「Peking」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| considerable tension between Moscow, Tokyo and | Peking along their common borders in what is now Nort |
| Chinese new martyrs of the Boxer Rebellion, at | Peking and other places (1900) |
| ing herd was in the Imperial Hunting Park near | Peking, and belonging to the Chinese emperor. |
| Hong Kong, Kowloon, Canton, Shanghai, Hankow, | Peking and Tientsin in China; Seoul, Korea; Kobe, Kyo |
| is the founder of the China Clubs (Hong Kong, | Peking and Singapore), the Shanghai Tang stores, Hava |
| ration Army had cut off the connection between | Peking and Tianjian, and accomplished the encirclemen |
| ntained as a subordinate unit headquartered in | Peking and was responsible for operations in the nort |
| He served in Havana, | Peking and Washington, and was Deputy Under Secretary |
| o defeat the Chinese army and open the road to | Peking and the relief of the Siege of the Internation |
| Exhibitions are planned for | Peking and Shanghai. |
| professor of anatomy at the Tung Wen College, | Peking, and in 1898 professor of surgery at the Imper |
| der of the Asiatic Station, was brought to the | Peking area to protect Americans who were under threa |
| Since he was in informed circles of | Peking as an always welcome guest, it was decided tha |
| In 1671 he was called to the court of | Peking as mathematician, and was one of that group of |
| was in command of the HMS Endymion and entered | Peking as part of the British response to the Boxer R |
| to April 1901 was attached to the Legation in | Peking as special political officer for Chinese affai |
| n which role he burnt the Old Summer Palace at | Peking as a reprisal for the torture and murder of Br |
| ish Admiral Edward Seymour, attempted to reach | Peking but due to heavy resistance were forced to sto |
| made a hurried attempt to go to the relief of | Peking, but met with severe resistance after it left |
| fter being posted to Beijing (sometimes called | Peking, but then known as Peiping), China after the w |
| During the siege of | Peking by the Boxers in 1900 he sent out the first me |
| 20 is called the “semi-siege” as foreigners in | Peking came increasingly under attack by the Boxers. |
| He received the Medal for his actions in | Peking, China from July 21-August 17, 1900 and it was |
| He received the Medal for his actions in | Peking, China from July 21 - August 17, 1900 and it w |
| 1861; the character runs a Chinese laundry in | Peking, China and is a pantomime dame; that is, alway |
| He received his Medal for his actions in | Peking, China from July 21-August 17, 1900. |
| received the Medal of Honor for his action in | Peking, China from on July 21-August 17, 1900. |
| itution was originally established in Beijing ( | Peking, China) in 1925 by the Benedictines of St. Vin |
| the presence of the enemy during the battle of | Peking, China, 21 July to 17 August 1900. |
| the presence of the enemy during the battle of | Peking, China, 12 July 1900, Mitchell distinguished h |
| the presence of the enemy during the action at | Peking, China, 21 July to 17 August 1900, Murphy dist |
| Instead, he found a job in | Peking, China, comparing different editions of the Ti |
| In Beijing (then known to Americans as | Peking), China, from July 21 to August 17, 1900, he h |
| his fellow Marines were erecting barricades in | Peking, China, when the Chinese rebels surrounded the |
| In action at | Peking, China, 21 July to 17 August 1900. |
| In | Peking, China, was a shrine devoted to the North Star |
| In action against the enemy at | Peking, China, July 21, to August 17, 1900. |
| Place and date: | Peking, China, July 21, to August 17, 1900. |
| nded the Marine Detachment, American Legation, | Peking, China, from November 14, 1910 to April 30, 19 |
| the presence of the enemy during the action at | Peking, China, June 28, to August 17, 1900. |
| the presence of the enemy during the action at | Peking, China, 21 July to 17 August 1900. |
| Marine Detachment at the American Legation in | Peking, China. |
| awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at | Peking, China. |
| An English-Chinese Dictionary of | Peking Colloquial (1910) |
| Herbst in | Peking concerts became more and more rare while the b |
| usk" which was performed and recorded with The | Peking Conservatoire Symphony Orchestra, and is often |
| The mission at | Peking continued to exist among persecutions, and the |
