Citations:Lo-t'ien

English citations of Lo-t'ien

 
Map including LO-T'IEN (AMS, 1961)
  • 1901, J. J. M. de Groot, “On Disease of the Soul, its Debility and Derangements”, in The Religious System of China[1], volume IV, →OCLC, archived from the original on October 07, 2023, page 92:
    Yuh ying kia pi 育嬰家祕, "Domestic Mysteries regarding the Rearing of Children", a work by Wan Tsʻüen 萬全, alias Mih-chai 密齋, a native of Lo-tʻien 羅田 in the extreme east of Hupeh, who lived under the Ming dynasty.
  • 1972, Colin P. Mackerras, The Rise of the Peking Opera 1770-1870[2], Oxford: Clarendon Press, →OCLC, →OL, page 184:
    Yü San-sheng came from Lo-t’ien in Hupeh, and was the son of a merchant.
  • 1986, Patricia Buckley Ebrey, James L. Watson, editors, Kinship Organization in Late Imperial China 1000-1940[3], University of California Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 51:
    Wu Hai, whose objections to contamination of the patrilineal line were cited above, described an ancestral hall (tz'u-t'ang) of the Lins of Lo-t'ien (Hupei).