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The rivers in this section are sorted north-west (Austria) to south (Croatia-Serbia). Danube/Duna (main branch at Sulina, Romania) Mosoni-Duna - branch of Danube Leitha/Lajta (in Mosonmagyaróvár) R; Rábca (near Győr) R; Rába (in Győr) R Marcal (near Gyirmót) R; Pinka (near Körmend) L; Lafnitz/Lapincs (near Szentgotthárd) L; Concó ...
Pages in category "Rivers of Hungary" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. * List of rivers of ...
The lower section of the river crosses the Romanian Plain and flows into the Black Sea through a delta. The Hungarian section of the river is 417 km (259 mi) long, from which 140 km (87 mi) forms the border between Hungary and Slovakia, from Rusovce to the mouth of the Ipeľ (Ipoly).
Less important rivers include the Drava along the Croatian border, the Rába, the Szamos, the Sió, and the Ipoly along the Slovakian border. Hungary has three major lakes. Lake Balaton, the largest, is 78 km long and from 3 to 14 km wide, with an area of 600 square km. [3] Hungarians often refer to it as the Hungarian Sea.
The lowest point in the Slovak Republic is the village of Streda nad Bodrogom in the eastern Slovak lowland (96 m) in the Bodrog River Basin. The Hungarian and Vojvodina part of the Tisza River Basin is a flat area bordered by small ranges of hills and mountains from the north and dominated by the Hungarian lowland. [16]
The Zagyva meets the Tisza River in Szolnok. The Zagyva is a river in Hungary. Its length is 179 km, and drains an area of about 5,677 km 2. The source is near Salgótarján in Nógrád county. It flows through the towns of Bátonyterenye, Pásztó, Hatvan and Jászberény and flows into the Tisza at Szolnok. Average discharge at Szolnok is 9 m ...
The Lithaha River in the Carolingian Avar March was first mentioned in an 833 deed issued by Louis the German, son of the Carolingian emperor Louis the Pious and ruler over the stem duchy of Bavaria. The Old High German name lît probably referred to a Pannonian ( Illyrian ) denotation for "mud", as maintained in the former Hungarian name Sár ...
The Hernád river at Gibárt, Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County, Hungary. It is a tributary to the river Slaná (Sajo). The source of the Hornád is the eastern slopes of Kráľova hoľa hill, south of Šuňava. [3] The river is 286 km long, with 178 km located in Slovakia, and the remaining 108 km in Hungary. [4]