Flood destroys ancient bridge in East China
Share - WeChat


HEFEI -- A bridge dating back over 480 years to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) collapsed in floodwaters Tuesday in East China's Anhui province.
Zhenhai Bridge, a state-level cultural relics protection site located in Tunxi district in the city of Huangshan, was destroyed by the roaring Xin'an River at 9:50 am during a heavy rainstorm starting Monday evening.
No casualties were reported as local people had been evacuated and traffic on the bridge had been blocked.
The bridge, 133 meters long and 15 meters wide, was initially constructed in 1536 and rebuilt several times in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).

- China allocates 50 million yuan to support flood-hit Hebei
- Beijing issues rainstorm, flood alerts amid heavy downpours
- China moves to revoke Buddhist ordination certificate of Shaolin abbot
- 4 killed, 8 missing following landslide in North China
- Russian influencer celebrates Xinjiang's 'hundred-family banquet'
- Delivery driver earns praise for intervening to protect teenager