No. There are actually several rivers called the Avon. (It's the Welsh word for river.)
The Globe theatre was in London near the Thames. Shakespear lived near the River Avon in Stratford-upon-Avon.
The Kennet and Avon canal.
He was born and brought up near the Warwickshire Avon. There are several River Avons in England because the word Avon means river. He lived in later life in London near the River Thames
I suppose it's the Thames, becase it flows through the Capital, London. But the Severn is the longest in England & Wales & the Tay is in Scotland. The longest in the British Isles is the Shannon, wholly in the Republic of ireland.
Thames, Severn, Trent, Humber, Yorkshire Ouse, Tyne, Mersey, Dee, Avon
Yes. If you want names, the Thames, the Avon, the Trent, the Dee and several others.
If you mean the Housatonic River, it is in America, and the Thames River is in England. There is roughly 3,000 miles of Atlantic Ocean between the two.
It's through not threw, and there are loads, the Thames, Seven, Avon, Trent, are a few.
Here are a few of the main rivers in England, River Thames, River Trent, River Avon, River Mersey, River Tyne, River Wear, River Tees, River Humber.
There are hundreds of rivers in England. Severn, Thames, Trent, Mersey, Avon and Tyne are a few of them.
there are 8: England * River Avon (Devon) * River Avon (Warwickshire) * River Avon (Hampshire) * River Avon (Bristol) Scotland * River Avon (Falkirk) * River Avon (Strathspey) * Avon Water, tributary of the River Clyde Wales * River Avon, occasional anglicisation of River Afan