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Word: hsia (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...done on the outskirts of China, by the Japanese in Core, a, by the French in Indo-China, by British. German, French, Japanese, and Russian missions in Chinese Turkestan and in Mongolia. The two Koslov missions of 1907 and 1922 have revealed to us the extent of the Hsi-hsia literature, in the late middle ages, today absolutely unknown, and the importance of the relations between Western Asia and the Far East via Upper Mongolia at the beginning of the Christian Era. As to the missions in Chinese Turkestan, they have shown, unexpectedly, that Chinese Turkestan, now inhabited...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PELLIOT TELLS OF CAVE EXCAVATION IN CHINA | 12/19/1928 | See Source »

...represent Harvard at the conference will be J. B. Bernardin Gr. T. S., L. S. Bryant '29, M. A. Clleek '26, Gardiner Day E. T. S., E. D. Emigh '30, Keitaro Fukudo 2 G. B., J. D. Gatsos '29, Frederick Hawkins '30, W. C. Hicks S. T. S., Pinfang Hsia 2G. B., Gerdon Huggins '29, J. H. Lane '28, A. B. Martin II '30, J. W. Martindale '28, O. R. Rice '25, Kufaro Sanaba 1 G. B., C. O. Simpson '27, F. C. Troll '30, and D. P. Tucker...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD DELEGATION WILL GO TO NORTHFIELD | 6/13/1927 | See Source »

...results of this expedition include a large addition to the huge collection of rubbings of Chinese stone inscriptions already possessed by the Fogg Museum, and photographic records of a series of paintings which are likely to prove to great interest as the work of the little known list Hsi Hsia dynasty which came to an end in the destructive times of Ghengis Khan Professor Paul Pelliot of the College de France, who visited Harvard in March to lecture at the Fogg Museum on recent discoveries in Chinese Archaeology is one-of three living scholars who can discipher this Hsi Hsia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LANGDON WARNER WRITES ACCOUNT OF FOGG MUSEUM EXPEDITION TO CHINA | 5/13/1926 | See Source »

Hankow, about 500 miles due west from Shanghai on the Yang-tsze-kiang River in the inland Province of Hupeh. Despite the efforts of Tuchun Hsia Yao-nan to maintain quiet, an ugly situation rapidly developed. Foreign women, children and missionaries left the city on the eve of an attack by rioters on the British Volunteer Armory and Japanese shops. The British used machine-guns on the rioters; many were killed and wounded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA: Confusion | 6/22/1925 | See Source »

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