Linjiang: difference between revisions
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1980 translation; #* {{seemoreCites|en}} |
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|text=Although the entire Communist force was driven back to the Korean border by early November, the commanders of the Fourth Column derived some satisfaction from their near destruction of the Nationalist 25th Division, after a fierce four-day battle at Hsin-k’ai-ling, west of K’uantien.* Moreover, their planned withdrawal to the vicinity of '''Linchiang''' in southwestern Kirin Province had diverted the Nationalists from exerting major pressure against Lin Piao’s main force at Harbin and Yüshu. |
|text=Although the entire Communist force was driven back to the Korean border by early November, the commanders of the Fourth Column derived some satisfaction from their near destruction of the Nationalist 25th Division, after a fierce four-day battle at Hsin-k’ai-ling, west of K’uantien.* Moreover, their planned withdrawal to the vicinity of '''Linchiang''' in southwestern Kirin Province had diverted the Nationalists from exerting major pressure against Lin Piao’s main force at Harbin and Yüshu. |
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#* {{quote-book |
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|en |
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|year=1980 |
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|origdate=April 3, 1939 |
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|last=Kim |
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|first=Il-sung |
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|authorlink=Kim Il-sung |
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|chapter=Let Us Continue to Strike Powerful Counterblows at the Japanese Imperialist Aggressors and Advance to the Homeland |
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|title=Kim Il Sung Works |
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|url=https://archive.org/details/kimilsungworks/01/ |
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|volume=1 |
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|location=Pyongyang |
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|publisher={{w|Foreign Languages Publishing House (North Korea)|Foreign Languages Publishing House}} |
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|OCLC=8532530 |
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|page=173 |
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|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/kimilsungworks/01/page/n186/ |
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|text=In view of the fact that the enemy was in hot pursuit and tried to encircle and attack us with huge forces in the comparatively narrow area southwest of Mt. Paektu, our units dealt blows to the enemy while moving round and round across many hills and valleys in the Changbai and '''Linjiang''' areas.}} |
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#* {{seemoreCites|en}} |
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====Translations==== |
====Translations==== |
Revision as of 11:41, 23 September 2022
See also: Línjiāng
English
Etymology
From the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the Mandarin Chinese pronunciation for 臨江/临江 (Línjiāng).
Proper noun
Linjiang
- A county-level city in Baishan, Jilin, China.
- [1967 January, Tso-peng Li, “Three Campaigns to the South of the Sungari River”, in China Reconstructs[1], volume XVI, number 1, China Welfare Institute, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 11, column 3:
- In mid-December the enemy sent eight complete divisions to invade the Linchiang area, arrogantly blustering: "We will drive the Communists into the Yalu to bite at the ice. We will drive them up the Changpai Mountains to chew on the rocks."]
- [1973, William W. Whitson, Chen-hsia Huang, “The Fourth Field Army Elite”, in The Chinese High Command: A History of Communist Military Politics, 1927-71[2], Macmillan Publishers, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 306:
- Although the entire Communist force was driven back to the Korean border by early November, the commanders of the Fourth Column derived some satisfaction from their near destruction of the Nationalist 25th Division, after a fierce four-day battle at Hsin-k’ai-ling, west of K’uantien.* Moreover, their planned withdrawal to the vicinity of Linchiang in southwestern Kirin Province had diverted the Nationalists from exerting major pressure against Lin Piao’s main force at Harbin and Yüshu.]
- 1980 [1939 April 3], Il-sung Kim, “Let Us Continue to Strike Powerful Counterblows at the Japanese Imperialist Aggressors and Advance to the Homeland”, in Kim Il Sung Works[3], volume 1, Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, →OCLC, page 173:
- In view of the fact that the enemy was in hot pursuit and tried to encircle and attack us with huge forces in the comparatively narrow area southwest of Mt. Paektu, our units dealt blows to the enemy while moving round and round across many hills and valleys in the Changbai and Linjiang areas.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Linjiang.