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Place names on China's northern frontier
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
The Ming government's grave concern with the Mongols appears on every written page of the history of that era. Moreover, this obsession with the danger threatening from the north is reflected in a great number of place names. Towers, fortresses, garrison towns of every kind and description built and repeatedly repaired along the border, carried names referring directly or indirectly to the Mongols. Whenever a new construction was begun, it had to be given a name, and every often a name indicating a role in the defence of the country: in fact, these names call to mind such Russian place names as Vladivostok Domination of the East, and Vladikavkaz Domination of the Caucasus.
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- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 45 , Issue 2 , June 1982 , pp. 271 - 283
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- Copyright School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1982
References
1 In fact the Vietnamese often followed the same practice: one may recall the now famous Dienbienphu Settle the Border
2 Books of easy access which I consulted regularly are for instance: Wang, shih-ch'iSan-Yn ch'ou-tsu k'ao, 1613Google Scholar. Cf. Wolfgang, FrankeAn introduction to the sources of Ming history, Kusla Lumpur, 1968, 215Google Scholar; Chang, YPien-cheng k'ao, 1547Google Scholar (Franke, 212); Wei, HuanHung-Ming Chiu-pien k'ao, 1541Google Scholar (Franke, 211)
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41 For example, San-Yn ch'ou-tsu k'ao, II, map 6a; then again on pp. 55ab, 58a, etc
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57 TC I-t'ung-chih, 204.2.5b. Shuo-fang tao chih 2.5b (map), 5.15a
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68 The Kan-su t'ung-chih, ch. 3 has a drawing of the old bridge; also 9.9b; 92.36a. Tu-shih fang-y chi-yao, X, 2628
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