| Aires, Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Constantinople, | Peking, Copenhagen as secretary to the legation, (188 |
| their compound the Boxers were raging through | Peking destroying foreign establishments and executin |
| Peking Duck is now served at most Chinese restaurants | |
| arkouri Cup to be awarded to the winner over a | Peking Duck. |
| kinese dishes Britain had ever seen, including | Peking Duck. |
| in the UK to serve Pekinese dishes, including | Peking Duck. |
| Peking Ducks | |
| o be found within the lake area include geese, | Peking ducks, Muscovy ducks, Campbell ducks, mallards |
| When the Japanese occupied | Peking during World War II, they insisted that all ch |
| Cousin Octavia of Faction Paradox has come to | Peking during the Boxer Rebellion in search of an art |
| alition forces helping to relieve the siege of | Peking during the Boxer Rebellion. |
| ht a more substantial force to the vicinity of | Peking, Esen attempted to ransom the emperor back to |
| ppointed C.B. for services rendered during the | Peking expedition in November 1900. |
| Peking Express is a 1951 adventure film made by Param | |
| He also appeared on several other TV shows as | Peking Express and Wildebeesten. |
| Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1978. | |
| The first Convention of | Peking formally ends the War. |
| and after learning Chinese he was stationed in | Peking from 1952 to 1954. |
| eninsula and in 1898, the Second Convention of | Peking further expanded the colony with the 99 year l |
| Peking Garden Restaurant - 3rd floor | |
| with the emperors reply, was published in the | Peking Gazette but failed to allay the excitement the |
| Exquisite examples of opium lamps crafted from | Peking glass are highly sought after by collectors. |
| Culmore Shopping Center contains the | Peking Gourmet Inn restaurant, in which President Geo |
| The force arrived in China after the siege of | Peking had already been lifted. |
| By that time, the siege of | Peking had already been lifted. |
| NB.Amherst WAS allowed to enter | Peking, having been rush there overnight. |
| of Ferdinand Verbiest, another Jesuit, then at | Peking, he attempted an overland journey, and travele |
| Atterbury MD, American Presbyterian Mission in | Peking, Henry Whitney MD, American Board of Commissio |
| In Beijing ( | Peking), hot pot is eaten year-round. |
| Moving on to Beijing ( | Peking), Huc gained more knowledge of the Chinese lan |
| en to accompany Lord Amherst on his embassy to | Peking in 1816. |
| Seymour expedition to relieve the Legations at | Peking in June 1900. |
| he Taku Forts and the subsequent occupation of | Peking in 1860. |
| These include Return to | Peking in which he described changes in China since h |
| He lectured in | Peking in 1947. |
| D'Incarville died in | Peking in June of 1757. |
| In 2001 he was resident at the University of | Peking in Beijing, China. |
| d Chinese Secretary at the British Legation in | Peking in 1891. |
| ight Nation Alliance have invaded and occupied | Peking, inflicting a crushing defeat on China. |
| and published by the Emperor's Authority, at | Peking. is of Sir George Thomas Staunton's translatio |
| oo radical for the liking of the leadership in | Peking, its influence began to wane, and it was forma |
| iod, and the attendant disorders in and around | Peking made this tour of duty particularly interestin |
| ield director of the continuing excavations at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China. |
| ield director of the continuing excavations at | Peking Man site in Zhoukoudian, China. |
| Large scale excavations begin at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China under Canadian |
| Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian, China is excavated a | |
| of the finds from the 1927-1937 excavations of | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China are lost, never |
| In the 1950s, the scientific designation of | Peking Man was changed when the hominid was generally |
| of the group that established the existence of | Peking Man (Sinanthropus pekinensis). |
| research and appraisal of fossils unearthed at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China |
| en by Otto Zdansky from his excavations of the | Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian, China in 1921 and 192 |
| Chinese excavations at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, begun in 1927 by Davi |
