1034 Yellow River flood
The Yellow River's course at the time (marked Han-Tang) began to be altered by the river's flooding in 1034 | |
| Date | July 1034 |
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| Location | Modern-day northern Shandong and southern Hebei |
| Cause | Heavy rainfall leading to the bursting of a fascine |
| Deaths | unknown |
| Property damage | Significant damage to agricultural regions around Dezhou and Bozhou; decreased revenues in northern provinces of the Northern Song |
| 1034 Yellow River flood | |||||||||||||||||||
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"1034 Yellow River flood" in Simplified (top) Chinese characters, and Traditional (bottom) Chinese characters | |||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 1034年黃河洪水 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 1034年黄河洪水 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The AD 1034 Yellow River flood was a natural disaster along China's Yellow River originating in a burst fascine following heavy rainfall at Henglong in the territory of the Northern Song. The flood divided the Yellow River from its previous course into three more northerly channels meeting the Chihe, You, and Jin.
The Yellow River's new channels caused flooding in the rich northern regions of Dezhou and Bozhou, as well as reducing revenues in the northern regions of the Northern Song. The Yellow River flooded once again in 1048, causing the river's course to move northward past the southern Hebei-Shandong region, where it had led into the sea before. The period of time surrounding both the 1034 Yellow River flood and the succeeding 1048 Yellow River flood is generally referred to as the "Song Dynasty period of two rivers".