11-808: Xincheng Township (traditional Chinese: 新城鄉 ; simplified Chinese: 新城乡 ) could refer to: Mainland China [ edit ] Xincheng Township , Lintan County , Gansu Xincheng Township , Qingshui County , Gansu Xincheng Township , Zhenyuan County, Gansu Xincheng Township, Songyuan , in Ningjiang District , Songyuan, Jilin Xincheng Township , Jingbian County , Shaanxi Taiwan [ edit ] Xincheng, Hualien , township in Hualien City See also [ edit ] Xincheng (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
22-574: A deal with Bai Lang and had Ma Qixi and his family slaughtered. Lintan County is divided to 11 towns , 3 townships , and 2 ethnic townships . This Gansu location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . The North China Herald The North China Daily News (in Chinese: Zilin Xibao ), was an English-language newspaper in Shanghai , China, called the most influential foreign newspaper of its time. The paper
33-531: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Lintan County Lintan County ( Chinese : 临潭县 , Tibetan : བ་ཙེ་རྫོང་། ) is an administrative district in Gansu , China. It is one of 58 counties of Gansu. It is part of the Gannan Prefecture . Its postal code is 747500, and in 1999 its population was 148,722 people. Tibetans of Taozhou helped crush
44-691: The Canidrome , a dog-racing stadium . One of the two Morrisses also purchased the Hellier Stradivarius . In 1924, the newspaper moved its headquarters to the new North China Daily News Building at Number 17 on the Bund , then the tallest building in Shanghai. Between 1925 and 1949 the paper employed a former officer of the Russian Imperial Army, Georgi Sapojnikov, as its daily cartoonist. Drawing under
55-658: The British Consulate. Briton Nichol Latimer, resident of Shanghai and the manager of Russell & Company’s Shanghai Steam Navigation Co., was the publisher of the North China Herald from 1863 until his death in 1865, during which period it was the most influential British newspaper in China. For much of the period it was published under the masthead North-China Herald and Supreme Court and Consular Gazette . Its circulation peaked at 7,817 copies. A notable early editor
66-553: The Muslim rebels in the Dungan revolt (1895–1896) like they did in the 1781 Jahriyya revolt . The loyalist Muslims of Táozhōu also fight against the Muslim rebels and Muslim rebel leader Ma Yonglin's entire family was executed. Muslim sect leader Ma Qixi 's Muslim Xidaotang repulsed and defeated Bai Lang's bandit forces , who looted the city of Táozhōu but Muslim general Ma Anliang slaughtered Muslim sect leader Ma Qixi and his family after
77-594: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Xincheng_Township&oldid=1184543624 " Categories : Place name disambiguation pages Township name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing traditional Chinese-language text Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text Short description
88-586: The signature of "Sapajou" he was noted for his perceptive coverage of the complex politics of contemporary China and the extremes of life and society in Shanghai during this period. The North-China Herald and the daily edition suspended publication after 8 December 1941 during the Pacific War . Publication of the Herald was never resumed. On 31 March 1951, the North China Daily News suspended publication at
99-761: The war. The bandits were notable for anti-Muslim sentiment, massacring thousands of Muslims at Taozhou. Muslim Khufiyya Sufi general Ma Anliang was only concerned with defending Lanzhou and his own home base in Hezhou (Linxia) in central Gansu where his followers lived and not the rival Xidaotang sect Muslims under Muslim leader Ma Qixi in southern Gansu's minor towns like Taozhou so he let Bai Lang ravage Taozhou and other towns in southern Gansu while passively defending Lanzhou and Hezhou. The North China Herald and Reginald Farrer accused Ma Anliang of betraying his fellow Muslims by letting them get slaighterd at Taozhou. Ma Anliang then arrested Ma Qixi after falsely accusing him of striking
110-581: Was Frederic H. Balfour . Other editors included Archibald John Little 's brother R.W. "Bob" Little (C: 李德立, P: Lǐ Délì ), who also served on the Shanghai International Settlement 's, Municipal Council . In 1901, the paper was purchased by Henry E. Morriss (T:馬立斯, S:马立斯, P: Mǎ Lìsī ). In 1920, the paper passed to his son, H.E. Morriss Jr., who used his money to build a compound of luxurious houses which became today's Ruijin Hotel , as well as
121-496: Was founded as the weekly North-China Herald (T: 北華捷報, S: 北华捷报, P: Běihuá Jiébào ) and was first published on 3 August 1850. Its founder, British auctioneer Henry Shearman (T: 奚安門, S:奚安门, P: Xī Ānmén ), died in 1856. A daily edition commenced publication on 1 June 1864 as the North China Daily News . The North-China Herald was also the gazette (official record) of the British Supreme Court for China and Japan and
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