Definition of "Kaifeng"
Kaifeng
proper noun
A prefecture-level city on the Yellow River in Henan, China, a former national capital.
Quotations
For several weeks preceding the actual overflow of its banks the Hoang-Ho had been swollen from its tributaries. It had been unusually wet and stormy in northwest China, and all the small streams were full and overflowing. The first break occurred in the province of Honan, of which the capital is Kaifeng, and the city next in importance is Ching or Cheng Chou. The latter is forty miles west of Kaifeng and a short distance above a bend in the Hoang-Ho.
1889, Willis Fletcher Johnson, chapter XXVIII, in History of the Johnstown Flood, Edgewood Publishing Co., page 322
The supposed founder of the Chinese monarchy was Fu-hsi , and his capital was Kaifeng, now the provincial city of Honan. The early inhabitants of China are said to have lived in this Province.
1897, P. N. Tsü, “Historical Description of China”, in The Geography of the Chinese Empire, Kelly & Walsh, page 9
Chengchow is on the Pehan (Peking-Hankow) railway, about fifteen miles south of the Yellow river, and about forty-five miles west of Kaifeng. This railway is being rapidly pushed to completion. Another railway is to be built from Kaifeng to Honanfu, which will have its junction with the Pehan railway at this place.
1905, “Foreign Mission Board Report”, in Annual of the Southern Baptist Convention 1905, number 60, Nashville, Tenn.: Marshall & Bruce Company, page 149
Actual work has begun on the railway which is to link Kaifeng to the Tientsin-Pukow railway at Hsuchowfu and will bring Kaifeng within about two days of Shanghai, writes the Kaifeng correspondent of the C. C. Post on the 11th instant.
1913 November, “Far Eastern Railways”, in The Far Eastern Review, volume X, number 6, Shanghai, page 234, column 3
During the summer I attended as a speaker and teacher, a summer Conference north of the Yellow River, in which one of our brightest young Christians at Kaifeng felt the call to the ministry; he Is now studying for the ministry in Shantung University.
1921 February 17, Hendon M. Harris, “Annual Report Country Work for Year 1920”, in The Baptist Record, volume XXIII, number 7, Jackson, Miss.: Mississippi Baptist Convention, page 2, column 3
After months of blundering, caused by underestimating Chinese resistance, the Japanese have finally thrown their full force into the drive. Kaifeng has fallen and the vital city of Chengchow is endangered.
1938 June 18, “Profits on Slaughter”, in The Nation, volume 146, number 25, New York, page 686
Kaifeng was raided by the Chinese twice, who remained there long enough to smash up the Japanese puppet organizations. They also dislodged the Japanese from the nearby town of Tunghsu and disrupted the Lung-Hai Railway, cutting the Japanese line of supply to Kaifeng.
1939 January, Lin Yu, “"The China Incident"”, in Philippine Magazine, volume XXXVI, number 1 (369), page 211
Liu, who was purged in a power struggle with Mao Tse-tung during the “cultural revolution,” died of pneumonia while being sent to Kaifeng by train several years after he was struggled down, according to mainland reports.
1979 January 7, “Wang Kuang-mei in jail”, in Free China Weekly, volume XX, number 1, Taipei, page 3
“A lot of people want to go work in big cities, but there is far less demand this year,” said a manager at the Tongxu County Enterprise Bureau, an employment service in the central city of Kaifeng in Henan province. He refused to give his name.
2012 July 12, Joe McDonald, “China’s economic slowdown painful despite stimulus”, in AP News, archived from the original on 18 May 2022