Also known as Chinese mile, Korean mile, Korean ri, ri
[里] traditional Chinese unit of distance; today standardized as 500 metres
Map of the eastern South China Sea from 1588; each grid square is 400 li (about 133 km or 80 miles). Li or ri (Chinese: 里, lǐ, or 市里, shìlǐ) is a traditional Chinese unit of distance. The li has varied considerably over time but was usually about one third of an English mile and now has a standardized length of a half-kilometer (500 meters or 1,640 feet or 0.311 miles). This is then divided into 1,500 chi, or "Chinese feet".
The character 里 combines the characters for "field" (田, tián) and "earth" (土, tǔ), since it was considered to be about the length of a single village. As late as the 1940s, a "li" did not represent a fixed measure but could be longer or shorter depending on the effort required to cover the distance. This traditional unit, in terms of historical usage and distance proportion, can be considered the East Asian counterpart to the Western league unit. However, in English league commonly means "3 miles."
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