Citations:Mu-tan-chiang
English citations of Mu-tan-chiang
- 1888, H. E. M. James, The Long White Mountain or A Journey in Manchuria[1], Longmans, Green, and Co., →OCLC, page 5:
- The principal rivers are the Yalu or Ai-chiang, the Tumen or Kaoli-chiang, the Sungari or Sung-hua-chiang, the Nonni, and the Hurka or Mu-tan-chiang.
- 1965, Alexey Okladnikov, The Soviet Far East in Antiquity: An Archaeological and Historical Study of the Maritime Region of the U.S.S.R.[2], University of Toronto Press, →OCLC, →OL, page 183:
- The balanced planning of the ancient city on the Mu-tan-chiang corresponds on the whole to the layout of the capital of the T'ang Dynasty, Ch'ang-an. The same street plans are found in the ancient capitals of Japan, Nara and Kyoto, built on the Chinese model.
- 1972, Theodore Shabad, “Index”, in China's Changing Map[3], New York: Frederick A. Praeger, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 345, 358:
- Chinese place names are listed in three common spelling styles: […] (1) the Post Office system, […] (2) the Wade-Giles system, […] shown after the main entry […] (3) the Chinese Communists' own Pinyin romanization system, which also appears in parentheses […] Mutankiang (Mu-tan-chiang, Mudanjiang)