| Đuống River Thiên Đức River, Canal des Rapides | |
|---|---|
|  Đuống River look from Phù Đổng Bridge 2008. | |
| Native name | Sông Đuống (Vietnamese) | 
| Location | |
| Country | Vietnam | 
| Tỉnh, thành | Hà Nội, Bắc Ninh | 
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | Cửa Dâu Junction | 
| • location | Xuân Canh, Đông Anh District, Hanoi, Vietnam | 
| • coordinates | 21°4′51″N 105°50′41″E / 21.08083°N 105.84472°E | 
| Mouth | Mỹ Lộc Junction | 
|  • location | Trung Kênh, Lương Tài District, Bắc Ninh Province, Vietnam | 
|  • coordinates | 21°3′21″N 106°18′16″E / 21.05583°N 106.30444°E | 
| Length | 68 km (42 mi) | 
| Discharge | |
| • location | Thượng Cát | 
| • average | 880 m3/s (31,000 cu ft/s) | 
| • maximum | 9,000 m3/s (320,000 cu ft/s) | 
The Đuống River (Vietnamese: Sông Đuống), also known as the Thiên Đức River, is a river of Vietnam. It flows for 68 kilometres (42 mi) through Bắc Ninh Province and Hanoi.[1] It was previously known by the French as the Canal des Rapides.
The river features in the poem "On the Other Side of the Đuống River" by Hoàng Cầm.[2]
Gallery
 Sunrise on Đuống river Sunrise on Đuống river
 Đuống bridge Đuống bridge
 The Duong River Bridge being repaired after the Operation Linebacker in 1972 The Duong River Bridge being repaired after the Operation Linebacker in 1972
References
 Media related to Duong River at Wikimedia Commons
 Media related to Duong River at Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ Vietnam Administrative Atlas, NXB Bản Đồ, 2004
- ↑ Kim Ngoc Bao Ninh A World Transformed: The Politics of Culture in Revolutionary ... 2002 - Page 133 "Hoàng Cầm, well known for his heartbreaking poem "On the Other Side of the Đuống River," which detailed his village's devastation during the anti-French resistance, had become the director of the National Theater Troupe in 1955. He, too ..."
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