Chingtao
See also: Ch'ing-tao
English
Etymology
Proper noun
Chingtao
- Alternative form of Qingdao
- 1897 December 3, North-China Herald and Supreme Court & Consular Gazette, volume LIX, number 1583, Shanghai, →OCLC, page 982, column 1:
- A CORRESPONDENT in Shantung sends us the following note, under date the 23rd ult., and adds that "the subject is of vital interest for commerce, especially if this action of Germany's contemplates the opening of Chingtao as a port in the near future. It is well known that such has been their desire for some time past."
- 2008 December, Michiko Ikeda, “Anti-Japanese Boycotts as Trade Barriers in China”, in Japan in Trade Isolation, 1926-37 and 1948-85, 1st English edition, Tokyo: International House of Japan, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 49:
- In Tientsin and in Shantung Province in north China, Japan’s exports declined to a lesser degree because the boycotts were much less vigorous.³⁵ They fell only slightly in Tientsin, and it was in this region, in Chingtao, that they first started to recover.
- 2014, “"Against Foreign Imperialist Oppression": East Asia I”, in Fairy Tales, Patriotism & the Nation State: The Rise of the Modern West and the Response of the World, Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 552:
- Qingdao with its excellent harbor became the German administrative center (from which time dates one of China’s famous beers, known by its old Wade-Giles transliteration Chingtao).
- 2015, Manako Ogawa, “Japanese Fishermen Enter Hawaiian Waters”, in Sea of Opportunity: The Japanese Pioneers of the Fishing Industry in Hawaiʻi, Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 42:
- Overwhelmed by the huge number of their rivals, the fishermen of Okikamuro inevitably headed to Taiwan, Chingtao in China, and, finally, Hawaiʻi during the first decade of the twentieth century.
Further reading
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