Chieh-yang
English

Map including CHIEH-YANG (KITYANG) 揭陽 (AMS, 1954) →OCLC
Etymology
Borrowed from Mandarin 揭陽/揭阳 (Jiēyáng) Wade–Giles pronunciation: Chieh¹-yang².
Proper noun
Chieh-yang
- Alternative form of Jieyang.
- 1965 [1959], C. K. Yang, “A Chinese Village in Early Communist Transition”, in Chinese Communist Society: The Family and The Village, The M.I.T. Press, OCLC 875655917, page 217:
- A co-operative in the southern part of Chekiang Province claimed a 25 per cent increase of yield of rice per mow in 1953, and another in Chieh-yang county of Kwangtung Province reported an increase of 33 per cent per mow of rice in the same year, as compared with 1952 before the co-operatives came into existence in either locality.
- 1984 [1983], Wilbur, C. Martin, The Nationalist Revolution in China, 1923-1928, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 84-9588, OCLC 246532584, page 155:
- As the Yeh-Ho armies approached Swatow, peasants briefly captured two other county seats, Ch’ao-yang and Chieh-yang, but there was very little coordination between the local forces and the oncoming troops.
- 1990, Arthur Waldron, The Great Wall of China: From History to Myth, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 88-32689, OCLC 243442537, page 125:
- Weng was from Chieh-yang county in Kwangtung province, and passed the chin-shih examination in 1526, after which he served for a time as provincial magistrate in Wu-chou in Kwangsi. But his rise to high office began only at the time of the Vietnam campaign in the years 1537-40.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Chieh-yang.
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