Citations:Puqi
Appearance
English citations of Puqi
- [1901 October 9, “A Journey through South Hupeh and North-west Honan.”, in The North-China Herald and Supreme Court and Consular Gazette[1], volume LXVII, number 1783, Shanghai, →OCLC, page 700, column 1:
- From Chink‘ou the current set in toward a lake which was entered 30 miles from the Yangtze. […]
On reaching the river, however, which passes both Ch‘ungyang and P‘uchi county towns, a most grievous sight was seen.]
- [1970 May 7 [1970 May 6], “Wuhan 'May 7' School Successfully Reeducates Cadres”, in Daily Report: Communist China, volume I, number 89, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, sourced from Wuhan Hupeh Provincial Service, translation of original in Mandarin, →OCLC, Communist China: Central-South Region, page D 2:
- The "7 May" cadres' school of the Wuhan Municipal Revolutionary Committee has had a total of 4,300 members, half of whom have settled in the rural areas in Puchi, Yanghsin, Chungyang, and Chiayu counties. The school, located in Puchi County, has a firm grasp of the class struggle and has given top priority to Mao Tsetung thought study.]
- 1980 December, Bolin Huo, “Shanghai Helps Backward Small Industries”, in China Reconstructs[2], volume XXIX, number 12, China Welfare Institute, →ISSN, →OCLC, pages 34–35:
- ONE of the problems in China’s economy today is: In the past decade many places built industries to utilize local raw materials or supply local markets with goods. But often these plants were technically backward, and the goods they produced were of poor quality, or even unsalable. This was once true of the Xianning district, consisting of seven counties south of the Changjiang (Yangtze) River in Hubei province. […]
Poor management was the problem in a local electrical goods factory operated by Puqi county.
- 1982, Bai Shouyi (白寿彝), editor, 中国通史纲要 [An Outline History of China] (China Knowledge Series)[3], Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, page 176:
- The site is identified as Chijishan to the west of present-day Wuchang County, Hubei, or Chibishan to the northwest of Puqi County, also in Hubei.
- 2001, Lucien Bianco, “Early Twentieth-Century Xiedou”, in Peasants Without the Party: Grass-roots Movements in Twentieth-Century China[5], M.E. Sharpe, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 206:
- Other cases include a dispute over sandy terrain in Yangzizhou, Puqi county, Hubei, on July 18, 1925 (ten killed, twelve wounded; Puqi WSZL, vol. 2, 1986, pp. 110-13) and one for three full years, from 1945 to 1948, in Tong’an, Fujian (Tong’an WSZL, vol. 9, 1989, p. 133).