In two days we came toWeihui, and the land part of the journey was now over.
1930, Jermyn Chi-hung Lynn, “The Mukden Party”, inPolitical Parties in China[2], published1975,→ISBN,→LCCN,→OCLC,page205:
On February 28 Marshal Chang Hsiao-liang went toWeihui to direct his men in crossing the Yellow River.
2008 November 12, “Scandal in China: soldiers work for butchery”, inFrance 24[3], archived fromthe original on19 September 2021:
This strange procession marched through the streets ofWeihui, a town in Henan, central China, on November 4. A donkey meat-seller engaged four men to walk down the main street, past the social security office, dressed as "devils" - the Japanese soldiers that occupied China in the Second World War.
2021 July 22, Pei Lin Wu, Rebecca Tan, “Death toll in China floods climbs to 33 as rains spread and more cities call for help”, inThe Washington Post[4],→ISSN,→OCLC, archived fromthe original on22 July 2021, Asia[5]:
“Please pay attention to Xinxiang,Weihui and Anyang,” one user pleaded on the microblogging site Weibo. “Villages are being drowned; mudslides are starting and there are already too many people in need of help at collapsed roads.” “In the small city ofWeihui, it’s been raining for three days already,” said another user. “Some villages have been relying entirely on local residents without any outside support!”
Leon E. Seltzer, editor (1952), “Chihsien”, inThe Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World[6], Morningside Heights, NY:Columbia University Press,→OCLC,page393, column 1: “[…]called Weihwei until 1913,[…]”