r e v i
f o u n t a in
A special ceremony was held
in Rome, Italy’s capital city, on
the evening o f 3rd November. It
marked the reopening of the Trevi
Fountain. For nearly two years,
the fountain’s pool has been empty
and most of its stonework covered
in scaffolding. This was part o f a
big restoration project. The foun
tain’s marble statues and stone
front have been cleaned, cracks
mended, the pool waterproofed,
and two special pumps fitted. The
pumps circulate the water from the
pool back through the fountain.
Currently, the city of Rome has
little money. A few years ago the
bosses of several famous Italian
companies offered to help. They
agreed to pay for the restoration work
that some of R om e’s ancient build
ings and monuments badly needed.
A shoe company called Tod’s is
currently paying for the Colosseum
to be cleaned. This huge elliptical
shaped building is an open-air are
na, or amphitheatre. The Colosseum
is almost 2,000 years old. It is where
Roman citizens watched gladiator
fights. The Colosseum restoration
work will cost €25 million (£17.6
million). Completion is expected
next year.
About €2.2 million (£1.55 mil
lion) was spent on the Trevi Foun
tain restoration work. The Fendi
Company paid for it. This is a well-
known Italian fashion company. It
makes clothes, shoes, leather bags
and belts,
sunglasses, watches,
and fragrances.
The Trevi Fountain
(Fontana di
Trevi)
is probably the w orld’s most
famous Baroque fountain. Baroque
(pronounced ba-rock) is a style of
European architecture, music and
art from the 17th and 18th centu
ries. Baroque buildings have com
plex sculpture-like designs. They
are usually very large and ornate.
The fountain has a long history.
In 19 BCE, or just over 2,000 years
ago, Roman engineers built a long
aqueduct. It brought clean water to
the city of Rome from a faraway
source, or spring. The aqueduct is
22 kilometres (14 miles) long. Much
of it is underground. The aqueduct
took the water to a place where three
roads intersected, or crossed. Called
the Trivia, it eventually became
Trevi Square.
Trevi Fountain, in Rome
Water flowed along the aque
duct for about 400 years. However,
it was badly damaged by invaders
after the Roman Empire collapsed.
In the 1450s the pope, or leader
of the Roman Catholic Church,
arranged for the aqueduct to be
repaired. In 1730 Pope Clement the
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