English citations of Ningpo

 
Map including NINGPO
  • In Ningpo, the ninth City of the Province of Chekiang, both ſides of the Artificial Rivers, for ſeveral miles together, are made up with Stone : At the end of every River lyes a Sluce, through which all Veſſels muſt paſs before they come into it.
  • 1956, Theodore Shabad, China's Changing Map: A Political and Economic Geography of the Chinese People's Republic[2], New York: Frederick A. Praeger, page 153:
    In the Lower Yangtze plain section of Chekiang, rice is associated with winter wheat and with silk and cotton. Cotton is also cultivated-on the south shore of Hangchow Bay, chiefly around Yüyao, from where it is shipped to Shanghai and Ningpo.
  • 1986, James H. Cole, Shaohsing: Competition and Cooperation in Nineteenth-Century China[3], University of Arizona Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 32:
    The Shang-yü gazetteer describes the increasing unruliness of tenants from the Opium War period on, and rather disingenuously places all the blame on the unrest stirred up by the British invasion of Ningpo at that time.
  • 2018, Paul French, City of Devils[4], Picador, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 51:
    The men from Ningpo who'd moved to Shanghai and created banking empires are just the type of bankers Jack likes: tight-lipped.