Misplaced Pages

Ming River

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#533466

3-743: The Ming River , also formerly known as the Qin , Qianbu , and Nanyi River , is a tributary of the Ziya River in Hebei , China . The river gave its name to Imperial China 's Ming Prefecture and to its capital Mingzhou, now Guangfu . During the establishment of the Tang , Prince Li Shimin broke a dam across the Ming in order to destroy the rebel army under Liu Heita in AD   622. This article related to

6-501: A river in China is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Ziya River The Ziya River is one of the five major tributaries of Hai River system in northern China. The total length of Ziya River is 730 km (450 mi) and the size of its drainage basin is 78,700 square kilometers (30,400 sq mi). The discharge rate of Ziya River is about 1 m3/s. The Ziya River flows from Mount Wutai until it reaches

9-900: The Hai River near Xian County . Notable tributaries of the Ziya include the Ming , the Hutuo , the Fuyang , and the Qingshui . It shares the same channel with the Hai near the Southern Canal . A new artificial channel was constructed to connect it to Bohai Sea near Tianjin under the name New Ziya River . 38°13′24″N 116°05′01″E  /  38.223339°N 116.083741°E  / 38.223339; 116.083741 This article related to

#533466