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  1. The prefecture-level city of Wuhan, the capital city of Hubei province, China, has a long and rich history that dates back over 3,500 years. Starting out from the Shang dynasty -era archaeological site at Panlongcheng associated with Erligang culture, the region would become part of the E state and Chu state during the Zhou dynasty.

  2. Feb 22, 2020 · An image believed to date back to 1906-1907 of Hankou, one of three cities that merged to become Wuhan. ... The West came to know Wuhan in 1858 as part of the unequal Treaty of Tianjin, extracted ...

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  4. Hankou was one of the first Chinese cities opened to foreign trade (1861); it came under Nationalist Chinese administration in 1928; and it was occupied by the Japanese in 1938–45. In 1949, following the establishment of the People’s Republic of China, it became part of Wuhan.

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  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HankouHankou - Wikipedia

    A part of Wuhan ( Jiang'an, Jianghan, & Qiaokou) Hankou, alternately romanized as Hankow ( simplified Chinese: 汉口; traditional Chinese: 漢口; pinyin: Hànkǒu ), was one of the three towns (the other two were Wuchang and Hanyang) merged to become modern-day Wuhan city, the capital of the Hubei province, China. It stands north of the Han ...

  6. The city was opened as a treaty port in 1862, held (1938–45) by the Japanese, and in 1949 passed to the Chinese Communists. It is linked by bridges with Hanyang and Wuchang. Hankou (hän´kō´) or Hankow (hăng´kou´), former city, since 1950 part of the Wuhan conurbation, E Hubei prov., China.

  7. The Wuhan Nationalist government (Chinese: 武漢國民政府), also known as the Wuhan government, Wuhan regime, or Hankow government, was a government dominated by the left-wing of the Nationalist or Kuomintang (KMT) Party of China that was based in Wuhan from 5 December 1926 to 21 September 1927, led first by Eugene Chen, and later by Wang ...

  8. It was razed and seized three times by Taiping rebels in the 1850s, burned to the ground by Qing troops in 1911, badly damaged by war and revolution in 1926– 27, and pummeled by Japanese bombing raids in 1938 and U.S. B-29 raids in 1944. Wuchang was spared until the 1920s and 1930s, when the city’s new commercial and industrial districts ...

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