found: Work cat.: A Roman City in Ancient China, 1957:p. 1-2 (This city with the Chinese name for Rome was located south of the present Yungchang, a place in the long northwestward extension of Gansu (Kansu) province ... renamed Jielu ... The Chinese name of this city was Lijien. This name was also used by the Chinese for Rome and the Roman empire)
found: Beijing Review, 1998:vol. 41, no. 46, p. 19-20 (A Roman connection with Lijan, an ancient city located in Zhelaizhai Village, 10 kilometers south of the county seat of Yongchang, Gansu Province, China, has been confirmed by archaeologists from China and other countries. Lijan was built to accommodate a group of Roman captives)
found: Hun & Huns WWW site, Apr. 15, 2004(Lijian ... Wang Mang called it Jie-lu ... Han Dynasty had altogether three cities named after foreign countries and ... Lijian, taken as equivalent to Alexandre of Egypt, was one of the three)
found: China Internet Information Center, Sept. 28, 2004:secondary page (Lijian, an ancient city built during the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-23), located in Zhelaizhai Village, 10 km south of the county seat of Yongchang, Gansu Province. According to archaeologists, the Roman Republic was called "Lijian" in ancient China, and the city "Lijian" was built to accommodate a group of Roman captives)
notfound: Getty, Apr. 15, 2004;GEOnet, Apr. 15, 2004;Columbia Gazetteer of the World