Citations:Ch'ing-tao

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English citations of Ch'ing-tao

Map including CH'ING-TAO (TSINGTAO) (AMS, 1967)
Map of CH'ING-TAO (TSINGTAO)
  • 1965, Norton S. Ginsburg, “Urban Geography and "Non-Western" Areas”, in Philip M. Hauser, Leo F. Schnore, editors, The Study of Urbanization[1], 3rd reprinting, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., published 1967, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 331:
    Somewhere between this type and the mixed type noted previously would be cases like that of Ch'ing-tao, in which virtually the entire existing city was constructed by the Germans after the razing of the old Chinese town, which included a new "Chinese" town laid out alongside the "Western" and disconcertingly Teutonic new town.
  • 1969, Yi-Fu Tuan, China[2], Chicago: Aldine Publishing Company, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 33:
    The strip of land north of the port of Ch'ing-tao in Shantung province is forested, in sharp distinction to the barren hills beyond. The forest was under German supervision, at the time when Ch'ing-tao came under their judicial control. If the port bears unhappy witness to Germany's imperialistic ambition, the green belt is a tribute to that country's attitude towards land.
  • 2008, China and Mongolia, Part 2[3], Marshall Cavendish, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 165:
    Qingdao (Tsingtao or Ch'ing-tao) is a major port along the south coast of the Shandong (Shantung) Peninsula.
  • 2008, James Laxer, The Perils of Empire[4], Viking Canada, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 77–78:
    In 1897, Germany gained control of the Chʻing-tao area in Shantung; the following year, the British acquired the Wei-hai region also in Shantung; and the Russians acquired Ta-lien and Lu-shan in Liaotung.