604 BOTANICON SINICUM. 
¥ 48 Tung (Eastern) Yiie and py & Si (Western) 
Yiie are terms still used to designate the provinces of Kuang 
tung and Kuang si. 
420.—jB& lj Yiie shan. Pie lu. 
Not ascertained. 
421.—f Jp] Yiin chou. K‘ai pao Pen ts‘ao. : 
T'ang and Wu tai: chou. Now: Shan tung, T‘ai an fu, 
Tung p‘ing chou. 
422.—52 Hs Yiin chung. Pre lu. 
Ts‘in and Han: kin. North-eastern part of the Ordos 
and North-east Shen si. 
423,—28 # Yiin meng. Li Sar Ch‘un ts‘iu [3rd cent. 
B.C]. 
The marshes of Yiin meng are mentioned in the Tribute 
of Yii, in the province of King chou (Hu kuang). Lxaan’s 
Shu king, p. 115. 
424,— HE )p] Yung chou. Pie lu, Su Kune and Han Pao- 
SHENG. 
Name of one of the nine ancient provinces of China in 
the Tribute of Yii, situated, as the ancient account says, 
between the Ho (Yellow River) and the Hei shui [one of 
the northern affluents of the Yang tsz‘ kiang, see supra, 26. 
Its sources are in South Kan su]. The Yung chou of the 
Tribute of Yii corresponds to Northern Shen si and Eastern 
Kan su. 
In the San kuo period Yung chou was a province of 
the kingdom of Wei and comprised Shen si north of the 
Wei River and Eastern Kan su. Yung chou was also a 
province in the Tsin and Sui dynasties. In the latter period 
it extended farther to the west into Kan su. 
Yung chou in the Wu tai period was a prefecture 
corresponding to present Si an fu in Shen si. 
425.—Jj¢ Jp] Yung chou. Authors of the Sung dynasty. 
Since T‘ang: chou. Now: Hu nan, Yung chou fu. 
