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File:Obsolete chinese telegraph code.jpg

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Summary

Description
English: Obsolete Chinese telegraph codes from 0001 to 0200 (ordered vertically from top to bottom, in columns from right to left). Each cell of the table shows a four-digit numerical code written in Chinese, and a Chinese character corresponding to the code. The cells for a Kangxi radicals are marked with red circles, followed by cells for other ideographs based on this radical. This is part of Septime Auguste Viguier’s New Book for the Telegraph (電報新書) published in Shanghai in 1872. Viguier developed this code succeeding Hans Carl Frederik Christian Schjellerup’s earlier work. See en:Chinese telegraph code.
Date
Source Sheet 13 of the electronically reproduced New Book for the Telegraph archived in the Royal Library of Denmark.
Author Septime Auguste Viguer (
威基謁
)
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain

Licensing

Public domain
This image is now in the public domain in China because its term of copyright has expired.

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According to copyright laws of Republic of China (currently with jurisdiction in Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Matsu, etc.), all photographs and cinematographic works, and all works whose copyright holder is a juristic person, enter the public domain 50 years after they were first published, or if unpublished 50 years from creation, and all other applicable works enter the public domain 50 years after the death of the creator.

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English: The source web page is marked as “© Det Kongelige Bibliotek,” i.e., this is the copyrighted work of the Royal Library of Denmark. However, it is obvious that the statement does apply to the web page itself but not to the images embedded in the web page, which was obtained through scanning the New Book for the Telegraph. Photocopying of a copyright-expired original does not generate a new copyright, neither does scanning of it.

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current12:07, 23 January 2007Thumbnail for version as of 12:07, 23 January 2007800 × 1,152 (336 KB)Kimura Aichi== Summary == {{Information | Description = {{en|Obsolete Chinese telegraph codes from <code>0001</code> to <code>0200</code>. Each cell of the table shows a four-digit numerical code written in Chinese, and a Chinese character corresponding to the code.

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