Rome’s Ingenious Water Transport Solutions
Rome’s Ingenious Water Transport Solutions Aqua Anio Vetus, the first raised aqueduct built in Rome, started off supplying the people living in the hills with water in 273 BC, even though they had depended on natural springs up till then. Outside of these aqueducts and springs, wells and rainwater-collecting cisterns were the lone technologies readily available at the time to supply water to locations of greater elevation. From the early sixteenth century, water was routed to Pincian Hill through the underground channel of Acqua Vergine. During its initial construction, pozzi (or manholes) were added at set intervals along the aqueduct’s channel. Although they were initially developed to make it possible to service the aqueduct, Cardinal Marcello Crescenzi began using the manholes to gather water from the channel, commencing when he acquired the property in 1543. He didn’t get adequate water from the cistern that he had built on his property to collect rainwater. Fortunately, the aqueduct sat just below his property, and he had a shaft established to give him accessibility.The Beginnings of Contemporary Outdoor Wall Fountains
The Beginnings of Contemporary Outdoor Wall Fountains Pope Nicholas V, himself a well educated man, reigned the Roman Catholic Church from 1397 to 1455 during which time he commissioned many translations of ancient classical Greek documents into Latin. In order to make Rome worthy of being the capital of the Christian world, the Pope decided to embellish the beauty of the city. In 1453 the Pope commissioned the reconstruction of the Aqua Vergine, an ancient Roman aqueduct which had carried fresh drinking water into the city from eight miles away. The ancient Roman tradition of building an awe-inspiring commemorative fountain at the location where an aqueduct arrived, also known as a mostra, was restored by Nicholas V. The present-day location of the Trevi Fountain was formerly occupied by a wall fountain commissioned by the Pope and constructed by the architect Leon Battista Alberti.