Bridge of Sighs

Bridge over a canal in Venice

The Bridge of Sighs (Italian: Ponte dei Sospiri) is a small bridge in Venice, northern Italy. The bridge has walls and a roof. It is made of white limestone and has windows with stone bars. It passes over the Rio di Palazzo and connects the old prisons to the interrogation rooms in the Doge's Palace. It was designed by Antoni Contino (whose uncle Antonio da Ponte had designed the Rialto Bridge), and built in 1602.

Bridge of Sighs
View from the Bridge of Sighs

The view from the windows of the Bridge of Sighs was the last view of Venice that convicts saw before their imprisonment. The bridge was named by Lord Byron in the 19th century. It was thought that prisoners would sigh at their final view of beautiful Venice through the windows before being taken down to their cells. In reality, the days of inquisitions and summary executions were over by the time the bridge was built and the cells under the palace roof were occupied mostly by small-time criminals. In addition, little could be seen from inside the Bridge due to the stone grills covering the windows.

A local legend says that lovers will be granted everlasting love and bliss if they kiss on a gondola at sunset under the bridge.[1]

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The name "Bridge of Sighs" has since been applied by association to other similar covered bridges around the world, including:

In fiction change

  • A reproduction of the bridge is featured in Volume 1 of the science fiction manga Aria, by Kozue Amano.

References change

  1. "Ponte dei Sospiri (the Bridge of Sighs)". travelandleisure.com.

Other websites change

45°26′02.6″N 12°20′27.2″E / 45.434056°N 12.340889°E / 45.434056; 12.340889