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・ Formica incerta
・ Formica japonica
・ Formica Leo
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・ Formica rufa
・ Formica rufa group
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・ Former Indian National Army Monument
・ Former Indian reservations in Oklahoma
・ Former Jamestown High School
Former Japanese Navy Fongshan Communication Center
・ Former Kowloon British School
・ Former Ladies of the Supremes
・ Former Liang
・ Former Liberation Movements of Southern Africa
・ Former Lietuvos rytas rosters
・ Former Lives
・ Former Maine Central Railroad Depot (Brooks, Maine)
・ Former Marine Police Headquarters
・ Former McLean County Courthouse
・ Former Meinong Police Station
・ Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court
・ Former members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group
・ Former members of the Polisario Front
・ Former Military Chapel (Bachelor Quarters)


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Former Japanese Navy Fongshan Communication Center : ウィキペディア英語版
Former Japanese Navy Fongshan Communication Center

The Former Japanese Navy Fongshan Communication Center () was one of the three radio stations operated in Taiwan by the former Imperial Japanese Navy located in Fongshan District, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
==History==
The radio station was the first radio station in Taiwan built by the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1919. Despite the military nature of the station, the channels were dedicated to civilian communication. After a major mechanical failure threatened the maritime safety, the Japanese built another radio station at Sankuaico and consolidated it with the Fongshan station into the Kaohsiung Communication Unit in 1937. Once the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out soon after that, the Kaohsiung Communication Unit was used to maintain the south west Pacific communication of the Empire of Japan. It was also used as tactical radio to jam and monitor the US and British movements on the sea and in the air.
After the handover of Taiwan from Japan to the Republic of China in 1945, the station was taken over by the Republic of China Navy and converted it into a navy boarding house. Over the next decade, the navy boarding house was used by the navy as an interrogation facility for serviceman accused for political actions. In 1976, this place became the Mingde Disciplinary Camp of the navy where persistent disobedient servicemen were imprisoned. When the camp was decommissioned, it was turned into the Kaohsiung Military Dependent's Village Cultural Association.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Former Japanese Navy Fongshan Communication Center」の詳細全文を読む



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