- Ben Hai River
The Ben Hai River ( _vi. Sông Bến Hải) is a river in central
Vietnam which became an important landmark in the partition of the country into a northern and a southern zone along the 17th parallel by the Geneva Accords of 1954. The
demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the two parts extended about 5 kilometers (3mile s) from either side of the river. The Ben Hai River has a total length of about 100kilometer s; its source is located in the Annamite Mountains along the border withLaos and it flows into theSouth China Sea at Cua Tung (Tung River mouth). In the mountains, the river is named "Rao Thanh". It flows from west to east just south of the 17th parallel and close to the northern border ofQuang Tri Province , in which it is located. At its widest point, the river is about 200meter s wide.At the time of the partition, the principal north-south road (Highway 1) crossed the Ben Hai River over Hien Luong Bridge (also known as the "Peace Bridge"), a
beam bridge built from steel by the French in 1950. After the partition, the northern portion of the bridge was painted red and the southern portion yellow. The bridge was damaged by American bombardment during theVietnam War in 1967. After theParis Peace Accords , a modern bridge was built next to the old bridge.External links
* [http://www.asia-planet.net/vietnam/quang-binh.htm Places of interest in Quang Binh - Quang Tri Provinces]
* [http://www.threeland.com/dmz_quangtri_binh.htm Sites in the DMZ]
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