Han-tan
English

Map including HAN-TAN (DMA, 1975)
Etymology
From Mandarin 邯鄲/邯郸 (Hándān) Wade–Giles romanization: Han²-tan¹.[1]
Proper noun
Han-tan
- Alternative form of Handan
- 1912, Lionel Giles, Taoist Teachings from the Book of Lieh Tzŭ, London: John Murray, OCLC 1184160266, page 118:
- The good people of Han-tan were in the habit, every New Year's day, of presenting their Governor, Chien Tzü, with a number of live pigeons.
- 1940, Bodde, Derk, Statesman, Patriot, and General in Ancient China (American Oriental Series), volume 17, New Haven, Conn.: American Oriental Society, OCLC 213520202, page 16:
- Now we know from the biography that Tzŭ-chʻu's wife had formerly been an ordinary courtesan (chi 姬) of Han-tan, who had been selected by Lü Pu-wei to be his concubine because she "was extremely beautiful and an excellent dancer."
- 1965, Cho-yun Hsu, Ancient China in Transition An Analysis of Social Mobility, 722-222 B.C., Stanford University Press, LCCN 65-13110, OCLC 313731364, page 45:
- Lu Pu-wei was a prosperous businessman in the large city of Han-tan in Chao, where he met a prince of Ch'in who was being kept as hostage in the capital.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Han-tan.
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Translations
Handan — see Handan
References
- Handan, Wade-Giles romanization Han-tan, in Encyclopædia Britannica
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