Sui-chou
English
![](Images/wiktionary/Txu-pclmaps-oclc-22834566_h-11b.jpg.webp)
Map including SUI-CHOU (SUIZHOU) (DMA, 1985)
Etymology
From Mandarin 隨州/随州 (Suízhōu), Wade–Giles romanization: Sui²-chou¹.
Proper noun
Sui-chou
- Alternative form of Suizhou
- 1971, Masterpieces of Chinese Album Painting in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, OCLC 1198189677, page 129:
- Mou Chung-fu's dates are not known, but he was a native of Sui-chou in Hupei.
- 1975, Wu-chi Liu and Irving Yucheng Lo, editor, Sunflower Splendor: Three Thousand Years of Chinese Poetry, Indiana University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 75-1938, OCLC 953176906, page 555:
- Her served as Censor and held other provincial posts under Emperors Hsüan-tsung and Su-tsung; later involved in a legal suit, he was banished as Marshal of Mu-chou, in Chekiang, and then as Censor of Sui-chou, in Hupeh.
- 1984, Ronald C. Egan, The literary works of Ou-yang Hsiu (1007-72), Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 84-1740, OCLC 633130087, page 2:
- When Ou-yang Hsiu was four years old his father died. His mother then took the boy with her to join the household of his uncle Ou-yang Yeh in Sui-chou (on the Han River in modern Hupeh). Ou-yang Hsiu remained there until he was twenty-one years old. Later in life, he characterized Sui-chou as a crude and uncultured place.
- 2011, Ralph D. Sawyer, Ancient Chinese Warfare, Basic Books, →ISBN, LCCN 2010051391, OCLC 657595552, page 30:
- Ditches continued to be employed as the sole defensive measure at many sites even after wall building began to emerge. For example, an immense ditch varying between 15 and 20 meters in width and marked by depths of 2.5 to 3.8 meters has recently been discovered in Hubei near Sui-chou.
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Translations
Suizhou — see Suizhou