English citations of Wuchiu

1936 1954 1969 1974 1983 1990s 2008 2010s 2021 2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
 
Map including 烏坵嶼 Wu-chʻiu Hsü (Ockseu) (AMS, 1953) →OCLC
  • 1936, Edwin A. Falk, Togo and the Rise of Japanese Sea Power[1], Longmans, Green and Co., →OCLC, →OL, page 229[2]:
    He departed with the Naniwa and the Hashidate²⁰ for a two day cruise, skirting the Wuchiu and Hui Ch’uan Islands and the shore of Fukien Province.
  • 1954 November 27, “Red Assault on Tiny Isle Beaten Off, Say Nationalists”, in The Daily Colonist[3], volume 96, number 294, Victoria, British Columbia, page 1, columns 6, 7:
    First reports were that the Reds, in five gunboats and swarms of junks, succeeded in landing on tiny Wuchiu in Formosa Strait, but were beaten off with many captured. []
    The attack on Wuchiu, a mile-long, half-mile-wide island 15 miles off the mainland, was the first amphibious operation by the Reds since they began boasting last summer they would "liberate" Formosa.
  • 1969, China Yearbook 1968-69[4], volume 22, Taipei: China Publishing Co., →OCLC, page 449:
    [1965 Nov.] 13— The Chinese Navy sank four Chinese Communist gunboats off the Wuchiu Islands near the Chinese mainland.
  • 1974, China Yearbook 1974[5], Taipei, Taiwan: China Publishing Co., →ISSN, →OCLC, page 294, column 1:
    Mainland refugee reception centers at Wuchiu, Kinmen and Matsu assisted 102 refugees in 1973.
  • 1983, David W. Reinhard, The Republican Right Since 1945[6], Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 126:
    Knowland expressed grave fears that the administration was about to be duped by the “Trojan Horse of co-existence” being advanced by the Soviet Union. Then he called upon the Congress to investigate current American foreign and defense policy. Days later, after Communist China announced its imprisonment of thirteen Americans captured during the Korean War and fired on the Nationalist-held island of Wuchiu, Knowland urged an immediate blockade of Red China. When Knowland subsequently sided with Senator McCarthy, pundits believed that he had gone over to the Republican Right, severing all connections with the Eisenhower administration.²⁹
  • 1994 July, Robert Storey, Taiwan - A Travel Survival Kit[7], 3rd edition, Lonely Planet, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, pages 261–262:
    Between Kinmen and Matsu - and also just a stone’s throw from the Chinese mainland - is a third island called Wuchiu. The island is so small and insignificant that the Communists didn’t even bother shelling it.[...]For 40 years, Kinmen, Matsu and Wuchiu even had their own currency to prevent capital flight, but these days standard NT$ are acceptable.
  • 1996 March 15, Michael Evans, “China offensive cannot be ruled out, experts say”, in The Times[8], number 65,528, →ISSN, →OCLC, Overseas News, page 14, column 3:
    The sources said the Chinese would not risk attempting an amphibious landing on one of the heavily fortified islands, in particular Quemoy, which is guarded by 40,000 Taiwanese troops, or Matsu, which has a defence force of 9,000. Two other islands, however, Wuchiu and Tungyin, are less heavily defended and may pose an easier target, the sources said.
  • 2008, Conor O'Clery, “No Third Act”, in May You Live in Interesting Times[9], Revised edition, Poolbeg Press, published 2009, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 245:
    However, Kinmen, along with two other offshore islands, Matsu and Wuchiu, remained cut off from its natural hinterland.
  • 2012 April, Bruce A. Elleman, High Seas Buffer: The Taiwan Patrol Force, 1950-1979[10], Newport, R.I.: Naval War College Press, →ISBN, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 115:
    In November 1965, while patrolling the Taiwan Strait, USS O’Brien arrived near Wuchiu Island just after an attack on two Nationalist patrol boats by PLAN torpedo boats and gunboats.
  • 2013, Rongxing Guo, Regional China: A Business and Economic Handbook[11], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 44:
    The Wuchiu (Wuqiu) Islands are nominally administered in the PRC by the Xiuyu District of the Putian prefecture, but are in reality controlled by the Republic of China, which administers Wuchiu (Wuqiu) as part of Quemoy (Jinmen) County.
  • 2015, Bi-yu Chang, Place, Identity and National Imagination in Postwar Taiwan[12], Routledge, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL:
    Because of its remoteness, Wuchiu was called 'the offshore islands of the offshore islands'. Even now, military ships only provide supplies between Wuchiu and Taichung once every ten days.
  • 2016 July 3, Han Cheung, “Taiwan in Time: ‘MiG busters’ in action”, in Taipei Times[13], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 02 July 2016, Features, page 8:
    The pilots noticed the presence of four enemy planes as they flew over Wuchiu Island (烏坵). They immediately prepared for combat, and after some maneuvering Captain Chang Yen-ming (張燄明) opened fire and shot down one of the MiGs.
  • 2017, Diana Fisher, Laoshi: Three Years in Taiwan[14], Oxford Mills, Ontario: Farmhouse Publishing Company, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL:
    We were looking out over the Taiwan Strait just south of Wuchiu Island, toward Mainland China. It was a cloudy day, but we clearly saw a very strange object in the sky.
  • 2021 December 27, Po-yang Hsiao, Kuan Jui-ping, Chang Hsiu-feng, Evelyn Kao, “Hehuanshan sees winter's heaviest snowfall so far”, in Focus Taiwan[15], archived from the original on 27 December 2021:
    On Monday, the weather on the outlying islands will remain cold, with Dongyin in Lienchiang County to experience temperatures as low as 7 degrees at 2:30 p.m., while Wuchiu in Kinmen can expect temperatures of 9.3 degrees at 3:50 p.m.
  • 2022, Veronica della Dora, Where Light in Darkness Lies: The Story of the Lighthouse[16], →ISBN, →OCLC:
    An even more impressive nineteenth-century militarized lighthouse is found on the Taiwanese Wuchiu island, located just 20 nautical miles off the Chinese coast. While much of the surrounding military structure has been demolished, its black tower and high walls painted in camouflage colours stand as reminders of the contested history of this small frontier island.
  • 2022 April 11, Kayleigh Madjar, “Deployment of short-range defense systems moved up”, in Taipei Times[17], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 10 April 2022, Front Page, page 1:
    The army and navy have purchased six sets of the short-range weapons systems to be in part deployed on Lienchiang County’s Dongyin Island (東引) and Kinmen County’s Wuchiu Island (烏坵).
    The Chinese-language United Daily News (UDN) yesterday reported that the Wuchiu system is expected to be deployed by June, while the system in Dongyin should become operational by the end of this year.
  • 2022 April 13, Lawrence Chung, “Taiwan to boost defences of tiny islet outpost Dongyin with short-range automated weapons”, in South China Morning Post[18], archived from the original on 13 April 2022, Military:
    The military has budgeted NT$725 million (US$24.8 million) for seven sets of the system, four of which should be deployed in Wuchiu – another small islet in the Taiwan-controlled Quemoy islands, also known as Kinmen, near Fujian province – around June, according to the report.
  • 2022 August 25, “Taiwan aims for big rise in defence spending amid escalating China tension”, in Taiwan News[19], archived from the original on 25 August 2022, Politics‎[20]:
    Live-fire drills will take place in a coastal part of China's Fujian province on Friday and Saturday, just north of the tiny Taiwan-controlled Wuchiu islands in the Taiwan Strait, Fujian authorities said on Wednesday, announcing a no-sail zone.