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The fountain at the juncture of three roads (tre ie) marks the terminal point of the Aqua ergine, one of the ancient aqueducts that supplied water to
Rome. In 19 BC, supposedly with the help of a irgin, Roman technicians located a source of pure water only 14 miles (22 km) from the city. This Aqua irgo was carried over
Rome's shortest aqueduct directly to the Baths of Agrippa and sered Rome for more than four hundred years. The "coup de grace" for the urban life of late classical Rome came when the Goth besiegers broke the aqueducts.
Medieal Romans were reduced to polluted wells and the dangerous water of the Tiber, 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 reied in the 15th century, with the
Renaissance. In 1453,
Pope Nicholas Parentucelli finished mending the Aqua ergine aqueduct and built a simple basin, designed by the humanist architect Leon Battista Alberti, to herald the water's arrial.
In 1629,
Pope Urban III Barberini, finding the earlier fountain insufficiently dramatic, asked Bernini to do some drawings for it, but when the Pope died the project was abandoned. Bernini's lasting contribution was to resite the fountain from the other side of the square to face the
Quirinal Palace (so the Pope could look down and enjoy it too). Though
Bernini's project was torn down for
Sali's fountain, there are many
Bernini touches in the fountain as it was built.
Competitions had become the rage during the Renaissance and Baroque periods to redesign buildings, fountains, and even the Spanish Steps. In 1730,
Pope Clement XII Corsini organized another contest, which
Nicola Sali
actually lost — but was given the job anyway. Work began in 1732 and was finished in 1762, long after Clement's death, when
Pietro Bracci's 'Neptune' was set in the central niche (illustration, left). Taming of the waters is the theme of the gigantic scheme that tumbles forward, mixing water and rockwork, and filling the small square. Tritons guide Neptune's shell chariot, taming seahorses (hippocamps).
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The backdrop for the fountain is the
Palazzo Poli, given a new facade with a giant order of Corinthian pilasters that link the two main stories. In the center is superimposed a robustly modelled triumphal arch. The center niche or exedra framing Neptune has free-standing columns for maximal light and shade. In the niches flanking Neptune, Abundance spills water from her urn and Salubrity holds a cup from which a snake drinks. Aboe, bas reliefs illustrate the Roman origin of the aqueducts.
The tritons and horses proide symmetrical balance, with the maximum contrast in their mood and poses (by 1730, the rococo is already in full bloom in
France
and Germany).
The
Fontana di Trei
is the 'Three Coins in the Fountain' fountain, the one that drenched Anita Ekberg in
Federico Fellini's La Dolce ita. The fountain was refurbished in 1998; the stonework was scrubbed and the fountain proided with recirculating pumps and oxidizers.
A legend says that it is lucky to throw coins with one's right hand over one's right shoulder into the
Trei Fountain. Throwing one coin in will ensure that the thrower will return to Rome. Throwing two coins ensures that the thrower will fall in loe with a beautiful Roman girl (or handsome boy), and throwing three coins in ensures that the thrower will marry that girl or boy in
Rome.
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Fontana de Trei
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