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Ponte Palatino

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Ponte Palatino , also known as Ponte Inglese ( Italian for English Bridge ), is a bridge that links Lungotevere Aventino to Lungotevere Ripa in Rome ( Italy ), in the Rioni Ripa and Trastevere .

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7-517: The bridge was designed by architect Angelo Vescovali and built between 1886 and 1890 in place of the partially destroyed, 2,200-year-old Pons Aemilius (also called Ponte Rotto , "Broken Bridge"). One arch of the ancient three-arch bridge was destroyed by a flood in 1598, while another arch was demolished by Vescovali in 1887 to make room for the Ponte Palatino, thus leaving the Pons Aemilius just

14-501: A bridge in the same location as the Pons Aemilius in 192 BC. The first stone bridge was constructed by Censor Marcus Fulvius Nobilior several years after that, in 179 BC (although it was not completed until 151 BC). The bridge's piers date from this early period, although its arches were constructed by Scipio Aemilianus and L. Mummius in 142 BC. The bridge kept its place for several hundred years, although it

21-503: A metal top surface and is 155 metres (509 ft) long. This article about a bridge in Italy is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Pons Aemilius The Pons Aemilius ( Latin for the " Aemilian Bridge"; Italian : Ponte Emilio ) is the oldest Roman stone bridge in Rome . Preceded by a wooden version, it was rebuilt in stone in the 2nd century BC. It once spanned

28-622: A single arch in mid-river, situated adjacent to the modern bridge. Ponte Palatino takes its name from the Palatine Hill , at whose slopes the structure rises. The bridge links the Forum Boarium to Piazza Castellani, in front of the Tiber Island ; the epithet English is due to the left-hand traffic flow that applies on it, just as in the United Kingdom . It shows four masonry piers with

35-555: The Tiber , connecting the Forum Boarium , the Roman cattle market, on the east with Trastevere on the west. A single arch in mid-river is all that remains today, lending the bridge its name Ponte Rotto ( Italian for the "Broken Bridge"). The oldest piers of the bridge were probably laid when the Via Aurelia was constructed in the mid-2nd century BC. According to Titus Livius , there existed

42-418: Was later rebuilt by Pope Gregory XIII ; the remnants of the bridge today still bear Latin inscriptions detailing Gregory XIII's renovation of the bridge. Finally, floods in 1575 and 1598 carried the eastern half away, resulting in its abandonment as a functioning bridge for several centuries. For many years, it was used as a fishing pier. In 1853, Pope Pius IX had the remnants of the bridge connected to

49-528: Was repaired and rebuilt both by Augustus , and later by Emperor Probus in AD ;280. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, the bridge was damaged several times by floods, with each flood taking a greater and greater toll on the overall structure. It was first severely damaged in 1230, after which it was rebuilt by Pope Gregory XI . Later, the bridge was more seriously damaged by the flood of 1557, but again

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