Eurasia Aviation Corporation

Eurasia Aviation Corporation (Chinese: 歐亞航空公司) was a Chinese airline headquartered in Shanghai.[1] The company was Sino-German.[2] Eurasia, classified as a state-owned airline by the Ministry of Communications of China,[3] operated the Junkers W33[4] and, later, the three-engined Junkers Ju 52.The main fleet base was Hong Kong. When the Japanese began occupying portions of China in the late 1930s, the airline encountered difficulty.[3]

Eurasia Aviation Corporation
Founded1925 (1925)
Ceased operations1943 (1943)
HeadquartersShanghai, China
Eurasia Aviation Corporation
Traditional Chinese歐亞航空公司
Simplified Chinese欧亚航空公司

Routes

Routes included Shanghai-Lanzhou, Beijing-Ho Nan, Liangzhou-Urumqi, and Shanghai-Manzhouli.[5]

gollark: Who's been jailed then?
gollark: I see. I think I'd consider tight control of information (and lack of government accountability) authoritarianism things, and the problem appears to have been caused by those.
gollark: Yes, it is indeed stupid. You were saying it was not authoritarianism, however.
gollark: I would consider censoring information which makes your government look bad fairly authoritarian.
gollark: There were (are) apparently bad quality issues: https://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/2021/04/28/brazil-rejects-the-gamaleya-vaccine

See also

References

  1. Flight International. April 28, 1938. p. 416 (Archive). " EURASIA AVIATION CORP., 97, Jinkee Road, Shanghai."
  2. "Eurasia Aviation Corporation - A German-Chinese Airline in China and its Airmail 1931-1943 by Peter Moeller and Larry D. Sall, paperback in color, 2007, 153 pages, great book on the history of this airline, includes a listing of First Flight covers and catalog values." China Stamp Society. Retrieved on October 4, 2014.
  3. Ballantine, Collin and Pamela Tang. "Chinese airlines: airline colours of China." Airlife, 1995. p. 6. Chinese Ministry of Communications which declared Eurasia to be a Chinese State-owned airline. The airline then fell into more trouble as a direct result of the continuing Japanese occupation. The fleet of airliners was based in Hong Kong[...]"
  4. Ballantine, Collin and Pamela Tang. "Chinese airlines: airline colours of China." Airlife, 1995. p. 5. "The outcome of this venture was Eurasia Airlines, operating six- seater Junkers W33 airliners across Asia into China."
  5. Flight International. November 2, 1933. p. 1092.

Further reading

  • Moeller, Peter and Larry D. Sall. Eurasia Aviation Corporation - A German-Chinese Airline in China and its Airmail 1931-1943. 2007.
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