Citations:Hongkong

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English citations of Hongkong

  • 1879 [1877 February 26], Anna Brassey, “The Inland Sea”, in A Voyage in the 'Sunbeam': Our Home on the Ocean for Eleven Months[1], 6th edition, Toronto: Rose-Belford Publishing, →OCLC, page 370:
    At 4 a.m. we found ourselves close under the light on the eastern end of the island of Hongkong. We were surrounded by islands, and the morning was dark and thick; so we waited till 5.30, and then steamed on through the Kowloon passage up to the city of Victoria, as it is really named, though it is generally called Hongkong.
  • 1895, E. J. Eitel, Europe in China: The History of Hongkong from the Beginning to the Year 1882[2], London: Luzac & Company, pages 127–128:
    Hongkong, and the opposite portion of the mainland of China, known as the Peninsula of Kowloon, together with the few tiny islets situated close inshore (Kellett Island, Stonecutter's Island, Green Island, Tree Island, Aberdeen Middle Island, and Round Island), all of which are at the present day comprised, within the boundaries of the Colony, formed, since time immemorial, a portion of the Kwangtung (Canton) Province. The Island of Hongkong (covering an area of about 29 square miles) is situated, 76 miles of Canton, near the mouth of the Pearl River, the eastern banks of which are lined by the Tungkoon District (24 miles S.E. of Canton city) and the Sanon District (52 miles S.E. of Canton city), of which the Kowloon Peninsula and Kowloon City Promontory from[sic – meaning form] the south-eastern extremities, whilst Hongkong is separated from Kowloon Peninsula by a channel of one nautical mile in width.
  • 1909 August 21, “THE TRUTH ABOUT PRATAS ISLAND”, in The Japan Weekly Mail[3], volume LII, number 8, Yokohama, page 241:
    Thus they went further afield in their depredations, and only last Summer, it will be remembered, a party of Japanese bird-hunters was rescued by a Brazilian training-ship as far south as Wake’s Island, just as their provisions and water had petered out, and were brought on to Hongkong.
  • 1927 May, Quincy Wright, “Bolshevist Influences in China”, in Current History[4], volume XXVI, number 2, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 301, column 1:
    Hongkong as a British colony is in a different class and on March 30 the Government denied any thought of abandoning it, but the gradual relinquishment of concessions and settlements and extraterritoriality in China seems to be accepted British policy.
  • 1940, Irving S. Friedman, British Relations With China: 1931-1939[5], Institute of Pacific Relations, →OCLC, page 81:
    Reports were common of a Sino-British agreement for British co-operation in the economic development of South China, including British financing of a railway in Hainan, the establishment of an airdrome on Tungsha Island southeast of Hongkong, an oil depot in the Sesha Islands southwest of Hainan, and the development of mines in South China.
  • 1979 April 29, “'Fifth modernization'”, in Free China Weekly[6], volume XX, number 16, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
    Human rights advocate Wei Ching-sheng was arrested in Peiping's recent crackdown on dissidents according to a report from Hongkong.