Wellheads: Difference between revisions
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There are 231 public wellheads located in the various squares of Venice proper. In the surrounding islands of the lagoon, there are 26 wellheads. The wellheads on Venice proper are divided by sestiere, or district. Venice proper is divided into seven sestiere. The figure below depicts the general distribution of public wellheads by sestiere. | |||
==Cultural Importance== | ==Cultural Importance== |
Revision as of 11:03, 8 December 2014
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This page is an overview of all the wellheads in Venice.
There are 231 public wellheads located in the various squares of Venice proper. In the surrounding islands of the lagoon, there are 26 wellheads. The wellheads on Venice proper are divided by sestiere, or district. Venice proper is divided into seven sestiere. The figure below depicts the general distribution of public wellheads by sestiere.
Cultural Importance

While Wellheads are no longer in use, they still hold cultural and historical significance to the city. Wellheads were built with a main purpose of protecting Venice's fresh water supply from possible sources of contamination, but how they were built and designed exemplified the city’s culture and its love for art. Often, wellheads were festooned with carvings of saints, family crests, inscriptions, or other images important to Venetians; carvings of saints usually faced the nearest church. The design and decorative characteristics of wellheads vary depending on the time period in which they were built; Carolingian, Byzantine, Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque eras are all associated with different wellhead designs.[1].
Alberto Rizzi
Alberto Rizzi has made great efforts in the field of art preservation in Venice, and is the author of the book Vere da Pozzo di Venezi. Alberto has cataloged and assigned identification numbers known as Rizzi Numbers to each of the individual wellheads in Venice. In this book, 231 public wellheads in the sestieri of Venice are cataloged. (50 in Cannaregio, 58 in Castello, 20 in Santa Croce, 23 in San Polo, 48 in San Marco, 29 in Dorsoduro, and 3 in Giudecca)[2]. In addition to those in Venice, Sixty public wellheads are located on the lagoon islands of Murano, Burano, Torcello, Lido, Malamocco, San Pietro in Volta, Portosecco, Pellestrina, and Chioggia.
While there were originally 231 public wellheads cataloged by Alberto, a recent study completed in 2000 by WPI students shows 217 public wellheads and 15 private wellheads. So 15 wellheads that were originally public have been claimed as private property of the past 30-40 years.
Map
Wellheads are designated by purple dots on the map(they are not visual until the map is further zoomed in). When you click on a dot an info box will pop up with the wellhead's Rizzi number and other information.
See Also
References
Bibliography
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