fbpx
Wikipedia

Fountain

A fountain, from the Latin "fons" (genitive "fontis"), meaning source or spring, is a decorative reservoir used for discharging water. It is also a structure that jets water into the air for a decorative or dramatic effect.

(Center) Jet d'eau, (Geneva, Switzerland) Clockwise from top right (1) Fontana di Trevi (Rome) (2) Place de la Concorde (Paris) (3) Fountain in the Garden of Versailles (Versailles) (4) The Hundred Fountains, Villa d'Este (Tivoli, Italy) (5) Fuente de los Leones, (The Alhambra, Granada) (6) Fountain in St. Peter's Square (Rome) (7) Samson and the Lion fountain (Peterhof, St. Petersburg, Russia) (8) Dubai Fountain (Dubai)

Fountains were originally purely functional, connected to springs or aqueducts and used to provide drinking water and water for bathing and washing to the residents of cities, towns and villages. Until the late 19th century most fountains operated by gravity, and needed a source of water higher than the fountain, such as a reservoir or aqueduct, to make the water flow or jet into the air.

In addition to providing drinking water, fountains were used for decoration and to celebrate their builders. Roman fountains were decorated with bronze or stone masks of animals or heroes. In the Middle Ages, Moorish and Muslim garden designers used fountains to create miniature versions of the gardens of paradise. King Louis XIV of France used fountains in the Gardens of Versailles to illustrate his power over nature. The baroque decorative fountains of Rome in the 17th and 18th centuries marked the arrival point of restored Roman aqueducts and glorified the Popes who built them.[1]

By the end of the 19th century, as indoor plumbing became the main source of drinking water, urban fountains became purely decorative. Mechanical pumps replaced gravity and allowed fountains to recycle water and to force it high into the air. The Jet d'Eau in Lake Geneva, built in 1951, shoots water 140 metres (460 ft) in the air. The highest such fountain in the world is King Fahd's Fountain in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, which spouts water 260 metres (850 ft) above the Red Sea.[2]

Fountains are used today to decorate city parks and squares; to honor individuals or events; for recreation and for entertainment. A splash pad or spray pool allows city residents to enter, get wet and cool off in summer. The musical fountain combines moving jets of water, colored lights and recorded music, controlled by a computer, for dramatic effects. Fountains can themselves also be musical instruments played by obstruction of one or more of their water jets. Drinking fountains provide clean drinking water in public buildings, parks and public spaces.

History edit

Ancient fountains edit

 
An Egyptian fountain on the Temple of Dendera

Ancient civilizations built stone basins to capture and hold precious drinking water. A carved stone basin, dating to around 700 BC, was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash in modern Iraq. The ancient Assyrians constructed a series of basins in the gorge of the Comel River, carved in solid rock, connected by small channels, descending to a stream. The lowest basin was decorated with carved reliefs of two lions.[3] The ancient Egyptians had ingenious systems for hoisting water up from the Nile for drinking and irrigation, but without a higher source of water it was not possible to make water flow by gravity, There are lion-shaped fountains in the Temple of Dendera in Qena.

 
Attic Greek vase from South Italy, about 480 B.C.

The ancient Greeks used aqueducts and gravity-powered fountains to distribute water. According to ancient historians, fountains existed in Athens, Corinth, and other ancient Greek cities in the 6th century BC as the terminating points of aqueducts which brought water from springs and rivers into the cities. In the 6th century BC, the Athenian ruler Peisistratos built the main fountain of Athens, the Enneacrounos, in the Agora, or main square. It had nine large cannons, or spouts, which supplied drinking water to local residents.[4]

 
Hellenistic fountain head from the Pergamon museum

Greek fountains were made of stone or marble, with water flowing through bronze pipes and emerging from the mouth of a sculpted mask that represented the head of a lion or the muzzle of an animal. Most Greek fountains flowed by simple gravity, but they also discovered how to use principle of a siphon to make water spout, as seen in pictures on Greek vases.[5]

