Display title | Chinese Hero |
Default sort key | Chinese Hero |
Page length (in bytes) | 5,618 |
Namespace ID | 0 |
Page ID | 84086 |
Page content language | en - English |
Page content model | wikitext |
Indexing by robots | Allowed |
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Number of subpages of this page | 1 (0 redirects; 1 non-redirect) |
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Page creator | prefix>Import Bot |
Date of page creation | 21:27, 1 November 2013 |
Latest editor | Labster (talk | contribs) |
Date of latest edit | 00:52, 1 August 2014 |
Total number of edits | 5 |
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Description | Content |
Article description: (description ) This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | If you told Hua Ying-Xiong (literally "China Hero"), the young son of a blacksmith and his sword-master wife, that he would be protecting Chicago's Chinatown from Kung-Fu Mafiosi and dueling to the death with a blind samurai master on the Statue of Liberty 17 years from now, he would probably laugh. The boy was content flirting with his childhood sweetheart Jie Yu ("Pure Jade"), helping his father at the forge, and playing pranks on the arrogant Westerners who terrorized his village, like any other red-blooded Chinese boy during the Great Depression. |