Autor: |
Kucher, Michael |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Urban History; May2005, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p504-536, 33p, 3 Maps |
Abstrakt: |
The Tuscan hill town of Siena, Italy, has been supplied by a system of gravity-fed fountains since at least the twelfth century. Medieval statutes and surviving physical evidence reveal that the city maintained the purity of its urban water supply by a combination of physical and legal structures. The urban water supply embodied the provisions of that legislation in the physical arrangements of the fountain complexes. Laws and architecture imposed a hierarchy whereby those uses of water with greater potential for contamination were kept downstream from the uses that required a supply of pure water. Although not unique to Siena, the city's hierarchal division of water provides a powerful and useful model for allocating contemporary water resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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