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Pingjang
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/08/31 22:36 UTC 版)
固有名詞
Pingjang
- (rare) Alternative form of Pingrang (Pyongyang).
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1670, Arnoldus Montanus, translated by John Ogilby, Atlas Japannensis: Being Remarkable Addresses by Way of Embassy ... from the East-India Company ... to the Emperor of Japan, page 184:
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The four Northern Territories bordering next to Tartary, he had already miſerably ruin'd, when the King of Corea rais'd an Army to oppoſe the Tartars (who then design'd to Beſiege the Metropolis Pingjang) chuſing a convenient place for Ambuſcade , to ſurpriſe them in their March , and , as deſign'd , ſuddenly ſallied out upon them, ſuſpecting there no Oppoſition; […]
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1671, Arnoldus Montanus, translated by John Ogilby, “A Memorable Embassy to the Emperor of Japan”, in Remarkable Addresses by Way of Embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Emperor of Japan. […], London: […] [T]he Author, […], page 131:
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WIthin stands the Idol Toranga, who had formerly been a great Hunter in Corca, and commonly dwelt in the Metropolis Pingjang; some Centuries before the Chinesy King Hiaovus, subdu'd and brought under his subjection half the Island Corea, which had never before tasted the cruelty of the Tartars, nor heard of the Spoils of Sandaracha, with which the Japanners and Chineses furnish their Houses: […]
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1701, “CORéE, or COREA”, in The Great Historical, Geographical, Genealogical and Poetical Dictionary; Being a Curious Miscellany of Sacred and Prophane History ... Collected from the Best Historians, Chronologers and Lexicographers ... But More Especially Out of Lewis Morery, D.D. His Eighth Edition Corrected and Enlarged by Monsieur Le Clerc, volume 1, page [3]:
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All the Peninſula is divided into eight Provinces ; that which lies in the middle is called Kinki, where the famous Town Pingjang, the King's ordinary Reſidence is; beſides which, there are ſeveral Towns and Cities very well peopled, whoſe Inhabitants have the ſame Cuſtoms and Religion the Chineſe have, for they keep their dead Bodies in fine Coffins for three Years together, during which time they render it as much reſpect and civility ,” as if he that it 64, to were ſtill living, and at the end of the three years they bury them.
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P'ing-jang
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/08/31 22:36 UTC 版)
語源
From Mandarin 平壤 (Píngrǎng), Wade–Giles romanization: Pʻing²-jang³.
固有名詞
P'ing-jang
- (rare) Alternative form of Pingrang (Pyongyang)
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1885, Edward P. Vining, quoting J. Klaproth, “Researches regarding the Country of Fu-sang, mentioned in Chinese Books, and erroneously supposed to be a Part of America”, in An Inglorious Columbus; or, Evidence that Hwui Shăn and a Party of Buddhist Monks from Afghanistan Discovered America in the Fifth Century, a. d., D. Appleton and Company, →OCLC, page 43:
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Next, the Chinese text says that they set forth from the district of Lo-lang, which is situated not in Leao-tung, but in Corea, and of which the capital is the present city of Pʽing-jang (in d’Auville’s map, Ping-yang), situated upon the northern bank of the Ta-tʽung-kiang, or Pʽai-shue, a river of the province of Pʽing-ngan, which, in great part, in the time of the dynasty of Han, formed the district of Lo-lang.
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1890, E. H. Parker, “On Race Struggles in Corea”, in Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, volume XVIII, Tokyo: The Hakubunsha, →OCLC, pages 192–193, 218:
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In A.D. 436 we find from the Kang Kien that Fêng Hung (馮弘) the last “Emperor” of Yen⁶² had to take refuge in the Tungusic (東胡) kingdom of Kao-li,—the very first mention of the new name,⁶³—which had been developing quietly at its capital P’ing-jang. […]
“The Emperor visited east-central China (江與京洛), and enlisted 400,000 soldiers and 500 Wu ships to cross the seas and go to P’ing-jang, (the Kao-li capital).”
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[1914, Li Ung Bing, “The Ming Dynasty (Continued)”, in Joseph Whiteside, editor, Outlines of Chinese History, Shanghai: The Commercial Press, →OCLC, page 251:
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Accordingly an army was sent into Corea. It met the Japanese before the walls of Pʻing Jang (平壤), where it was annihilated and its commander, Tsu Chʻêng-hsun, (祖承訓), barely escaped with his life. The next Chinese army under the command of Li Ju-sung (李如松), fresh from a successful campaign against a Mongol rebel in Ning Hsia (甯夏), gained a victory over the Japanese in Pʻing Jang; but, elated by this success, the Chinese general allowed himself to be led into an ambuscade near Seoul and overthrown (1593).]
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[1933, “The Korean War and the Closing Years a.d. 645–50”, in Son of Heaven: A Biography of Li Shih-Min, founder of the T’ang Dynasty, Cambridge University Press, published 1971, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 187:
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It was not merely distaste for court life at Ch’ang An that urged the emperor to make war upon this country. China had substantial grievances against the peninsula kingdom. In the year a.d. 642 P’ing Jang, the Korean capital, had been convulsed by a revolution more sanguinary and more successful than that which had menaced the Chinese court.]
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1934, Tung Chi Lin, Chinese Expansion to the Northeast: Methods and Mechanisms, University of California, →OCLC, page 37:
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While both the Northeast and the Korean Peninsula were under the jurisdiction of Ho-pei Province, a Protectorate of An-tung was established at P'ing-jang to supervise the Peninsular states and two High Commanders were stationed at You-chou and P'ing-lu […]
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1952, Suyeji Umehara, “The Newly Discovered Tombs with Wall Paintings of the Kao-kou-li Dynasty”, in Archives of the Chinese Art Society of America, volume 6, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 5:
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Among investigations of ancient sites made by Japanese scholars in the Korean Peninsula during the past forty yeas, there are some which have attracted the attention of scholars of the world. One of these was the excavation of the Lo-lang sites of the Han dynasty centering about Heijōᵃ (P'ing-jang); the other was the discovery of the Kao-kou-li tombs with wall paintings in the neighborhood of Heijō and in the vicinity of T'ung-kou, Chi-an shêng,ᵇ Manchuria, in the north.
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1968, Hae-jong Chun, “Sino-Korean Tributary Relations in the Ch’ing Period”, in John King Fairbank, editor, The Chinese World Order: Traditional China's Foreign Relations, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 97:
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:P'ing-jang.
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参照
- ^ William H. Harris, Judith S. Levey, editors (1975), “Pyongyang”, in The New Columbia Encyclopedia, Fourth edition, Columbia University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 2250, column 1: “Chin. P'ing-jang”
- ^ Blunden, Caroline (1998), “Gazetteer”, in Cultural Atlas of China, Revised edition, Facts on File, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 232, 235: “Names in italics represent the Wade-Giles equivalent of the preceding Pinyin transcription. […] Pingrang/P'ing-jang see Pyongyang”
Further reading
- P'ing-jang, Pingjang, Pingrang at the Google Books Ngram Viewer.
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