The Rhine has frozen in places, (It's a long river), but the last time was the winter of 1962-63.
Yes, there are hundreds of bridges over the River Rhine, too many to list here.
1977
their are 43
It's impossible to say who or even when the first man saw the Rhine river because it was over 30,000 years ago -- long before written history.
Winter of 1949
Not since the last Ice Age. Yes in 1693.
River Thames frost fairs were held on the tideway of the River Thames at London in some winters between the 17th century and early 19th century, during the period known as the Little Ice Age, when the river froze over.
Rhine and Rhone originate in the Swiss Alps, the Po in the Italian Alps and the Danube in the German Balck Forest
The Rhine River is an important water way of some major European countries: France, German, Switzerland, Austria, and the Netherlands. The basins of the Rhine also flow into Luxembourg, Italy, and Belgium. Over history, the Rhine has served as an important way of trade and travel. It also possesses some very fertile regions.
The area of Over-the-Rhine is 14.67 square kilometers.
The Rhine is one of the longest and most important river in Europe. It runs for over 820 miles (1,320 kilometres) from its source in the in the Swiss Alps issuing from the Rheinwaldhorn Glacier 3,353m above sea level.The Rhine flows through six countries, Switzerland, The Principality of Liechtenstein, Austria, Germany, France and the Netherlands before flowing into the North Sea at Rotterdam.The River Rhine is called different names depending on the country it flows through. It is called Rhein in Germany; Rhine in France and Rijn in Netherlands.Julius Caesar had a timber bridge across it.
According to Wikipedia, the Rhine is about 1,233 km(766 miles) from the source in canton Graubünden (Switzerland) to its mouth at the North Sea at Hook of Holland (Netherlands).