported one confirmed case in Luohe city on Saturday. Local authorities said the infected person had been in contact with two doctors based in Jia county who later tested positive for the virus even though they had showed no symptoms.