Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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CHAP. VI.
OF Bridges, ſome are of Stone, others of
Wood
.
We ſhall ſpeak firſt of thoſe which
are
of Wood, as the moſt eaſy of Execution;
next
we ſhall treat of thoſe which are built of
Stone
.
Both ought to be as ſtrong as poſſible;
that
therefore which is built of Wood, muſt
be
fortified with a good Quantity of the

ſtrongeſt
Timbers.
We cannot give a better
Example
of this Sort of Bridges than that built
by
fulius Cæſar, which he gives us a Deſcrip­
tion
of himſelf, as follows: He faſtened to­
gether
two Timbers, leaving a Diſtance be­
tween
them of two Foot; their Length was
proportioned
to the Depth of the River, and
they
were a Foot and an half thick, and cut
ſharp
at the Ends.
Theſe he let down into
the
River with Cranes, and drove them well in
with
a Sort of Rammers, not perpendicularly
down
like Piles, but ſlanting upwards, and
giving
Way according to the Current of the
River
.
Then, oppoſite to theſe, he drove in
two
others, faſtened together in the ſame Man­
ner
, with a Diſtance between them at Bottom
of
forty Foot, ſlanting contrary to the Force
and
Current of the Stream.
When theſe were
thus
fixed, he laid acroſs from one to the other,
Beams
of the Thickneſs of two Foot, which
was
the Diſtance left between the Timbers
drove
down; and faſtened theſe Beams at the
End
, each with two Braces, which being
bound
round and faſtened of oppoſite Sides,
the
Strength of the whole Work was ſo great
and
of ſuch a Nature, that the greatcr the
Force
of Water was which bore againſt it,
the
cloſer and firmer the Beams united.
Over
theſe
other Beams were laid acroſs and faſtened
to
them, and a Floor, as we may call it, made
over
them with Poles and Hurdles.
At the
ſame
Time, in the lower Part of the River,
below
the Bridge, other Timbers, or ſloping
Piles
, were driven down, which being faſtened
to
the reſt of the Structure, ſhould be a Kind
of
Buttreſs to reſiſt the Force of the Stream;
and
other Piles were alſo driven in at a ſmall
Diſtance
above the Bridge, and ſtanding ſome­
what
above the Water, that if the Enemy
ſhould
ſend Trunks of Trees, or Veſſels, down
the
Stream, in order to break the Bridge, thoſe
Piles
might receive and intercept their Vio­
lence
, and prevent their doing any Prejudice
to
the Work.
All this we learn from Cæſar.
Nor
is it foreign to our Purpoſe to take Notice
of
what is practiced at Verona, where they
pave
their wooden Bridges with Bars of Iron,
eſpecially
where the Wheels of Carts and Wag­
gons
are to paſs.
It remains now that we

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