Definition of "Hinghwa"
Hinghwa
proper noun
(historical) A prefecture in eastern Fujian province of imperial China, corresponding to the modern-day prefecture-level city of Putian.
Quotations
The Lamyet (or Nanjeih) islands are situated to the northeastward of Chinchew bay, the nearest distant about forty miles. The mainland, leaving its usual northeastern direction, runs out due east for above thirty miles, and the first of the Lamyet islands lies off the easternmost point of it. From hence there is an almost uninterrupted series of islands and islets, up to the mouth of the Yangtsze keäng. The Lamyet islands are opposite to the entrance of a deep bay, at the bottom of which is the city of Hinghwa foo, the capital of the most fertile portion of Fuhkeën. This bay, however, has not yet been visited by foreigners. The outermost of the Lamyet islands, named by Ross Ocksou, was found, when passed by the ships of Lord Amherst’s embassy, to be in lat .24° 59' 15" north, lon. 119° 34' 30" east. About thirty miles further to the northward, we pass between an island of peculiar form and the main. This island is named Haetan, the altar of the sea ; in shape it is semicircular, and of nearly equal breadth throughout. A few miles above this island we reach the mouth of the river Min.
1837 May, “Coast of China: the division of it into four portions ; brief description of the principal places on the southeastern, eastern, and northeastern portions.”, in The Chinese Repository, volume VI, number 1, Canton, pages 12–13
Lindbergh of course volunteered to help and nearly lost the plane. He and two doctors landed at the city of Hinghwa with a bag of vital medicines, which the Chinese thought was food and swam out to one doctor’s sampan, swamped it, and then swam to the plane and began to clamber aboard, tipping the wings dangerously, until Lindbergh took out his revolver and fired into the air, driving them away.
2015, Winston Groom, “An Inspiration in a Grubby World”, in The Aviators: Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight, Washington, D.C.: National Geographic, page 255
Puxian Min (a family of Min Chinese dialects spoken in and around Putian, Fujian, China)
Quotations
HANKONG DISTRICTArea: Includes the market towns of Gangkau and Hankong, and surrounding villages.Location: On the coast plain east of Hinghwa City. Two-third of the district is mountainous.Population: 350,000. Methodist responsibility, 250,000. Hinghwa is spoken.
1924, Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church for the Year 1923, page 66
In Foochow one of the presses and a font of Romanized type were transferred to Hinghwa, “for greater convenience in publishing literature in the Hinghwa dialect, as no one trained to read that proof could be found in Foochow,” and the day of special delivery and airmail had not yet arrived.
1948, Walter N. Lacy, A Hundred Years of China Methodism, Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, page 186
The Methodist Church has established two clinics: one down the river at a Hinghwa-speaking settlement, Sungei Teku ; and the other at Nanga Mujong up the river in the Kapit District where most of the Iban Methodist Christians live.
1957, Lands of Witness and Decision, New York City: Board of Missions of The Methodist Church, page 53