Citations:Coloane

English citations of Coloane

Island edit

1899 1910 1926 1953 1960 1986 1997 2005 2010s 2021
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Map including Coloane (Lu Wan) 路環 (AMS, 1954)
  • Coloane at Google Ngram Viewer
  • 1899, “Portugal”, in Appletons' Annual Cyclopedia and Register of Important Events of the Year 1898 (Third Series)‎[1], volume III (XXXVIII), New York: D. Appleton and Company, page 649, column 2:
    Macao, at the mouth of the Canton river, contained, with the dependent islands of Taipa and Coloane, 74,568 Chinese, 3,106 native Portuguese, 615 Portuguese from the Continent and 177 from the islands, and 161 foreigners.
  • 1910, Francis J. Bacchus, “Macao”, in The Catholic Encyclopedia[2], volume IX, New York: Robert Appleton Company, →OCLC, page 482, column 1:
    The Catholic being the state religion of Portugal, the prisons and the five government hospitals at Macao and in Portuguese Timor are all open to the ministrations of Catholic priests and sisters; three of these hospitals have chaplains of their own. The government also maintains on the islands of Coloane and Dom João, near Macao, two leperhouses, which are frequently visited by missionaries and sisters.
  • 1926 June 2, “PICKET TROUBLE ENDED.”, in The Hongkong Telegraph[3], →OCLC, page 1, column 6:
    The interference by pickets with Chinese funeral processions has stopped, as all bodies are now being transported to Taipa and Coloane for burial.
  • 1953 May, George W. Long, “Macau, a Hole in the Bamboo Curtain”, in National Geographic Magazine[4], volume CIII, number 5, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 679, column 1:
    Including two small islands—Taipa and Coloane—the whole colony totals only six square miles, but it supports some 300,000 people. About 99 percent are Chinese, many of them refugees.
  • 1960 September 3, “3 Die Fleeing Reds”, in The Lincoln Star[5], volume 58, number 290, Lincoln, Nebraska, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 5, column 7:
    Macao (UPI) — Three Chinese children were drowned when a sampan with 12 Chinese aboard sank while fleeing Communist China, it was learned. The 9 adults swam to safety on Coloane island off this Portuguese enclave.
  • 1986 January 12, Rudy Maxa, “Magical Macau, Gateway to China”, in The Washington Post[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 16 September 2023:
    To the south of the main part of Macau, a bridge spanning a mile and a half of water leads to the island of Taipa, and a causeway connects Taipa to the other island, Coloane.
  • 1997 July, Emmet R. Easton, Wing-Wah Pun, “Observations on some Hemiptera/Heteroptera of Macau, Southeast Asia”, in Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington[7], volume 99, number 3, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 574, column 1:
    The territory of Macau consists of a peninsula of land connected to the Guangdong Province of mainland China as well as two islands consisting of Taipa and Coloane which are connected to the peninsula either by bridges (Taipa, 2) or a causeway (Coloane).
  • 2005 July 8, Alex Frew McMillan, “In Macao, developers look to property as a sure bet”, in The New York Times[8], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 16 September 2023, Real Estate‎[9]:
    Coloane, the southernmost of Macao's two islands, which is connected to the Macao peninsula by bridges and a causeway.
  • 2015 February 8, Farah Master, “In Macau, casino titans join China reform wagon”, in Reuters[10], archived from the original on 16 September 2023, CYCLICAL CONSUMER GOODS‎[11]:
    Over the next three years, the operators, including Melco Crown, SJM Holdings Ltd, Galaxy Entertainment Group and MGM China Holdings, will open new resorts on the Cotai strip, a reclaimed stretch of land between the bustling main peninsula of Macau and Coloane island, which is modelled on the Las Vegas strip.
  • 2016 June 19, “Street food shines in Macau, China”, in USA Today[12], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 16 September 2016[13]:
    However, Macau’s most well-known street food comes from Lord Stow’s Bakery, an original shop on Coloane Island. []
    Tired of the streets? Beach-front stands on Coloane island serve made-to-order pork chop buns, not to mention grilled scallops, octopus and chicken legs.
  • 2017 May, Emily Matchar, Piera Chen, “Macau”, in Hong Kong (Lonely Planet)‎[14], 17th edition, Lonely Planet Global Limited, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 192:
    A similar physical joining has happened to Taipa and Coloane because of land reclamation from the sea. The new strip of land joining the two islands is known as Cotai (from Coloane and Taipa).
  • 2021 November 21, “On Chinese islands next to Macau, great stories of pirates, typhoons and war played out”, in South China Morning Post[15], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 21 November 2021[16]:
    It’s hard to imagine now, but there were once three mountainous, verdant islands between Macau and mainland China. The Portuguese named them Dom João, Montanha and Lapa. Later the islands became known in Chinese as Xiao (Little) Hengqin, Da (Big) Hengqin and Wanzai, respectively.
    The two Hengqins, which faced Coloane and Taipa, were eventually joined by land reclamation to form a single island while Wanzai, a mere few hundred metres from Macau’s Inner Harbour (Porto Interior), saw its inclines levelled enough to become a peninsula.