Hsiao-kan

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English

Map including HSIAO-KAN (DMA, 1972)

Etymology

From the Wade–Giles romanization of the Mandarin 孝感 (Hsiao⁴-kan³).

Proper noun

Hsiao-kan

  1. Alternative form of Xiaogan
    • 1910s, William Robson, Griffith John of Hankow (Bright Biographies Series)‎, Pickering & Inglis, →OCLC, page 189:
      He could not be restrained from again visiting the country, and in 1908, at the period of the Chines New Year, accompanied by his daughter and Mr. Nelson Bitton, he set out on what was to prove the last missionary journey of his travel-filled life. The trip was to Hsiao-kan, the scene of many an early disappointment and triumph. Now the line of railway from Hankow to Peking passes within a few miles of Hsiao-kan City, and the trip was very different one from the old, uncomfortable journeys. Arrived at Hsiao-kan the veteran worker could scarcely rest until he had seen the lepers, and admired the chapel which had just been erected for their Christian worship. In the afternoon a visit was paid to the house which had first sheltered the missionary in Hsiao-kan, and where he had met with the few believers who had been gathered into the Church by the earnest efforts of Mr. Wei.
    • 1956, Chien-nung Li, The Political History of China 1840-1928, D. Van Nostrand Company, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 254:
      On November 11 while Yüan was with the army at Hsiao-kan, he received the imperial decrees appointing him premier of the cabinet, but he declined the offer.
    • 1978, Mark Elvin, “Chinese Cities since the Sung Dynasty”, in Philip Abrams, E. A. Wrigley, editors, Towns in Societies, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 86–87:
      A late Ming gazetteer for Hsiao-kan county in Hupeh province observed, after listing abuses in the assessment and exaction of various levies, that 'people living in the villages have to provide twice as much as those who live in towns, and those in economically distressed circumstances provide twice as much again as the [ordinary] countryfolk'.

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