English citations of Fushan

  • 1990, Gideon S. Golany, Design and Thermal Performance: Below-ground Dwellings in China[1], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 80:
    Another example is Fushan County, 40 kilometers east of Linfen City, where cave dwellings predominate. The 120,000 people of the county are involved in the production of iron ore, coal, wine, and silk.
  • 2011, Zhaohui Hong, “The Protestant House Church and Its Poverty of Rights in China”, in Patrick Michel, Enzo Pace, editors, Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion[2], volume 2, →ISBN, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 170:
    On September 13, 2009, the Fushan county authority in Linfen city, Shaanxi Province dispatched over 400 policemen and unidentified mobsters to force their way into the gathering place of the Fushan House Church which had about 30,000 members. [] Worse yet, the Fushan County authority also used bulldozers and excavators to destroy several dozens of building, damaged television sets, refrigerators, cars and cooking utensils, all of which were properties of the church.
  • 2015, Ha Jin, A Map of Betrayal[3], Thorndike, Maine: Center Point Large Print, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 96:
    The final leg of the trip was different, though. From Jiamusi I took a local train to Fushan County, and for two hours I sat among Chinese passengers, some of whom looked like peasants.
  • 2021 October 15, Zhou Huiying, Sun Ruisheng, “Artist with unusual tools captures Shanxi architecture”, in China Daily[4], archived from the original on 18 October 2021[5]:
    Since 2014, the 29-year-old from Shanxi's Fushan county, has traveled across the province to created nearly 30 drawings of ancient Chinese architecture using only a pen — either a fountain pen or a ballpoint.