Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ponte Salario

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Carries
  
Locale
  
Design
  
Bridge type
  
Arch bridge

Carry
  
Crosses
  
Followed by
  
Current bridge (1874)

Location
  
Body of water
  
Ponte Salario Ponte Salario Bridge ClipArt ETC

Total length
  
72 m (historical bridge)

Similar
  
Aniene, Pont de Pierre, Roman Bridge, Bridge near Limyra, Ponte Nomentano

Cgi vfx demo hd terragen 3 ponte salario sunrise by planetsidesoftware


The Ponte Salario, also called Ponte Salaro during the Middle Ages, is a road bridge in Rome, Italy, whose origins date back to the Roman period. In antiquity, it lay outside the city limits, 3 km north of the Porta Collina, at the point where the Via Salaria (modern SS4) crossed the Aniene, a tributary of the Tiber. The visible side arches are assumed to originate from the first stone structure built during the 1st century BC.

Ponte Salario Ponte Salario Monumenti Roma antica Sovrintendenza

In the Gothic War (535–554), the main arch was largely destroyed by the Ostrogothic king Totila, but repaired by his East Roman opponent Narses in 565, who recorded the extensive restoration works, including a river diversion, in an extant bridge inscription. At that time, the Ponte Salario was 72 m long and 6.52 m wide, with its semi-circular arch reaching a remarkable clear span of 24.86 m.

Ponte Salario ponte salarioromaPonte SalarioRomaPONTE SALARIOROMA

The large bridge tower was possibly erected in the 8th century, allowing more effective control of the passage. In 1798, the Ponte Salario, which had been hitherto well-preserved due to repeated repairs, was battered by Napoleonic troops, who tore down the balustrade, including the ancient inscription. In 1829, the medieval tower was demolished, and in 1849 the bridge was cut on a length of 15 m by French soldiers. In 1867, the bridge once and for all lost its historical character, when papal troops blew up the central arch. The Ponte Salario was reconstructed in its current form in 1874, with the roadway widened in 1930.

Ponte Salario mediangagovpublicobjects4166541665prima

Apart from the Ponte Salario, there were other fortified bridges across the Aniene, such as the extant Ponte Nomentano, the Ponte Mammolo (both of Roman origin) and the medieval Ponte di San Francesco in Subiaco.

Ponte Salario Ponte Salario Wikipedia
Ponte Salario FileErhard Ponte Salario 1820jpg Wikimedia Commons

References

Ponte Salario Wikipedia