Jehlum River or Jhelum River (, ) is the largest and most western of the five rivers of Punjab, and passes through Jhelum District. It is a tributary of the Indus River.
The river was regarded as a god by the ancient Greeks, as were most mountains and streams; the poet Nonnus in the Dionysiaca (section 26, line 350) makes the Hydaspes a titan-descended god, the son of the sea-god Thaumas and the cloud-goddess Elektra. He was the brother of Iris the goddess of the rainbow, and half-brother to the harpies, the snatching winds. Since the river is in a country foreign to the ancient Greeks, it is not clear whether they named the river after the god, or whether the god Hydaspes was named after the river.
Alexander the Great crossed the Jhelum in 326 BC to defeat Porus at the Battle of the Hydaspes. According to Arrian (Anabasis, 29), he built a city "on the spot whence he started to cross the river Hydaspes", which he named Bukephala (or Bucephala) to honour his famous horse Bukephalis which was buried there. It is thought that ancient Bukephala was near the site of modern Jhelum City.
The waters of the Jhelum are allocated to Pakistan under the terms of the Indus Waters Treaty.
The Jhelum enters the Punjab in the Jhelum District. From there, it flows through the plains of the Punjab, forming the boundary between the Chaj and Sindh Sagar Doabs. It ends in a confluence with the Chenab at Trimmu in District Jhang. The Chenab merges with the Sutlej to form the Panjnad River which joins the Indus River at Mithankot.
Rivers of Pakistan | Rivers of India | Rigvedic rivers | Tributaries of the Indus River | Jhelum District
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"Jhelum River".
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