Ponte della Paglia
Ponte della Paglia is a bridge in Venice, Italy. The current structure dates from 1847, and the original structure was built in 1360. The original structure was the oldest stone bridge in Venice.[1] The name of the bridge is understood to come from boats mooring nearby to offload straw (paglia).[2] The bridge is a common place from which to view the Bridge of Sighs.
In popular culture
The bridge is the subject of a painting by Maurice Prendergast, the original artwork being part of the Phillips Collection.[3] Casanova references the bridge in his memoirs as a place where he meets a woman whose life he had saved before.[4]
gollark: I guess, in fairness, shared environmental conditions which push dodgy drives over the edge would probably also eventually damage okay drives.
gollark: If we assume failures are independent, yes, but they probably aren't.
gollark: RAID is irritating to manage and won't save you if multiple salvaged disks fail at the same time.
gollark: Which is obviously unacceptable.
gollark: I'm willing to do this with *some* things, but not data storage, because then I would lose data.
References
- A Week in Venice: A Complete Guide-book to the City and Its Environs (4 ed.). Venice: Colombo Coen And Son. 1880. p. 22.
- Ball, Caroline (2010). Venice and the Veneto. DK Eyewitness Travel. London: Dorling Kindersley LTD. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-75666-132-8.
- Phillips Collection, Ponte della Paglia, Maurice Prendergast, ca. 1898/reworked 1922, Oil on canvas, Acquired 1922. Accessed on July 25, 2015.
- Littlewood, Ian (1995). A Literary Companion To Venice: Including Seven Walking Tours. Macmillan. pp. 133–135. ISBN 9780312131135.
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