| ial unearthed by Otto Zdansky's excavations at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China which will even |
| of Chinese vertebrate paleontology, buried at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China |
| findings contrast with the hypothesis that the | Peking Man was the ancestor of Chinese people. |
| Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian, China is first excava | |
| Ongoing excavations at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China unearth a mandi |
| ding father of Chinese anthropology, buried at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China |
| i Wenzhong joins the continuing excavations at | Peking Man site in Zhoukoudian, China. |
| French archaeologist Henri Breuil visits the | Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian, China and confirms th |
| Bian Mienmien join the ongoing excavations at | Peking Man Site in Zhoukoudian, China. |
| Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian, China is discovered b | |
| n the later H. erectus (Turkana boy, Java man, | Peking man). |
| useum's collection contains three teeth of the | Peking Man. |
| e later identified as being the first finds of | Peking Man. |
| olumbia, as well as honorary professorships at | Peking Medical School and University of Tokyo. |
| The mission was established at | Peking on 26 March 1861, but it was not until 2 April |
| He proceeded to | Peking on 7 Nov. 1860, but withdrew to Tientsin for t |
| he Russian Cemetery outside the Anting gate of | Peking on 17 October 1860; he left a widow and five y |
| foreign persecutions ended with the capture of | Peking, on 14 August, by the China Relief Expedition, |
| Dr. Lowry retired in 1922 and died in | Peking on January 13, 1924. |
| They arrived in | Peking on May 31 before the Boxers closed the city of |
| acting in many of the films he directed (like | Peking Opera Blues) and produced (Swordsman II). |
| It is a special combined pop, R&B and | Peking Opera style, English and Chinese language.This |
| The movie is about the | Peking Opera School that Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, and |
| era, another man who practices the trombone, a | Peking opera troupe, a Filipina ballad singer and a b |
| s; and Pat Neil (Sally Yeh), the daughter of a | Peking Opera impresario. |
| -La. This time he incorporated ancient Chinese | Peking Opera and kunqu instead of the Chinese ethnic |
| made a career of playing transgender roles: in | Peking Opera Blues she plays a tomboy who dresses in |
| The archaic dialect of | Peking opera is a form of Zhongyuan Mandarin. |
| by 200 artists including The Wooster Group and | Peking opera, the attendance was recorded as 92,500. |
| ction, and serious drama with scenes involving | Peking Opera. |
| Peking Ravioli - In Boston, guotie are known as "Peki | |
| The movement against Westerners in | Peking reached a climax on 20 June 1900 when the Germ |
| e capture of the Taku forts and the entry into | Peking, returning to South Africa to complete his wor |
| m Sha Tsui, which used to be named Chater, see | Peking Road. |
| PEKING SEEKS WORLD TRADE! | |
| nese emperor Jianqing and were forced to leave | Peking, some days later. |
| The Herbst in | Peking song "Bakschischrepublik" became the hymn of E |
| uary 1945, he was appointed to be Mayor of the | Peking Special City of the Wang Jingwei regime. |
| Euphorbia pekinensis, the | Peking spurge, is a flowering plant native to Asia. |
| the end of July 1900 that losses for the ABCFM | Peking station was about $71,000 gold. |
| The City of | Peking, the City of Sydney, and the Australia passing |
| It is named after | Peking, the capital city of the People's Republic of |
| In 1665, he was exiled from | Peking to Canton, where he died (according to Sommerv |
| Brown participated in a recreation of the 1907 | Peking to Paris race using five 100 year-old cars. |
| teps to organize a large relief expedition for | Peking, to stamp out what came to be known as the Box |
| In 1937, Geshe Wangyal left | Peking to return to Tibet via India after earning eno |
| The overland road from | Peking to Tabriz was not only of portentous length fo |
| nceived the daring idea of going overland from | Peking to Goa (India) by way of Tibet and Nepal. |
| y completed transferring the coal from City of | Peking to Charleston on 22 June. |
| While there's no doubt that | Peking took pains to extract as much information out |
