Jump to content

White Drin

Coordinates: 42°5′30″N 20°23′41″E / 42.09167°N 20.39472°E / 42.09167; 20.39472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Drini i Bardhë)
White Drin
Waterfall at the mouth of the White Drin river
Map
Native nameDrini i Bardhë (Albanian)
Location
Countries
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationZhleb mountain, north of Peja, Kosovo
Mouth 
 • location
with Black Drin forms the Drin, at Kukës, Albania
 • coordinates
42°5′30″N 20°23′41″E / 42.09167°N 20.39472°E / 42.09167; 20.39472
Length136 km (85 mi)[1]
Basin size4,964 km2 (1,917 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average66 m3/s (2,300 cu ft/s)[1]
Basin features
ProgressionDrinAdriatic Sea
White Drin river and its canyon

The White Drin or White Drim (Albanian: Drini i Bardhë; Serbian: Beli Drim, Serbian: Бели Дрим) is a river in Kosovo and northern Albania, a ca. 140-kilometre (87 mi) long headstream of the Drin.

Course

[edit]

Kosovo

[edit]

The Kosovo section of the White Drin flows entirely in the semi-karst part of Kosovo, in an arc-shaped 122-kilometre (76 mi)-long course.[2] The river originates in the southern slopes of the Zhleb mountain, north of the town of Peja. The river springs near the Bukuroshja e Fjetur Cave. The cave is multi-levelled, not much explored and has a lake inside. The water from the spring was used by the Peja brewery. The stream is originally a sinking river which eventually springs out from the strong well and falls down as a 25-metre (82 ft)-high waterfall named the White Drin Waterfall near the village of Radac, 8 km (5.0 mi) away from Peja. In 1934, Russian émigré Dimitry Tyapkin projected and constructed a hydroelectric power plant next to the waterfalls which produced electricity for the town.[3]

The White Drin first flows to the east, next to the spa of Banja of Peja or Ilixhe, and the villages of Banje, Novosellë, Dubova, Ozdrim, Trubuhoc and Zllakuqan, where it receives the Istog river from the left and turns to the south. The rest of the course is through the very fertile and densely populated central section of Kosovo (Podrima region), but oddly, there is not even one large settlement on the river itself, despite many smaller villages on the river. The largest cities are several miles away from the river (Peja, Gjakova, Prizren) whilst some smaller towns (Klina) and large villages (Krusha e Madhe, Gjonaj) are closer to it. The White Drin also creates the small White Drin Canyon in the Republic of Kosovo.

The White Drin receives many relatively long tributaries: Lumbardhi i Pejës, Lumbardhi i Deçanit, Prue Potok, and Erenik from the right; Istog, Klina, Mirusha, Rimnik, Topluga and Lumbardhi i Prizrenit from the left.

The Kosovo part of the White Drin basin comprises 4,360 km2 (1,680 sq mi). Here the waters of the river are used for waterworks of the big nearby towns, irrigation and power production (especially its right tributaries). At the Vërmica-Shalqin border crossing, the river enters the eastern Albanian region of Trektan.

Albania

[edit]

The Albanian section of the river is 16 km (9.9 mi) long[1] with the drainage area of 604 km2 (233 sq mi). There are no settlements on the river and it receives the Lumë river from the left (which also originates in Kosovo, from several rivers in the region). Finally, the White Drin reaches the town of Kukës where it meets the Black Drin and forms the Drin, which flows into the Adriatic Sea; thus the White Drin belongs to the Adriatic Sea drainage basin. The river is not navigable.

The entire Albanian section (and part of the Kosovan) is flooded by the artificial Fierza lake (see Drin controversy).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Drin/Drim River Sub-basin
  2. ^ "Lumenjtë dhe pellgjet lumore" (PDF) (in Albanian). Retrieved 2023-10-23.
  3. ^ Dr Branislav Nikolić, "Vodopad na izvoru Belog Drima", Politika (in Serbian)
  • Jelena Bosnić; Milosav Mirković (1997). Tajni teret. Prosveta. ISBN 978-86-07-00001-2.
  • Jovan Đ. Marković (1990): Enciklopedijski geografski leksikon Jugoslavije; Svjetlost-Sarajevo; ISBN 978-86-01-02651-3
[edit]