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Here are some articles that you might find useful during your stay in Florence. Feel free to also ask your guides about any of the attractions of Florence during your tour. |
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> March, 2020 |
The fascinating
Old Bridge,
crossing past
and present in
Florence |
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The history of the Old
Bridge
The first appearance of the Old Bridge in the
documents dates back to 996 AD, even if it’s
believed that before it there was another bridge
built in Roman times.
The Old Bridge crosses the Arno river at its
narrowest point, in the same area where there
was the Roman Via Cassia. At its origins the
Roman piers were of stone and the superstructure
of wood.
In 1117 the Old Bridge was destroyed by a flood
and then reconstructed in stone, but in 1333 the
two central piers swept away and Florentines
rebuilt the bridge only twelve years later in
1345.
Giorgio Vasari, the Florentine artist and
historian, recorded the design of the Old Bridge
as we see it today to the artist Taddeo Gaddi,
who has been one of the most important
Florentine artists and member of Giotto’s
workshop.
According to modern historians, the architect
who designed the Old Bridge was Neri di
Fioravanti, who worked and lived in Florence in
the fourteenth century.
On August 4 1944 the Old Bridge risked to be
destroyed once again by the retreat of the
Germans, but fortunately it was spared (unlike
all other bridges in Florence).
However they destroyed the buildings at both
ends so the access to the Old Bridge was
obstructed. They reconstructed then the
buildings using a combination of original and
modern design. The structure of the Old
Bridge
The Old Bridge, a stone closed-spandrel
segmental arch bridge, consisting of three
segmental arches: the main one has a span of 30
meters (98 feet) and the two side arches each
span 27 meters (89 feet). The rise of the arches
is between 3.5 and 4.4 meters (11½ to 14½ feet).
In the central opening of the bridge there is a
little loggia with a dedication stone which once
read in Italian: “In 1333 the bridge fell
down because of a storm, then after 10 years as
the Comune wished, it was reconstructed with
this ornamentation“.
Like it happened with the
Basilica of the Holy Cross, also the Old
Bridge was severely damaged in the 1966 flood of
the Arno. The shops on the Old Bridge
and the origins of bankruptcy
The Old Bridge has always hosted a big variety
of shops and merchants. After the authorization
of the Bargello (a sort of police authority),
they displayed their goods on tables before
their premises.
The retrobotteghe (back shops) that are visible
from upriver, were added in the seventeenth
century. Legend says that the word and the
economic concept of bankruptcy have their
origins on the Old Bridge.
In the past it happened that if a money-changer
was not able to pay his debts, the banco (table)
on which he sold his wares, was physically rotto
(broken) by soldiers.
This practice was cold bancorotto, which
literally means “broken table”, so the merchant
without his table was not able to sell anything
and his activity failed. The Vasari Corridor on the
Old Bridge
In 1565 Cosimo
de’ Medici the duke of Florence, in
order to connect the Old Palace (Palazzo
Vecchio – Florence’s town hall) with the
Palazzo Pitti, commissioned to Giorgio Vasari
the construction of a structure that ran also
above the Old Bridge, it was called the “Vasari
Corridor“.
Some years later in 1595 in order to enforce the
prestige of the bridge, with a decree the
authorities prohibited butchers (whose
corporative association had monopolized the
shops on the bridge since 1442) to work there
and their place was immediately taken by several
gold merchants. The
guides of the Free
Tour Florence – Another Florence, will be
very happy to show you the Old Bridge – one of
the highlights of Florence.. . |
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