Ancient Roman fountains edit

 
Reconstruction of a Roman courtyard fountain in Pompeii (1st century AD)

The Ancient Romans built an extensive system of aqueducts from mountain rivers and lakes to provide water for the fountains and baths of Rome. The Roman engineers used lead pipes instead of bronze to distribute the water throughout the city. The excavations at Pompeii, which revealed the city as it was when it was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, uncovered free-standing fountains and basins placed at intervals along city streets, fed by siphoning water upwards from lead pipes under the street. The excavations of Pompeii also showed that the homes of wealthy Romans often had a small fountain in the atrium, or interior courtyard, with water coming from the city water supply and spouting into a small bowl or basin.

Ancient Rome was a city of fountains. According to Sextus Julius Frontinus, the Roman consul who was named curator aquarum or guardian of the water of Rome in 98 AD, Rome had nine aqueducts which fed 39 monumental fountains and 591 public basins, not counting the water supplied to the Imperial household, baths and owners of private villas. Each of the major fountains was connected to two different aqueducts, in case one was shut down for service.[6]

The Romans were able to make fountains jet water into the air, by using the pressure of water flowing from a distant and higher source of water to create hydraulic head, or force. Illustrations of fountains in gardens spouting water are found on wall paintings in Rome from the 1st century BC, and in the villas of Pompeii.[7] The Villa of Hadrian in Tivoli featured a large swimming basin with jets of water. Pliny the Younger described the banquet room of a Roman villa where a fountain began to jet water when visitors sat on a marble seat. The water flowed into a basin, where the courses of a banquet were served in floating dishes shaped like boats.[8]

Roman engineers built aqueducts and fountains throughout the Roman Empire. Examples can be found today in the ruins of Roman towns in Vaison-la-Romaine and Glanum in France, in Augst, Switzerland, and other sites.

Medieval fountains edit

 
Lavabo at Le Thoronet Abbey, Provence, (12th century)

In Nepal there were public drinking fountains at least as early as 550 AD. They are called dhunge dharas or hitis. They consist of intricately carved stone spouts through which water flows uninterrupted from underground water sources. They are found extensively in Nepal and some of them are still operational. Construction of water conduits like hitis and dug wells are considered as pious acts in Nepal.[9]

During the Middle Ages, Roman aqueducts were wrecked or fell into decay, and many fountains throughout Europe stopped working, so fountains existed mainly in art and literature, or in secluded monasteries or palace gardens. Fountains in the Middle Ages were associated with the source of life, purity, wisdom, innocence, and the Garden of Eden.[10] In illuminated manuscripts like the Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry (1411–1416), the Garden of Eden was shown with a graceful gothic fountain in the center (see illustration). The Ghent Altarpiece by Jan van Eyck, finished in 1432, also shows a fountain as a feature of the adoration of the mystic lamb, a scene apparently set in Paradise.

The cloister of a monastery was supposed to be a replica of the Garden of Eden, protected from the outside world. Simple fountains, called lavabos, were placed inside Medieval monasteries such as Le Thoronet Abbey in Provence and were used for ritual washing before religious services.[11]

Fountains were also found in the enclosed medieval jardins d'amour, "gardens of courtly love" – ornamental gardens used for courtship and relaxation. The medieval romance The Roman de la Rose describes a fountain in the center of an enclosed garden, feeding small streams bordered by flowers and fresh herbs.

