-
British Envoy in China, 1900–06. For example, on 21
November 1903: "Wu
Tingfang came in the afternoon, and
stopped talking for an hour and a half about...
- Ng Teng Fong (Chinese: 黄廷方; pinyin: Huáng
Tíngfāng; 28 July 1928 – 2
February 2010) was a
Singaporean real
estate tycoon with a
major presence in Hong...
- Bie
Tingfang (Chinese: 别廷芳; Pinyin: Bié
Tíngfāng; 1883–1940) was a Lieutenant-General in the
National Revolutionary Army of China. Bie was born into a...
- Chinese: 蘇定方;
simplified Chinese: 苏定方; pinyin: Sū Dìngfāng; Wade–Giles: Su
Tingfang) (591–667),
formal name Su Lie (蘇烈) but went by the
courtesy name of Dingfang...
- at the
Wayback Machine (in Russian)
Linda Pomerantz-Zhang (1992). Wu
Tingfang (1842–1922):
Reform and
Modernization in
Modern Chinese History. Hong Kong...
-
Wuhan to
negotiate with the revolutionaries. The
revolutionaries chose Wu
Tingfang. With the
intervention of six
foreign powers, the
United Kingdom, the United...
- new
government central personnel list:
Minister of
Foreign Affairs Wu
Tingfang Wu
Chaoshu Minister of
Finance Tang
Shaoyi Liao
Zhongkai Secretary of the...
-
State Xu
Shichang Lu Zhengxiang*
Premiers of
State Council Duan
Qirui Wu
Tingfang* Li
Jingxi Prime Minister of the
Great Qing
Zhang Xun (under
restored Qing...
-
District of California. Born in New York City, Wu is the great-grandson of Wu
Tingfang, the
first ethnically Chinese barrister in England, and the
grandson of...
-
Yunnan clique and Lu
Rongting of the Old
Guangxi clique as marshals, Wu
Tingfang as the
Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Tang
Shaoyi as the
Minister of Finance...