Jiangsu-Anhui flood, 1911
…through other means. The Central China Famine Relief Committee, comprised of both Chinese and foreigners, was particularly active. In addition to saving lives, the Committee aimed to address the causes…
…through other means. The Central China Famine Relief Committee, comprised of both Chinese and foreigners, was particularly active. In addition to saving lives, the Committee aimed to address the causes…
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…system was that most of its predictions were false and thus useless. [12] Tianjin tongzhi –Dizhenzhi. Tianjin: Tianjin Shehuikexueyuan chubanshe 1995, 269 [13] For different casualty counts see e.g. http://global.britannica.com/event/Tangshan-earthquake-of-1976….
…posed a less immediate dilemma. Elisa-Andreea Linu contributed writing and research to this article. Christopher Yien (Chinese Studies) and Elisa-Andreea Linu (History with Economics) are undergraduates in the class of…
…Chinese Loess Plateau in the Last 10,000 Years,” Mountain Research and Development 24/4 (2004), 342–3. [2] Li Tianchi, “Landslide Disasters and Human Responses in China,” Mountain Research and Development 14/4…
…from foreign missionaries and charitable organisations.[12] In terms of foreign aid, organisations such as the Baptist Missionary Society sent telegrams to their native countries to appeal to the public for…
…only an extreme case, robberies which made “no shop dare to open and no peasants dare to farm” all over the province[10]did disrupt local agricultural production and commodities trading seriously….
…been reported to be ‘fatal’[9] and by November 8th the city had a death toll of 5,272 deaths. Quarantine and control had been put in place in order to prevent…