Much of the Grand Canal south of …
Years: 1280 - 1280
Much of the Grand Canal south of the Yellow River had been ruined for several years after 1128, when Du Chong decided to break the dikes and dams holding back the waters of the Yellow River in order to decimate the oncoming Jurchen invaders during the Jin–Song wars.
The Jurchen Jin dynasty continually battled with the Song in the region between the Huai River and the Yellow River; this warfare led to the dilapidation of the canal until the Mongols invaded in the thirteenth century and began necessary repairs.
Under the Mongol Yuan dynasty, the capital of China has been moved to Beijing, eliminating the need for the canal arm flowing west to Kaifeng or Luoyang.
A summit section is dug across the foothills of the Shandong massif during the 1280s, shortening the overall length by as much as seven hundred kilometers (making the total length about eighteen hundred kilometers) and linking Beijing and …
Locations
Groups
- Chinese (Han) people
- Mongols
- Mongol Empire
- Kublai Khan, Empire of
- Chinese Empire, Yüan, or Mongol, Dynasty
