Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Penkalas Bridge

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Crosses
  
Penkalas (Kocaçay)

Material
  
Stone

Construction end
  
2nd century AD

Number of spans
  
5

Design
  
No. of spans
  
5

Bridge type
  
Arch bridge

Locale
  
Aizanoi, Turkey


Similar
  
Aizanoi, Nysa Bridge, Pergamon Bridge, Ponte di Quintodecimo, Aesepus Bridge

The Penkalas Bridge is a Roman bridge over the Penkalas (today Kocaçay), a small tributary of the Rhyndakos (Adırnas Çayı), in Aezani, Asia Minor (Çavdarhisar in present-day Turkey).

The 2nd-century AD structure was once one of four ancient bridges in Aezani and is assumed to have been the most important crossing-point due to its central location in the vicinity of the Zeus temple and the direct access it provided to the Roman road to Cotyaeum (Kütahya). According to reports by European travellers, the ancient parapet remained in use as late as 1829, having been replaced today by an unsightly iron railing.

Around 290 m upstream, another well-preserved, almost identical five-arched Roman bridge leads across the Penkalas.

References

Penkalas Bridge Wikipedia


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