- The Hai
River (海河, lit. "Sea River"), also
known as the
Peiho, Pei Ho ("White River"), or Hai Ho, is a
Chinese river connecting Beijing to
Tianjin and...
- The Taku
Forts or Dagu Forts, also
called the
Peiho Forts are
forts located by the Hai
River (
Peiho River)
estuary in the
Binhai New Area, Tianjin, in...
- Cape
Peiho is
located on the
south coast of New
Britain in the West New
Britain Province 32
kilometres (20 mi) west of Arawe,
Papua New Guinea. v t e...
-
capture a
flotilla of four
Chinese destroyers moored to a
wharf on the
Peiho River. He was one of the
first men to
climb over the
Peking walls, to break...
- Chinese.
These were all
successful except for the
landing at the
Mouth of the
Peiho in 1859,
where Admiral Sir
James Hope
ordered a
landing across extensive...
- and
British concessions (which were
situated on the
right bank of the
Peiho River)
became the most
prosperous ones. With the 1911 Revolution, the new...
-
greater access to its ports, he
witnessed the
capture of
Chinese forts on the
Peiho River by the
French and
English on
April 28, 1858. He then
sailed to ****an...
-
Gekisai dai ni (撃砕大二) Shisōchin (四向戰) Ohan ( ) Saifā (碎破)
Kururunfa (久留頓破)
Peiho ( )
Sanchin (三戰) Sūpārinpei (壱百零八手) Sōchin (壮鎮)
Tensho (転掌)
Pachu ( ) Niseishi...
- 1860
expedition to China. It took
place at the Taku
Forts (also
called Peiho Forts) near
Tanggu District (Wade-Giles: Pei Tang-Ho),
approximately 60...
-
served the
British faithfully and cheerfully... At the ****ault of the
Peiho Forts in 1860 they
carried the
French ladders to the ditch, and, standing...