-
Chaoyong (Chinese: 超勇; pinyin:
Chāoyǒng; Wade–Giles: Ch'ao-yung; lit. 'Valiant') was a
cruiser built for the
Imperial Chinese Navy. She was
built by Charles...
- (1886) -
purchased 1912,
decommissioned 1940
Unprotected Cruisers Chaoyong class Chaoyong (1880) - Sunk 1894
Yangwei (1881) - Sunk 1894 Kai Che (1882) -...
- Jingyuen, Laiyuan, Jiyuan,
Jingyuan and Zhiyuen, the
small cruisers Yangwei,
Chaoyong and Kwan Chia,
torpedo gunboat Guangbing, the
gunboats Zhennan and Zhenzhong...
- Degui; Wang, Shaohua; Jiang, He; Zhu, Min; Deng, Changyan; Hu, Pengfei; Li,
Chaoyong; Liu, Fang; Lian, Jisan; Wang, Xiaorong; Wang, Liang****; Shen, Xuming;...
-
Ching Yuen
Cruisers Torpedo cruisers – Tsi Yuen,
Kuang Ping/Kwang Ping,
Chaoyong,
Yangwei Coastal warship Pingyuan Corvette Kwan Chia
Other vessels Approximately...
- was used to
represent China. In
September 1881, when the two
cruisers Chaoyong and
Yangwei ordered from Birkenhead,
England were sent to China, Li Hongzhang...
-
February 1885 the
Beiyang Fleet reluctantly released two of its ships,
Chaoyong and Yangwei, to join a
sortie launched by a
number of
ships of the Nanyang...
- Navy. Its name is a
traditional name for Kyūshū island. Its
sister ships Chaoyong and
Yangwei were
acquired by the
Chinese Beiyang Fleet. The
design for...
-
abolished the
titular court in 1924. The
edict was
first collected by
Zhang Chaoyong, the
secretary of the cabinet, who
saved it with two
sequent imperial edict...
- ****embly. The
emblem of the Games, "Surging Tides" (Chinese: 潮涌; pinyin:
Cháoyǒng), was
unveiled during a
ceremony at the
headquarters of the
Hangzhou Culture...