English citations of Lushan

  • 1912, “An-hui”, in Northern China, The Valley of the Blue River, Korea[1], Hachette & Company, →OCLC, page 358:
    In the midst of the neck, the Great Orphan rock surmounted by a stûpa. — Beyond, the Northern ramifications of the Lu Shan, one of whose upper valleys is a Summer resort (Ku-ling) for the families of foreigners residing in the Blue River basin, (See CHIANG-HSI, R. 2).
  • 1959, C. K. Yang, The Chinese Family in the Communist Revolution[2], M.I.T. Press, published 1972, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 82:
    In the village of Tunghua in Lushan county of Honan Province a child bride, Li Hsiu-yuan, demanded a divorce, but the local officials were against it, and for three months, the case hung fire.
  • 1963, William J. Goode, “China”, in World Revolution and Family Patterns[3], The Free Press, published 1970, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 277-278:
    Some earlier reports, however, presented a more positive picture of the effects of the Marriage Law: in the 1951-1953 period in Lushan County, Honan Province, 4,600 marriages were reported to have been based on free choice.
  • 2013, Xun Zhou, “Unnatural Disasters”, in Forgotten Voices of Mao's Great Famine, 1958-1962: An Oral History[4], Yale University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 112:
    Together with nearby Lushan county, Pingdingshan was the champion in Henan province’s iron and steel production. Here more than forty thousand agriculture laborers had been diverted to make iron and steel.
  • 2021 July 21, Jackson Dill, Shawn Deng, Hira Humayun, “Typhoon In-fa impacting parts of Japan with its eye set on China by next week”, in CNN[5], archived from the original on 22 July 2021[6]:
    The highest level of rainfall was seen in Lushan County's Pingdingshan City with 15.8 inches of precipitation, Xinhua reports, adding that rainwater has damaged more than 35 square miles of crops, causing losses worth $11.3 million.