Citations:Neihu
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English citations of Neihu
In Taipei, Taiwan
[edit]1953 1969 1970s 1980s | 2010s 2023 | ||||||
ME « | 15th c. | 16th c. | 17th c. | 18th c. | 19th c. | 20th c. | 21st c. |
As 內湖鄉 (~Retrocession-1968)
[edit]- 1952, “Neihu”, in Leon E. Seltzer, editor, The Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World[1], Morningside Heights, NY: Columbia University Press, →OCLC, page 1296, column 2:
- Neihu (nāʹho͞oʹ), Jap. Naiko (nīʹkō)
- 1953, Ch'un-sun (何春蓀) Ho, Mineral Resources of Taiwan[2], Ministry of Economic Affairs, →OCLC, pages 31, 307:
- The coal-bearing rocks consist of two ENE-WSW trending coal belts extending from the coast at the west of Keelung to the eastern edge of the Taipei basin near Sungshan and Neihu. The northern belt is formed of the Lower coal-bearing formation, beginning from Waimushan on the northern coast westwards through Neimushan, Tawulun, Luliao, to Neihu in a total extension of nearly 16 km. […] Neihu 內湖
As 內湖區 (1968-present)
[edit]- 1969, Free China Review[3], volume 19, →ISSN, →OCLC, pages 9, 28:
- The area is 3,678 kilometers and the population exceeds 3,650,000. First projects will be a new city of 300,000 at Linkou and another new community at Neihu to relieve Taipei population pressure. […]
Some 700,000 housing units will be built along with industrial parks, transportation facilities, public utilities, parks and playgrounds, drainage systems, etc. Development of Linkou and Neihu are high on the priority list.
- 1972 April—June, Ronald Freeman, Albert Hermalin, T. H. Sun, “Fertility Trends in Taiwan: 1961-1970”, in Population Index[5], volume 38, number 2, Office of Population Research, Princeton University; Population Association of America, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 151:
- ᵇRural area includes Musha and Neihu, which were made part of Taipei on July 1, 1968.
- 1977 May 1, “North-South Freeway”, in 自由中國週報 [Free China Weekly][6], volume XVIII, number 17, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 4, column 1:
- The section between Keelung and Neihu (northeast of Taipei) of the North-South Freeway is scheduled to be completed by the end of May and will be opened to traffic in July, according to the Taiwan Area Freeway Construction Bureau.
- 1988, Daniel P. Reid, “Taipei: Modern Hub With An Old Heart”, in Paul Zach, editor, Taiwan (Insight Guides)[7], 4th edition, Apa Publications, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 111, column 2:
- When the Republic of China regained Taiwan in 1945, Taipei was made the capital of the nation’s provisional government and was divided into 10 administrative districts. It became a special municipality by decree in 1966, confirming it as Taiwan’s political, cultural, economic and military center. The towns of Chingmei, Mucha, Neihu, Nankang, Peitou and Shihlin were incorporated into Taipei in 1968.
- 2012 December 12, Lin Yang, “Textile Makers in Taiwan Create a High-Tech Niche”, in The New York Times[9], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 13 December 2012, Global Business[10]:
- This new business environment spawned companies like Hyperbola Textile, whose 24 employees work in a chic loft office in Neihu, a high-technology hub in Taipei.
- 2016 March 28, “Taiwanese girl decapitated in 'random' attack”, in Deutsche Welle[11], archived from the original on 2016-03-28[12]:
- The mother and daughter were on their way to a subway station in the Neihu District when the attacker grabbed the girl from behind and decapitated her with a cleaver shortly before noon local time.
- 2016 November 29, “Taipei’s Neihu District site of city’s first dengue fever cluster infection in five years”, in Formosa TV[13]:
- Authorities in Taipei's Neihu District have begun an extensive public hygiene operation, after the district became the site of Taipei's first cluster infection of dengue fever in five years.
- 2017 July 11, Chris Horton, “Lonely Giant of the Taipei Skyline Is About to Get Some Company”, in The New York Times[14], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 11 July 2017, Commercial Real Estate[15]:
- The arrival of Taipei Sky Tower and Fubon Xinyi Headquarters is unlikely to hurt the office space market, Mr. Huang said. Fubon, for instance, is moving many of its operations from older buildings in nearby Neihu District.
- 2018 June 11, Jess Macy Yu, Ben Blanchard, Christian Shepherd, “U.S. shows new de facto embassy in Taiwan amid China tensions”, in Anne Marie Roantree, Darren Schuettler, editors, Reuters[16], archived from the original on 08 February 2019, World News[17]:
- The sprawling new site occupies 6.5 hectares, including Chinese gardens, in Taipei’s Neihu district. AIT’s Taipei office has nearly 500 American and local employees, while its Kaohsiung branch has more than 30 staff.
- 2018 June 12, Ralph Jennings, Gerry Shih, Christopher Bodeen, “US lauds Taiwan ties in dedication of new de-facto embassy”, in AP News[18], archived from the original on 11 October 2022[19]:
- AIT’s roughly 500 staff members will move to the new office complex in Taipei’s Neihu district in the fall.
- 2019 April 6, Lawrence Chung, “US prepares to open new de facto embassy in Taipei amid ‘policy shift’ on Taiwan”, in South China Morning Post[20], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2019-04-06, Diplomacy[21]:
- Nearly 500 staff – including active US military personnel – will relocate to the brand new US$255 million hillside complex in the Neihu district of Taipei on May 6.
- 2023 April 28, Brendan Wong, “Taipei MRT Circular Line’s new east section expected to begin construction within two years”, in Public Television Service[22], archived from the original on 2023-07-22, News[23]:
- Chiang says he hopes the construction will improve convenience for metro riders living in Taipei’s northern Neihu District. He hopes the central government can assist with other construction projects that have been delayed or suffered cost increases due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- 2018, “2017 Vanke Corporate Social Responsibility Report”, in Vanke[24], archived from the original on 2023-07-22, page 76[25]:
- Under the unified deployment and planning of CPC Shenzhen MunicipalCommittee and Shenzhen Municipal People's Government, Shenzhen Foreign Affairs Officedecided to support Xibei Village, Neihu Town, in Lufeng, Shanwei. The office building of the localVillage Committee had been unrepaired since the 1980s and was severely damaged and leaking,and assessed as dangerous building.
Spanish citations of Neihu
- 2015 July 9, “Se extreman las precauciones ante la llegada del tifón Chan-hom”, in Radio Taiwan International[26], archived from the original on 04 March 2023[27]:
- Además las grandes acumulaciones de agua y el desplome de rocas en las zonas de Tianmu, Neihu y Hsichih provocaron el derrumbe de casas en Hsichih, causando la muerte de varias personas.