English citations of Hun-ch'un

 
Map including HUN-CHʻUN (AMS, 1967)
  • 1904, B. L. Putnam Weale, Manchu and Muscovite[1], Macmillan and Co., →OCLC, page 52:
    In this fashion China completely lost access to the Sea of Japan, and surrendered what is to-day the important province of the Primorsk to the northern power. The nearest point on Chinese territory to the coast in this extreme east is Chinese Hun-ch'un, which stands some thirty miles inland from Passiet Bay.
  • 1984, Ki-baik Lee, translated by Edward Willett Wagner, A New History of Korea[2], Harvard University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 89–90:
    The capital of Parhae, called Sanggyŏng or "High Capital" was located at modern Tung-ching-ch'eng in Hei-lung-chiang province, Manchuria, and there were four secondary capitals- the "Central Capital" at modern Tun-hua in Chi-lin province, Manchuria, "Eastern Capital" at Hun-ch'un in Chi-lin, "Southern Capital" at Hamhŭng in South Hamgyŏng province, Korea, and "Western Capital" at Lin-chiang in Chi-lin [see map p. 70].
  • 2008, Rodney P. Carlisle, Day by Day: The Twenties[3], volume 1, Facts on File, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 82:
    The armed Korean independence movement attacks Hun-ch'un, in eastern Manchuria, and kills Japanese consulate police.