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Jin_River_(Fujian) Latitude and Longitude:

24°52′42″N 118°35′50″E / 24.878339°N 118.59724°E / 24.878339; 118.59724
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jin River
The Jin River in Quanzhou
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese

The Jin River, also known in Hokkien Chinese: 晉江; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Chìn-kang; Mandarin Chinese: 晉江; pinyin: Jìnjiāng, is located in southern Fujian. Its basin includes most of Quanzhou prefecture-level city, whose Jinjiang County-level City is named after it.

Name

The name of the river comes from the 3rd-to-5th-century Jin Empire, during which time its banks were settled by Chinese colonists from the Central Plains to avoid wars and tumult in northern China.[ citation needed]

Geography

The upper course of the Jin is also known as the Xixi ( 西溪, "West Creek"). It originates in the Daiyun Mountains ( 戴云山) and flows generally southeast for 180 kilometers (110 mi)[ citation needed] into Quanzhou Bay on the Taiwan Strait. East of Nan'an, the Xixi receives its major tributary, the Dongxi ( 东溪, "East Creek"), from the north. The Jin River develops an estuary as it enters Quanzhou Bay from the west. There, it separates downtown Quanzhou (aka Licheng, Fengze and Luojiang districts, respectively) to the north from Jinjiang to its south.

There are 13 towns around the river: Chinyan, Chidian, Chendai, Luoshan, Cizao, Neikeng, Anhai, Dongshi, Yonghe, Yinglin, Longhu, Shenhu and Jinjinchu.[ citation needed] Zimao Mountain is also nearby.

Climate

The annual rain fall level ranges from 820 to 2,276 millimeters (32.3 to 89.6 in), so the Jin River sees dramatic changes in volume during the year.

See also


24°52′42″N 118°35′50″E / 24.878339°N 118.59724°E / 24.878339; 118.59724