- pinyin: Dàdū; lit. 'Great Capital'
Beiping:
Under the Ming dynasty, the city
itself was
initially known as
Beiping. The name
reads literally as "Northern...
-
Battle of
Beiping–Tianjin (simplified Chinese: 平津作战;
traditional Chinese: 平津作戰; pinyin: Píng Jīn Zùozhàn), also
known as the
Battle of
Beiping,
Battle of...
-
dominance in the
North China Plain. The term
Pingjin refers to the
cities Beiping (now Beijing) and Tianjin. By the
winter of 1948, the
balance of power...
- withdraw. The ****anese
captured Beiping and the Taku
Forts at
Tianjin on 29 and 30 July respectively, thus
concluding the
Beiping-Tianjin campaign. However...
- The
Beiping–Hankou
Railway Operation (****anese: 京漢線作戦; Mid
August – Dec. 1937) was a follow-up to the
Battle of
Beiping–Tianjin of the ****anese army in...
- From 1928 to 1945, when
Beijing was
known as
Beiping, the Beijing–Hankou
railway was
known as the
Beiping–Hankou or
Pinghan railway.
During the Second...
- The
Beijing dialect (simplified Chinese: 北京话;
traditional Chinese: 北京話; pinyin: Běijīnghuà), also
known as
Pekingese and Beijingese, is the
prestige dialect...
-
Order of
battle Beiping–Suiyuan
Railway Operation refers to the
troops involved in the 1937
Beiping–Suiyuan
Railway Operation.
China Taiyuan Pacification...
- The
Cathedral of the
Immaculate Conception (Chinese: 圣母无染原罪堂),
colloquially known as the
Xuanwumen church (Chinese: 宣武门天主堂; pinyin: Xuānwǔmén Tiānzhǔtáng)...
- The
politics of
Beijing are
structured as a dual party-government
system like all
other governing institutions in the
mainland of the People's Republic...