Definition of "Chinkiang"
Chinkiang
proper noun
Quotations
Not content with this, Pottinger ordered the commanders to proceed up the Yangtsze and capture Nanking—the ancient capital of the empire. As a first step, Chinkiang, seventy miles lower down the river than Nanking, was occupied after a very sharp struggle.
1905, B. L. Putnam Weale, The Re-shaping of The Far East, volume II, The Macmillan Company, page 35 to 36
Starting from Hangchow the canal goes by Kashing to Soochow, a distance of 100 miles, and thence by Wusih and Changchow through long straight stretches to Chinkiang, another 100 miles. It is here unlike our preconceived ideas of a canal—a current-less water-way barely wide enough to allow two streams of boats to pass each other—and has often a width of over a hundred feet between its sides, faced in many parts of its course with cut stone bunding.
1908, Hosea Ballou Morse, “Internal Trade”, in The Trade And Administration Of The Chinese Empire, Longmans, Green, and Co., pages 312–313
In spite of the 1913 rebellion and the loss of opium revenue, Chinkiang has a hopeful future, especially when the new port of P’u-k’ou opposite Nanking springs into organised existence.
1917, Edward Harper Parker, “Modern Trade”, in China: Her History, Diplomacy and Commerce from the Earliest Times to the Present Day, 2nd edition, New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, page 165
The resourcefulness of the Taipings was not too greatly occupied with the establishment of the Celestial Capital to prevent reaching out for the vital strategic centers of Chinkiang and Yangchow, the former a commanding site at the intersection of the Grand Canal with the Yangtse River, the latter on the canal about twenty-five or thirty miles away, both together controlling that vital artery through which flowed the supplies of tribute grain to the capital.
1927, William James Hail, Tsêng Kuo Fan And The Taiping Rebellion: With a Short Sketch of His Later Career, Yale History Press, page 188
As it nears the sea at Chinkiang, the point at which it makes its entrance into our story, it broadens out into a mile-wide flood, following a serpentine course through flat, marshy country, its waters stained the colour of milk chocolate by its heavy load of alluvial silt and impeded by innumerable islands and sandbanks that vex the way of the navigator. This is the Yangtse—the Yangtse of the low-lying province of Kiangsu, from the ancient walled city of Chinkiang to the open sea—upon whose waters and along whose banks we shall live and move in this story.
1957, C. E. Lucas Phillips, Escape of the Amethyst, New York: Coward-McCann, page 10