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aqueducts 2 The Carolino
Aqueduct and the "Bridges" of Maddaloni
The purpose of the aqueduct was to provide water to the new royal palace of Charles III of Bourbon and to the surrounding areas—that is, the city of Caserta and the new experimental community of San Leucio, in anticipation that the new palace, when completed, would be the centerpiece for a new capital of the kingdom of Naples. (For various reasons, that "new capital" did not come to pass.) The waterway, as well, would serve mountain communities such as Sant'Agata dei Goti along the way as it wended down from the source, the Fizzo springs of Mt. Taburno near Bucciano not far from Benevento. The aqueduct, indeed, wound up providing flatlanders with water for irrigation and even feeding into and augmenting the flow in the Carmiggiano aqueduct, a main water source for the city of Naples, itself. The aqueduct was 38 kilometers long and marked by 67 sampling and inspection stations. One of the remarkable features of the aqueduct was that it dropped only half a millimeter for each meter of length, providing a solid but calm flow. Much of the aqueduct was submerged, including the last stretch in the Briano hill right above the north end of the grounds of the royal palace itself, before the water dropped down to feed a spectacular series of cascading pools. Construction was started in March of 1753 when Charles III was on the throne; it was inaugurated on May 7 of 1762 in the presence of the new boy-king Ferdinand, his regent, Bernardo Tanucci, the architect, Vanvitelli, and a goodly number of skeptics who had said it couldn’t be done. The
most
impressive
construction along the whole length was bringing the
aqueduct through Mt. Longano and over the Maddaloni
valley and into (and then through) Mt. Garzano. The
bridge over that valley turned out to be 529 meters
long, at the time the longest in Europe; it was
sustained by three rows of arches with, from bottom to
top row, 19, 29 and 43 arches, respectively. The average
height of the bridge as it crosses the valley is almost
60 meters. The water took four hours to flow from the
source to the Briano hill and down into the fountains.
The bridge is well preserved and is a major tourist
attraction in the area. |