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・ Guanyin
・ Guanyin District
・ Guanyin Famen
・ Guanyin Gumiao Temple
・ Guanyin of the South China Sea, Mount Xiqiao
・ Guanyinge
・ Guanyinge Subdistrict, Beizhen
・ Guanyinge Subdistrict, Benxi County
・ Guanyinge Subdistrict, Jining
・ Guanyinge Township
・ Guanyinge, Guangdong
・ Guanyinge, Hunan
・ Guanyinqiao Station
・ Guanyinyan Bridge
・ Guanyinyan Dam
Guangzhouwan
・ Guangzhou–Dongguan–Shenzhen Intercity Railway
・ Guangzhou–Huizhou Expressway
・ Guangzhou–Maoming Railway
・ Guangzhou–Meizhou–Shantou Railway
・ Guangzhou–Sanshui Railway
・ Guangzhou–Shenzhen Railway
・ Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link
・ Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link Hong Kong section
・ Guangzhou–Zhuhai Intercity Railway
・ Guangzhou–Zhuhai Railway
・ Guangzong
・ Guangzong County
・ Guanhães
・ Guanidine


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Guangzhouwan : ウィキペディア英語版
Guangzhouwan

Guangzhouwan (officially Kouang-Tchéou-Wan; also spelled Kwangchow Wan, Kwangchow-wan, Kwang-Chou-Wan or Quang-Tchéou-Wan) () was a small enclave on the southern coast of China ceded by Qing China to France as a leased territory and administered as an outlier of French Indochina.〔Gale 1970: 201〕 The territory did not experience the rapid growth in population that other parts of coastal China experienced, rising from 189,000 in 1911〔EB 1911: Kwangchow Bay〕 to just 209,000 in 1935.〔Priestly 1967: 441〕 Industries included shipping and coal mining.
Japan occupied the territory in February 1943. The French briefly took it back in 1945 before returning it to China in 1946,〔Olson 1991: 349–350〕 at which point its original name of Zhanjiang was restored. The capital of the territory was Fort-Bayard, also known in Cantonese as Tsamkong. It was later romanized in pinyin as Zhanjiang by the Chinese government in 1958.
==Geography==
The leased territory was situated in Guangdong Province (Kwangtung Province) on the east side of the Leizhou Peninsula ((フランス語:Péninsule de Leitcheou)), north of Hainan, around a bay then called Kwangchowan, now called the Port of Zhanjiang. The bay forms the estuary of the Maxie River (Chinese: Maxie He, French: Rivière Ma-The). The Maxie is navigable as far as inland even by large warships. The territory ceded to France included the islands lying in the bay, which enclosed an area 29 km long by 10 km wide and a minimum water depth of 10 metres. The islands were recognized at the time as an admirable natural defense, the main islands being Donghai Dao. The limits of the concession inland were fixed in November 1899; on the left bank of the Maxie, France gained from Gaozhou prefecture (Kow Chow Fu) a strip of territory 18 km by 10 km, and on the right bank a strip 24 km by 18 km from Leizhou prefecture (Lei Chow Fu).〔 The total land area of the leased territory was .〔 The city of Fort-Bayard (Zhanjiang) was developed as a port.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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