(Redirected from Postal System Pinyin)
'Chinese Postal Map Romanization' (
Traditional Chinese: ;
Pinyin: Yóuzhèngshì Pīnyīn) refers to the system of romanization for Chinese place names which came into use in the late
Qing dynasty and was officially sanctioned by the Imperial Postal Joint-Session Conference (), which was held in
Shanghai in the spring of
1906. This system of romanization was retained after the fall of the Qing dynasty in 1912 and since it was in use in the official postal atlas of the
Republic of China, it remained the most common way of rendering Chinese place names in the West for a large part of the twentieth century. Following the establishment of the
People's Republic of China, the system has gradually been replaced by
Hanyu pinyin, which is now almost universally accepted.
The system was based on
Wade-Giles for
postal purposes, especially for
placenames in the official postal atlas,
letters and
stamps. It uses some already common
European names of Chinese places that override the Wade-Giles system, and incorporates some
dialectal and historical pronunciations.
Main differences with Wade-Giles include:
★ Complete lack of
diacritic and accent marks.
★ ''Chi'', ''ch'i'', and ''hsi'' (pinyin ''ji'', ''qi'', and ''xi'') are represented as either ''tsi'', ''tsi'', and ''si'' or ''ki'', ''ki'', and ''hi'' depending on historic pronunciation, e.g.,
★
★
Peking (Pei-ching, Beijing)
★
★
Tientsin (T'ien-chin, Tianjin)
★
★
Tsinan (Chi-nan, Jinan)
★ Unless it is the sole vowel in the syllable, the Wade-Giles ''u'' becomes ''w'', e.g.,
★
★
Ankwo (An-kuo, Anguo)
★
★
Chinchow (Chin-chou, Jinzhou)
★
Guangdong,
Guangxi, and
Fujian placenames are to be Romanized from the local dialects, such as
Hakka,
Cantonese, and
Min (systems also obtained from Giles' ''A Chinese-English Dictionary'').
★
★
Amoy (Hsia-men, Xiamen)
★
★
Swatow (Shan-t'ou, Shantou)
★
★
Quemoy (Chin-men, Jinmen)
★ Popular pre-existing (from 19th century or earlier) European names for place in China are to be retained, such as those of the
treaty ports.
★
★ Canton (Kuang-chou,
Guangzhou)
See also:
Romanization
References
★ ''China postal album: showing the postal establishments and postal routes in each province.'' 2d ed. Peking: Directorate General of Posts, 1919.
★ Playfair, G. M. H. ''The Cities and Towns of China: A Geographical Dictionary.'' 2d. ed. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh Ltd., 1910.
★ "Youzheng shi pinyin." ''Zhongguo da baike quanshu: Yuyan wenzi''. Beijing: Zhongguo da baike quanshu chubanshe, 1998.