Some Medieval fountains, like the cathedrals of their time, illustrated biblical stories, local history and the virtues of their time. The Fontana Maggiore in Perugia, dedicated in 1278, is decorated with stone carvings representing prophets and saints, allegories of the arts, labors of the months, the signs of the zodiac, and scenes from Genesis and Roman history.[12]

Medieval fountains could also provide amusement. The gardens of the Counts of Artois at the Château de Hesdin, built in 1295, contained famous fountains, called Les Merveilles de Hesdin ("The Wonders of Hesdin") which could be triggered to drench surprised visitors.[13]

Fountains of the Islamic World edit

 
Shalimar Gardens in Lahore, Pakistan (1641)
 
Fountain in Baku, Azerbaijan
 
Pasargadae Persian Gardens

Shortly after the spread of Islam, the Arabs incorporated into their city planning the famous Islamic gardens. Islamic gardens after the 7th century were traditionally enclosed by walls and were designed to represent paradise. The paradise gardens, were laid out in the form of a cross, with four channels representing the rivers of Paradise, dividing the four parts of the world.[14] Water sometimes spouted from a fountain in the center of the cross, representing the spring or fountain, Salsabil, described in the Qur'an as the source of the rivers of Paradise.[15]

In the 9th century, the Banū Mūsā brothers, a trio of Persian Inventors, were commissioned by the Caliph of Baghdad to summarize the engineering knowledge of the ancient Greek and Roman world. They wrote a book entitled the Book of Ingenious Devices, describing the works of the 1st century Greek Engineer Hero of Alexandria and other engineers, plus many of their own inventions. They described fountains which formed water into different shapes and a wind-powered water pump,[16] but it is not known if any of their fountains were ever actually built.[17]

The Persian rulers of the Middle Ages had elaborate water distribution systems and fountains in their palaces and gardens. Water was carried by a pipe into the palace from a source at a higher elevation. Once inside the palace or garden it came up through a small hole in a marble or stone ornament and poured into a basin or garden channels. The gardens of Pasargades had a system of canals which flowed from basin to basin, both watering the garden and making a pleasant sound. The Persian engineers also used the principle of the syphon (called shotor-gelu in Persian, literally 'neck of the camel) to create fountains which spouted water or made it resemble a bubbling spring. The garden of Fin, near Kashan, used 171 spouts connected to pipes to create a fountain called the Howz-e jush, or "boiling basin".[18]

The 11th century Persian poet Azraqi described a Persian fountain:

From a marvelous faucet of gold pours a wave
whose clarity is more pure than a soul;
The turquoise and silver form ribbons in the basin
coming from this faucet of gold ...[19]

Reciprocating motion was first described in 1206 by Arab Muslim engineer and inventor al-Jazari when the kings of the Artuqid dynasty in Turkey commissioned him to manufacture a machine to raise water for their palaces. The finest result was a machine called the double-acting reciprocating piston pump, which translated rotary motion to reciprocating motion via the crankshaft-connecting rod mechanism.[20]

 
The Fountain of the Court of the Lions in the Alhambra (14th century)
 
Fountain of Ahmed III next to Topkapı Palace in Istanbul, Turkey

The palaces of Moorish Spain, particularly the Alhambra in Granada, had famous fountains. The patio of the Sultan in the gardens of Generalife in Granada (1319) featured spouts of water pouring into a basin, with channels which irrigated orange and myrtle trees. The garden was modified over the centuries – the jets of water which cross the canal today were added in the 19th century.[21]

The fountain in the Court of the Lions of the Alhambra, built from 1362 to 1391, is a large vasque mounted on twelve stone statues of lions. Water spouts upward in the vasque and pours from the mouths of the lions, filling four channels dividing the courtyard into quadrants.[22] The basin dates to the 14th century, but the lions spouting water are believed to be older, dating to the 11th century.[23]

The design of the Islamic garden spread throughout the Islamic world, from Moorish Spain to the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent. The Shalimar Gardens built by Emperor Shah Jahan in 1641, were said to be ornamented with 410 fountains, which fed into a large basin, canal and marble pools.