| den, while branches with Chinese only staff in | Peking, Tsinanfu, and Kirin, among others. |
| ronze bust of Huang Kun at Physics department, | Peking U |
| He was also editor of the | Peking Union Church Bulletin from 1928-1943, was a me |
| rk: Feng was Tsien's mother's professor at the | Peking Union Medical College in 1930s. |
| me, and a few days later the vice president of | Peking University summoned me to his office. |
| the Table Tennis program and took place at the | Peking University Gymnasium. |
| and took place between August 13 and 17 at the | Peking University Gymnasium. |
| In 2008, she represented | Peking University club, and in 2010, she played for B |
| the 2008 Summer Olympics and took place at the | Peking University Gymnasium. |
| rds, first described in 1998 by S.A. Ji of the | Peking University Department of Geology. |
| ay 25, 1966 "Big-character poster" criticizing | Peking University for being controlled by the "bourge |
| n taught law at a number of schools, including | Peking University and Beijing Jiaotong University. |
| t the Department of Mathematics and Mechanics, | Peking University (1954-1958) and as a postgraduate a |
| Shandong, he was graduated in history from the | Peking University in 1958, specialized in the fronter |
| Industry Bureau before he was admitted to the | Peking University Department of History, majoring in |
| graduate student at the physics department in | Peking University (PKU), on September 17, 1999, servi |
| e received his B.A. of Quaternary geology from | Peking University in 1983, and earned Ph.D. of soil s |
| d Chinese educator Hu Shih (later president of | Peking University and China's ambassador to the U.S.) |
| founded the Department of Eastern Languages at | Peking University soon after his arrival, becoming de |
| Peking University | |
| Peking University Press | |
| Project, a joint investment by the CFG and the | Peking University Kwans Group to fund new directors. |
| ially successful, the China Film Group and the | Peking University Kwans Group invested ¥5 million to |
| Peking University School of Stomatology | |
| Zhang obtained PhD in 1988 from | Peking University in Beijing. |
| Peking University Gymnasium during the 2008 Summer Ol | |
| In 1917, he transferred to | Peking University due to the law department of Peiyan |
| He later continued his studies at | Peking University where he received a Masters Degree |
| The | Peking University School of Transnational Law (STL) i |
| 1999: Doctor Honoris Causa at the | Peking University Health Science Center, China |
| He went to Wuhan University and | Peking University to study Chinese modern literature. |
| After a summer at | Peking University in Beijing, China, he worked in Tok |
| ck to China after obtaining PhD and joined the | Peking University Department of Chemistry. |
| Luo studied history under Professor Hu Shih at | Peking University (now Beijing University). |
| He worked at | Peking University and CAS until his visit to the Oxfo |
| o China in 1916 and served as the President of | Peking University the following year. |
| ionalist and professor at Yenching University, | Peking University and Tsinghua University. |
| He graduated the | Peking University in 1926, and it was not long before |
| many times, teaching comparative literature at | Peking University and Tsinghua University. |
| ne Tao received a B.Sc. degree in biology from | Peking University in Beijing, China, in 1992. |
| ing dean of the School of Transnational Law at | Peking University's Shenzhen campus. |
| Tu was a visiting professor at | Peking University, Taiwan University, the Chinese Uni |
| A law department graduate of | Peking University, Shen Qing went to the United State |
| been deployed at Columbia, Johns Hopkins, MIT, | Peking University, Stanford, UC Berkeley, University |
| ptember 17, 1999, and was built by students in | Peking University, Beijing, China. |
| long with the graduate schools of Tsinghua and | Peking University, HIT Shenzhen Graduate School occup |
| ns at numerous universities in China including | Peking University, Beijing Forestry University, Jilin |
| d to establish a department of Christianity at | Peking University, Beijing, People's Republic of Chin |
| ing dean of the School of Transnational Law at | Peking University, in south China's Shenzhen city. |
| niversity, Russia, University of Siena, Italy, | Peking University, China, China Medical University, T |
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