Citations:Turiy Rog

English citations of Turiy Rog

 
Map including Turiy Rog (DMA, 1986) (lower left)
  • 1936 August 1, “Soviet-Manchukuo Waterways Negotiations Break Down”, in The China Weekly Review[1], volume 77, number 9, →OCLC, page 324, column 1:
    A Tass message from Moscow July 27 stated that on July 23 a frontier guard patrol of the U.S.S.R. discovered, that in the region of Turiy Rog, a frontier post denoting the Soviet-Manchurian frontier had been removed and carried away into Manchurian territory. At the place of location of the post, footprints of people were discovered leading to Manchurian territory, while 250 metres from this place, on Manchurian territory, a platoon of Manchurian troops in battle formation was noticed.
  • 1951, Theodore Shabad, “Soviet Far East”, in Geography of the USSR; A Regional Survey[2], New York: Columbia University Press, →OCLC, page 328:
    The main railway line is the Trans-Siberian, which here runs south along the Ussuri River to its terminus at Vladivostok. A number of short branch lines serve mining areas (Kraskino and Suchan) or lead to the USSR—Chinese border towns (Grodekovo and Turiy Rog).
  • 1996, 秋野豊<t:Yutaka Akino>, “Moscow's New Perspectives on Sino-Russian Relations”, in Socio-Economic Dimensions of the Changes in the Slavic-Eurasian World[3], Sapporo, Japan: Slavic Research Center, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 301:
    In the Maritime Territory there are four crossing points with Сhina*⁸, among which the Pogranichiny-Shuifunhe is now the only point available to those who have ordinary documents. The other three points are limited to those with official endorsement, and three disputed areas are located near these crossing points. The first place is located 20 km west of Turiy Rog Village on a border-crossing near the Khanka Lake; the second is the P-Letter district near the Poltavka-Dongning crossing point; and finally the third comprises two small strips north of Khasan Lake near the Khasan border-crossing into North Korea and China.
  • 2001, Peter G. Tsouras, “Hokushin: The Second Russo-Japanese War”, in Peter G. Tsouras, editor, Rising Sun Victorious[4] (Fiction), New York: Skyhorse Publishing, published 2015, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 15:
    On the front from Lake Hanka south, there were three main defensive localities that barred their way in depth. In the north, on the edge of Lake Hanka at Turiy Rog, there was one rifle division. [] About thirty percent of this area was wooded and easily passable. Along the border between Turiy Rog and Grodekovo ran a dense forest, covered only by observation.
  • 2018 November 6, “Over 39 thousand foreigners visited the Russian Far East on e-visa”, in Visa House[5], archived from the original on 17 January 2022:
    Currently, foreign nationals can arrive on e-visa at the airports of Vladivostok (Knevichi), Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (Yelizovo), Blagoveshchensk, Khabarovsk (New), Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Khomutovo) and Anadyr (Ugolny). In the Sakhalin Region, Primorsky and Kamchatka Territories, sea border crossing points are operating using the same technology. In Primorye, travelers can arrive on e-visa through Pogranichny, Khasan, Makhalino railway checkpoints as well as Poltavka and Turiy Rog automobile checkpoints.
  • 2021 April 28, David Strege, “Siberian tiger attacks car, runs over farmer in scary encounters”, in USA Today[6], archived from the original on 28 April 2021:
    A Siberian tiger that wandered into a Russian village from China was videotaped attacking a car, terrifying its occupants, and then literally running over a female farmer as villagers attempted to scare it away from the area.
    The incident occurred in the village of Turiy Rog in the Russian province of Primary[sic – meaning Primorsky/Primorye] on the northwestern shore of Lake Khanka.