Citations:Tatung

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English citations of Tatung

In China

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1964 1972 1978
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  • 1964, O. Edmund Clubb, 20th Century China[1], Columbia University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 221:
    The Japanese forces went on to an easy conquest of Tatung, commanding the gateway into Shansi Province, because Yen Hsi-shan's relative General Li Fu-ying, was chiefly interested in preserving his strength and abandoned the fortress town without a fight.
  • 1972, Theodore Shabad, China's Changing Map[2], New York: Frederick A. Praeger, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 233:
    The most important coal basin is Tatung, in the extreme north of the province, where good bituminous coal, partly suitable for coking, is mined. The modern development of Tatung began in the early 1920's, after the coal basin had been reached by the railroad from Peking. The early mines were situated at Kowchüan, 10 miles southwest of Tatung.
  • 1978 July 16, “Anti-Communist actions escalate”, in Free China Weekly[3], volume XIX, number 29, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
    According to the report, a bomb planted by an anti-Communist group in a theater at Tatung in Shansi Province on My 21 killed 29 Communist commune cadres and 15 others were seriously injured, while more than 100 people suffered slight injuries.

In Taipei, Taiwan

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  • 1973 March 25, “Work gets under way on sewers for Taipei”, in 自由中國週報 [Free China Weekly]‎[4], volume XIV, number 11, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 2, column 1:
    He said the other project features construction of a branch sewage collection system in the Wanhua and Tatung districts, where an urban renewal program is in progress.
  • 1996, Robert M. Marsh, “Solidarity with Extended Kin”, in The Great Transformation: Social Change in Taipei, Taiwan Since the 1960s[5], M.E. Sharpe, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 150:
    In 1991, Taan again had the lowest percent of Taiwanese households (63%) and Tatung the highest (86%).
  • 2002, Hsin-Huang Micahel Hsiao, Hwa-Jen Liu, “Collective Action toward a Sustainable City: Citizens' Movements and Environmental Politics in Taipei”, in Peter Evans, editor, Livable Cities? Urban Struggles for Livelihood and Sustainability[6], University of California Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 82:
    Also, the city government’s Department of Urban Development proposed various redevelopment projects that showed concern for the preservation of traditional landscape and historical architecture. For example, two old and historically significant districts of Taipei city (Tihua Street and the Tatung District) are expected to be economically revitalized and to attract cultural tourism.
  • 2003, Scott Simon, “Women in a Flower-Drinking World”, in Sweet and Sour: Life Worlds of Taipei Women Entrepreneurs[7], Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 192:
    I visited the Taipei Bridge Teahouse twice: once with a group of businessmen and once with a group of acquaintances whom I knew enjoyed flower drinking. The teahouse was in the alleys of Taipei’s historical Tatung District.
  • 2022 January 22, “Taoyuan, Taipei disclose places visited by COVID-19 patients”, in Culture Center of Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York, U.S.A.[8], archived from the original on 14 October 2022[9]:
    In Taipei, meanwhile, the city government said Thursday that at least three of the nine patients had visited two clinics in the city's Tatung District and Soochow University campus in Zhongzhen District, as well as the Uni-President Department Store, Breeze Xin Yi shopping mall and Chun Shui Tang restaurant at the National Concert Hall.
  • 2022 September 28, Shelley Shan, “Tourism Bureau mulls subsidies for hotels”, in Taipei Times[10], archived from the original on 28 September 2022[11]:
    A man walks past the cordoned off entrance to a quarantine hotel in Taipei’s Tatung District yesterday.

In Yilan County, Taiwan

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  • 1963, Taiwan's Health[12], Department of Health, Taiwan Provincial Government, Republic of China, →OCLC, page 57:
    Sand flies: Only one male of Phlebotomus species, similar to P. dicipiens, was recorded from Tuchang, Tatung township in Ilan county in 1939 by Tokunaga.
  • 1975 January 19, “Taiwan cement for home use”, in 自由中國週報 [Free China Weekly]‎[13], volume XVI, number 3, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 1, column 4:
    To encourage cement companies to establish new factories in the Ilan, Hualien and Tatung areas in northeast Taiwan, the government has ruled that any kiln with annual production capacity exceeding 400,000 metric tons will receive the benefits of the Statute for Encouragement of Investment.
  • 1994, “Investigation of An Outbreak of Hepatitis A in Su-Chi Village, Ilan County”, in Epidemiology Bulletin[14], numbers 10-11, Executive Yuan, Department of Health, Bureau of Disease Control, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 80:
    In the period between February 1993 and 13 January 1994, there were 11 acute hepatitis A patients in the Saint Mary's Hospital. In addition to the 8 of the present incident, 3 had the inflection in March 1993, and they are not residents of Tatung Township.
  • 2014 February 14, Chih-ju Shih, Jake Chung, “Tatung man keeps Atayal culture alive with weekend class”, in Taipei Times[15], archived from the original on 15 April 2014[16]:
    Over the past 12 years, Wang Yung-hsiung (王永雄) — an Atayal from Tatung Township’s (大同) Sungluo community in Yilan County — has taught hundreds of students in northern Taiwan.
  • 2018 November 29, Natalie Tso, “VIDEO: Taiwan promotes domestic tourism with youth subsidies”, in Radio Taiwan International[17], archived from the original on 15 October 2022[18]:
    Cherry blossoms in Yilan's Tatung Township
  • 2021 April 24, Ching-Tse Cheng, “Construction worker hit by TRA train in northeast Taiwan”, in Taiwan News[19], archived from the original on 24 April 2021, Society‎[20]:
    According to railway police, a man in his 50s, surnamed Wang (), was hit by the No. 405 Taroko Express train running from Tatung to Shulin, New Taipei, at 8:45 a.m. on Saturday, near the Wuta Station in Yilan.

