Citations:Fu-shun

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English citations of Fu-shun

Map including FU-SHUN (DMA, 1975)
  • 1907, Frederick McCormick, The Tragedy of Russia in Pacific Asia[1], volume I, New York: Outing Publishing Company, →OCLC, page 281:
    The army now began to advance, not yet from the Sha-ho, because there were troops occupying the hills on the north bank of the Hun River, twenty miles in the rear, that had to be brought up. These were the Frist Siberian Corps at Fu-ling and the Third Siberian Corps at Fu-shun, with a force also at Ying-p'an.
  • 1994, Tony Scotland, The Empty Throne: The Quest for an Imperial Heir in the People's Republic of China[2], Penguin Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 9:
    Four years later China became a Communist republic, and the Russians sent the Emperor home. He could have been executed for collaborating with the Japanese, but he wasn't: instead Chairman Mao packed him off to the War Criminals' Prison at Fu-shun in Manchuria for 're-education through labour'.
  • 2011, Barbara Somervill, The Story Behind Coal[3], Raintree, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 11:
    About 3,000 years ago, Chinese miners dug for coal in the Fu-shun mine in north-eastern China.