Ming River

{{Short description|Stream in Hebei, China}}

{{unref|date=November 2017}}

{{chinese

|c={{linktext|洺|河}} |p=Mínghé |w=Ming Ho |l=Ming River

|altname=Former name |c2={{linktext|洺|水}} |p2=Míngshuǐ |w2=Ming Shui |l2=Ming River

}}

{{chinese |title=Other names

|altname=Qin River |t2={{linktext|寢|水}} |s2={{linktext|寝|水}} |p2=Qǐnshuǐ |w2=Ch‘in Shui |l2=

|altname3=Qianbu River |c3={{linktext|千步|水}} |p3=Qiānbùshuǐ |w3=Ch‘ien Pu Shui |l3=

|altname4=Nanyi River |c4={{linktext|南易|水}} |p4=Nányìshuǐ |w4=Nan I Shui |l4=

}}

The Ming River, also formerly known as the Qin, Qianbu, and Nanyi River, is a tributary of the Ziya River in Hebei, China.

History

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{{nbsp}}622.

File:Ming river basin.png

See also

References

{{reflist|30em}}

{{coord missing|Hebei}}

Category:Rivers of Hebei

{{China-river-stub}}