Citations:Inner Mongolia

English citations of Inner Mongolia

  • 1832 August, Le Ming-che Tsing-lae, “Ta-tsing wan-neen yih-tung King-wei Yu-too”, in The Chinese Repository[1], volume 1, number 4, Canton, page 120:
    Inner Mongolia has no lakes of any importance, and those of the Kalkas are small; but Kobdo is a country of lakes, as well as of mountains.
  • 1834, Charles Gutzlaff, A Sketch of Chinese History[2], volume 1, page 12:
    The twenty-four tribes, or Aimaks, in Inner Mongolia constitute forty-nine standards or Khochoun,—Ke, in Chinese.
  • 1956, Harry S. Truman, chapter 6, in Memoirs of Harry S. Truman: Years of Trial And Hope[3], volume II, Doubleday & Company, →OCLC, page 78:
    To lend the strength of his influence to the cease-fire agreement between the two Chinese armies, Marshall undertook a three-thousand-mile flight through northern China all the way to the borders of Inner Mongolia.
  • 1973 February 4, “Size of Inner Mongolia reduced”, in Free China Weekly[4], volume XIV, number 5, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
    The Chinese Communist regime has drastically reduced the size of Inner Mongolia and greatly boosted Chinese immigration there in an effort to reduce the Russian threat on the Mongolian border. []
    With the heavy concentration of Soviet troops along the borders of Inner Mongolia, Peiping fears that the Mongolians might rise to pave the way for a Russian invasion, the report said.
    By cutting up Inner Mongolia and reducing the Mongolian population, the Chinese Communists hope to make their tight control of the Mongolians easier in face of the Russian threat, the report said.
  • [1990, Arthur Waldron, “The second debate over the Ordos”, in The Great Wall of China: From History to Myth[5], Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 125:
    Bounded to the north and west by mountains and river, to the east by river alone, and to the south by high bluffs that mark the beginning of the loess country, it is a compact and easily defended territory hospitable only to nomads. Today these lands are divided between the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region and the Ning-hsia Hui Autonomous Region. Under the Republic the Ho-t’ao and Pao-t’ou plains were included in Sui-yuan province, and the Ning-hsia area in Ning-hsia province.]
  • [2011 May 30, Andrew Jacobs, “Anger Over Protesters’ Deaths Leads to Intensified Demonstrations by Mongolians”, in The New York Times[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on June 02, 2011, Asia Pacific‎[7]:
    Occupying 12 percent of China’s land, the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region has become an increasingly vital source of the coal, natural gas and rare earth elements that help fuel the Chinese economy.]
  • 2011 June 17, “Vestas says wins 49 MW turbine order in China”, in Mike Nesbit, editor, Reuters[8], archived from the original on 2023-07-04, Green Business News‎[9]:
    The turbines would be installed at Dayuanshan wind farm in Wuchuan County in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, it said.
  • 2020 October 17, “Orphaned by the state”, in The Economist[10], volume 437, number 9216, page 37:
    As elsewhere in China, Xinjiang has been stepping up efforts to banish ethnic-minority languages from schools—a policy that has recently triggered protests by parents in Inner Mongolia, a northern region.
  • 2022 April 16, “Chinese astronauts land after 6 months on space station”, in AP News[11], archived from the original on 16 April 2022[12]:
    The Shenzhou 13 space capsule landed in the Gobi desert in the northern region of Inner Mongolia, shown live on state TV.