This one was sent from Belarus by Kate. This spot is beautiful! I miss Italy...
"The Trevi Fountain is a fountain in the Trevi rione in Rome, Italy. Standing 26 metres (85.3 feet) high and 20 metres (65.6 feet) wide, it is the largest Baroque fountain in the city and one of the most famous fountains in the world.
The
fountain at the junction of three roads (tre vie) marks the terminal point of
the "modern" Acqua Vergine, the revived Aqua Virgo, one of the
ancient aqueducts that supplied water to ancient Rome. In 19 BC, supposedly
with the help of a virgin, Roman technicians located a source of pure water
some 13 km (8.1 mi) from the city. (This scene is presented on the present
fountain's façade.) However, the eventual indirect route of the aqueduct made
its length some 22 km (14 mi). This Aqua Virgo led the water into the Baths of
Agrippa. It served Rome for more than four hundred years. The coup de grâce for
the urban life of late classical Rome came when the Goth besiegers in 537/38
broke the aqueducts. Medieval Romans were reduced to drawing water from polluted
wells and the Tiber River, which was also used as a sewer.
The Roman
custom of building a handsome fountain at the endpoint of an aqueduct that
brought water to Rome was revived in the 15th century, with the Renaissance. In
1453, Pope Nicholas V finished mending the Acqua Vergine aqueduct and built a
simple basin, designed by the humanist architect Leon Battista Alberti, to
herald the water's arrival." In: Wikipedia
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