释义 |
Examples:G7, the group of 7 industrialized countries: US, Japan, Britain, Germany, France, Italy and Canada (now G8, including Russia)—Amur River (the border between north east China and Russia)—Treaty of Saint Petersburg of 1881, whereby Russia handed back Yili province Qing China in exchange for compensation payment and unequal treaty rights—Treaty of Nerchinsk (1698) between Qing China and Russia—the Ural mountains in Russia, dividing Europe from Asia—BRICS economic bloc (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)—Ingushetia region of Russia North of the Caucasus—the Treaty of Beijing of 1860 between Qing China and Tsarist Russia—Boris Yeltsin (1931-2007) first post-communist president of Russia 1991-1999—Treaty of Saint Petersburg of 1881 in which Russia agreed hand back Yili province to Qing China in exchange for compensation payment and unequal treaty rights—Krasnodar (city in Russia)—Russia, China and North Korea—Voronezh, city in the southwest of European Russia—Saint Petersburg (city in Russia)—Information Telegraph Agency of Russia—Cang Jize or Tseng Chi-tse (1839-1890), pioneer diplomat of late Qing, serve as imperial commissioner (ambassador) UK, France and Russia—alliance with Russia (e.g. of early Chinese communists)—Plesetsk, settlement in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia—Kraskino town in Primorsky Krai, Russia, close the North Korean border—Sea of Azov in southern Russia—Treaty of Aigun, 1858 unequal treaty forced on Qing China by Tsarist Russia—Altai mountain chain on the border of Russia and Mongolia—the war of 1904-1905 between Russia and Japan—Catherine the Great or Catherine the Second (1684-1727), Empress of Russia—collectivization of agriculture (disastrous policy of communist Russia around 1930 and China in the 1950s)—Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia—Heilongjiang river forming the border between northeast China and Russia—Saransk, capital of the Republic of Mordovia, Russia—draft unequal treaty of Livadia (Crimea) of 1879 between Russia and Qing China, subsequently renegotiated—Malka River, Russia, a.k.a. Balyksu River— ▸ Wikipedia |