- Charente (river)
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Charente
Charente River in Tonnay-CharenteOrigin Haute-Vienne Mouth Atlantic Ocean
45°57′24″N 1°4′56″W / 45.95667°N 1.08222°WCoordinates: 45°57′24″N 1°4′56″W / 45.95667°N 1.08222°WBasin countries France Length 381 km Avg. discharge 40 m³/s Basin area 10,000 km² The Charente (Occitan: Charanta) is a 381 km long river in southwestern France. Its source is in the Haute-Vienne département at Chéronnac, a small village near Rochechouart. It flows through the departments of Haute-Vienne, Charente, Vienne and Charente-Maritime. The river flows into the Atlantic Ocean near Rochefort.
Contents
The Charente was navigable for many years, but navigation has only recently been restored after the river had been virtually abandoned by commercial shipping in the middle of the 20th century. Recreational vessels have now taken possession of the waterway of which the navigability has been completely restored as far upstream as Angoulême. Flowing through cities like Cognac, Jarnac, Saintes and Rochefort, the river has excellent possibilities for tourism.
The river has been equipped upstream from Saintes, and it has locks of a fairly modest size - some 34 by 6 meters. Marinas along the river with boats for hire and good possibilities to moor and disembark make the Charente a perfect leisure area for boat trip lovers.[1]
Tributaries
Tributaries include:
Cities
Cities along the river include:
- Civray
- Jarnac
- Montignac-Charente
- Angoulême
- Cognac
- Saintes
- Taillebourg
- Saint-Savinien
- Tonnay-Charente
- Rochefort
- Soubise
- Vergeroux
References
External links
Categories:- Rivers of France
- Charente basin
- Charente
- Charente-Maritime
- Haute-Vienne
- Vienne
- Limousin geography stubs
- Poitou-Charentes geography stubs
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