In Korea

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  • 1895, Pain's Pyrotechnic Spectacle, War between Japan and China[21], Pain's Spectacle Co., →OCLC, page 4:
    With a calmness and deliberation, which marked all their operations, they began preparations for the capture of Ping Yang, the only remaining stronghold of the Chinese on the peninsula. Ping Yang is a walled city situated on the Tatung River, and on the direct road from the Corean capital to the Manchurian frontier.
  • 1896, N. W. H. Du Boulay, “Campaign in Korea and in southern Manchuria up to the commencement of December, 1894”, in An Epitome of the Chino-Japanese War, 1894-95.[22], London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, →OCLC, pages 23, 24:
    General Nodzu himself reached Sëoul on the 19th August, and made his plans for a combined attack on Ping Yang, which was now held by the Chinese in force.
    (¹) Ping Yang is a large walled town occupying a strong position on the right bank of the Tatung river, and was admirably situated as a place of concentration for the Chinese troops. []
    General Nodzu’s first plan was to send Oshima against Ping Yang by the main road, whilst all the other columns, including Sato’s troops at Wonsan, should move round the Chinese left and attack from the north-east and north. But this plan was afterwards changed, and the main column, under Nodzu himself, was taken across the Tatung river near Hwang-ju, to attack from the west.
  • 1897, Robert Van Bergen, “War with China”, in The Story of Japan[23], American Book Company, →OCLC, page 271:
    China had sent reinforcements, and its troops then occupied a very strong position at Ping-yang, on the Tatung River. August passed by without further fighting, although war had been regularly declared on the first of that month.
  • 1969, Stella Parker Peterson, “Growing Pains”, in It Came in Handy[24], Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald Publishing Association, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 83:
    For timber I imported pine logs from Manchuria, rafted them two hundred miles down the Yalu River, three hundred miles over the Yellow Sea, and twenty miles up the Tatung River, where a thirty-five-foot tide lifted the consignment to Pyongyang.
  • 1974, W. G. Beasley, The Modern History of Japan[25], 2nd edition (History), New York: Praeger Publishers, →LCCN, →OCLC, page [26]:
    TOP RIGHT The Russo-Japanese War, 1904-5. Japanese infantry waiting for engineers to bridge the Tatung River

German citations of Tatung

  • 1930, Robert Musil, Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften, Book 1, Chapter 73: Leo Fischels Tochter Gerda:
    Ihre klugen Eltern hatten Hans Sepp nicht das Haus verboten, sondern ihm einige Tage im Monat eingeräumt. Dafür mußte Hans Sepp, der Student, der nichts war und noch keine Aussicht hatte, etwas zu werden, ihnen sein Ehrenwort geben, fortab Gerda zu nichts Unrechtem zu verleiten und die Propaganda der deutschen mystischen Tat einzustellen. Sie hofften, ihm damit den Zauber des Verbotenen zu nehmen. Und Hans Sepp hatte in seiner Keuschheit (denn nur Sinnlichkeit will Besitz, ist aber jüdisch-kapitalistisch) das abverlangte Ehrenwort ruhig gegeben, worunter er jedoch nicht verstand, daß er heimlich öfter ins Haus kommen oder glühende Reden, begeisterte Händedrücke und selbst Küsse unterlassen werde, was alles noch zum natürlichen Leben befreundeter Seelen gehört; sondern nur die Propaganda für ein priester- und staatsloses Bündnis, die er bis dahin theoretisch betrieben hatte. Er hatte sein Ehrenwort umso lieber gegeben, als er die seelische Reife für die Tatung seiner Grundsätze bei sich und Gerda noch nicht für gekommen erachtete und ein Riegel gegen die Einflüsterungen der niederen Natur ganz nach seinem Sinne war.
    (please add an English translation of this quotation)