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Text from Green - English

  • Venetian wells

  • The venetian well is an architectural structure used in the city of Venice in past ages for the supply of drinking water.
  • Currently, more than 600 venetian wells are survived only as an ornamental complement but they are essential and contribute in a fundamental way.in the planning of the city.
  • History The water supply was always fundamental problem in Venice and its surrounding islands.
  • Considering the particular hydro-geological features of the lagoon, citizens already started in the Middle Ages the building of underground cisterns, commonly defined "wells".
  • For its part, the government of the island encouraged, promoted and coordinated the construction of water systems In 1322 the Maggior Consiglio decreed the construction of fifty wells.
  • In 1386 was founded the "Guild of Acquaioli." In 1424 another thirty wells were built.
  • In the eighteenth century, there were 157 public wells, to which you had to to add many thousands of private wells [1], so much so that in 1858 the Venice Municipal Technical Office estimated the presence in the city of nearly 7,000 wells (6,046 public and 180 private wells, over 556 already buried).
  • During maintenance operations were brought to light the rests of a well in the same Piazza San Marco and was engraved in the pavement track of its location.
  • In the nineteenth century, with the making of the municipal aqueduct, the use of wells as a source of water supply was slowly abandoned until they ceased altogether.
  • For safety reasons, the top of the wells which are no longer used was closed with metal covers or in cement.
  • Venetian wells differs from the ordinary artesian wells as for the specific hydro-geological characteristics of the Venetian lagoon, the water was not obtained by accessing an underground source but only by collecting and filtering rainwater, taking advantage of the clayey nature - and then substantially impermeable - of venetian subsoil.
  • The construction of a well was somewhat complex.
  • It was necessary first of all to have a sufficiently large collecting area around the well itself, towards which converge the rainwater: for this reason the Venetian wells are located almost exclusively in the "campi" or in the wider courts.
  • Once identified, the area of a rectangular or square, was dug for a depth of five or six feet, covered with a thick layer of impermeable clay and filled with layers of different thinness of sand, which held the filter function.
  • Rainwater was collected using two or four manholes in Istrian stone, called "pilelle", arranged symmetrically in relation to the pipe of the well.
  • To limit losses, under manholes was built a brick structure in the shape of a bell, open at the bottom, to convey as much rainwater as possible directly to the sand filter.
  • The whole area surrounding the manhole was also elevated slope in order to promote rainwater harvesting.

МОЛЯ, ПОМОГНЕТЕ ДА КОРИГИГИРАМЕ ВСЯКО ИЗРЕЧЕНИЕ! - English