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The Pons Fabricius (Italian: Ponte Fabricio, "Fabrician Bridge") or Ponte dei Quattro Capi, is the oldest extant bridge in Rome, Italy. [1] Built in 62 BC, it spans half of the Tiber River, from the Campus Martius on the east side to Tiber Island in the middle (the Pons Cestius is west of the island).
The Ponte Fabricio, the only original bridge in Rome, connects the island from the northeast to the Field of Mars in the rione Sant'Angelo (left bank). The Ponte Cestio , of which only some original parts survived, connects the island to Trastevere on the south (right bank).
Lungotevere De' Cenci is the stretch of Lungotevere that connects Ponte Garibaldi to the Ponte Fabricio, in Rome, in the rioni Sant'Angelo and Regola. [ 1 ] The lungotevere is named after the family of the Cenci [ it ] , protagonist of a tragic story of Renaissance Rome.
Ripa borders northward with Regola (R. VII), whose border is defined by a stretch of the Tiber near the Tiber Island, between Ponte Garibaldi and Ponte Fabricio; as well as with Sant'Angelo (R. XI), from which is separated by Ponte Fabricio itself, by Lungotevere dei Pierleoni and by Via del Foro Olitorio.
The well-dressed poet with a top hat, a walking stick, and his right hand loiters on a reconstruction of Ponte Fabricio banister, recognizable by the presence of a typical four-faced hermes. Awkwardly represented as aloof on a plinth, he affectionately gazes at his fellow pedestrians.
The Pons Cestius (Latin for the "Cestian Bridge"; Italian: Ponte Cestio) is an ancient Roman bridge connecting the right bank of the Tiber with the west bank of Tiber Island in Rome, Italy. [1] In Late Antiquity , the bridge was replaced and renamed the Pons Gratiani [ 1 ] ("Bridge of Gratian").
Ponte Matteotti (1929; pre 1945 called Ponte delle Milizie or Ponte Littorio) Ponte Nenni (1971–1972) Ponte Regina Margherita (1886–1891, also called Ponte Margherita) Ponte Cavour (1891–1896) Ponte Umberto I (1885) Ponte Sant'Angelo (134, formerly called Pons Aelius (Ponte Elio)) Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II (1886–1911; also called Ponte ...
Southward, it borders with Ripa (R. XII), the boundary being outlined by Via del Foro Olitorio, Lungotevere dei Pierleoni, Ponte Fabricio and the Tiber, beside the Tiber Island. To the west, the rione borders with Regola, from which is separated by Piazza delle Cinque Scole and Via di Santa Maria del Pianto.