In the Ottoman Empire, rulers often built fountains next to mosques so worshippers could do their ritual washing. Examples include the Fountain of Qasim Pasha (1527), Temple Mount, Jerusalem, an ablution and drinking fountain built during the Ottoman reign of Suleiman the Magnificent; the Fountain of Ahmed III (1728) at the Topkapı Palace, Istanbul, another Fountain of Ahmed III in Üsküdar (1729) and Tophane Fountain (1732). Palaces themselves often had small decorated fountains, which provided drinking water, cooled the air, and made a pleasant splashing sound. One surviving example is the Fountain of Tears (1764) at the Bakhchisarai Palace, in Crimea; which was made famous by a poem of Alexander Pushkin. The sebil was a decorated fountain that was often the only source of water for the surrounding neighborhood. It was often commissioned as an act of Islamic piety by a rich person.

Renaissance fountains (15th–17th centuries) edit

 
Tivoli, Villa d'Este
 
Le Cento Fontane (The Hundred Fountains)
 
The Fontana Masini in Piazza del Popolo in Cesena

In the 14th century, Italian humanist scholars began to rediscover and translate forgotten Roman texts on architecture by Vitruvius, on hydraulics by Hero of Alexandria, and descriptions of Roman gardens and fountains by Pliny the Younger, Pliny the Elder, and Varro. The treatise on architecture, De re aedificatoria, by Leon Battista Alberti, which described in detail Roman villas, gardens and fountains, became the guidebook for Renaissance builders.[24]

In Rome, Pope Nicholas V (1397–1455), himself a scholar who commissioned hundreds of translations of ancient Greek classics into Latin, decided to embellish the city and make it a worthy capital of the Christian world. In 1453, he began to rebuild the Acqua Vergine, the ruined Roman aqueduct which had brought clean drinking water to the city from eight miles (13 km) away. He also decided to revive the Roman custom of marking the arrival point of an aqueduct with a mostra, a grand commemorative fountain. He commissioned the architect Leon Battista Alberti to build a wall fountain where the Trevi Fountain is now located. The aqueduct he restored, with modifications and extensions, eventually supplied water to the Trevi Fountain and the famous baroque fountains in the Piazza del Popolo and Piazza Navona.[25]

One of the first new fountains to be built in Rome during the Renaissance was the fountain in the piazza in front of the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere (1472), which was placed on the site of an earlier Roman fountain. Its design, based on an earlier Roman model, with a circular vasque on a pedestal pouring water into a basin below, became the model for many other fountains in Rome, and eventually for fountains in other cities, from Paris to London.[26]

In 1503, Pope Julius II decided to recreate a classical pleasure garden in the same place. The new garden, called the Cortile del Belvedere, was designed by Donato Bramante. The garden was decorated with the Pope's famous collection of classical statues, and with fountains. The Venetian Ambassador wrote in 1523, "... On one side of the garden is a most beautiful loggia, at one end of which is a lovely fountain that irrigates the orange trees and the rest of the garden by a little canal in the center of the loggia ...[27] The original garden was split in two by the construction of the Vatican Library in the 16th century, but a new fountain by Carlo Maderno was built in the Cortile del Belvedere, with a jet of water shooting up from a circular stone bowl on an octagonal pedestal in a large basin.[28]

In 1537, in Florence, Cosimo I de' Medici, who had become ruler of the city at the age of only 17, also decided to launch a program of aqueduct and fountain building. The city had previously gotten all its drinking water from wells and reservoirs of rain water, which meant that there was little water or water pressure to run fountains. Cosimo built an aqueduct large enough for the first continually-running fountain in Florence, the Fountain of Neptune in the Piazza della Signoria (1560–1567). This fountain featured an enormous white marble statue of Neptune, resembling Cosimo, by sculptor Bartolomeo Ammannati.[29]

Under the Medicis, fountains were not just sources of water, but advertisements of the power and benevolence of the city's rulers. They became central elements not only of city squares, but of the new Italian Renaissance garden. The great Medici Villa at Castello, built for Cosimo by Benedetto Varchi, featured two monumental fountains on its central axis; one showing with two bronze figures representing Hercules slaying Antaeus, symbolizing the victory of Cosimo over his enemies; and a second fountain, in the middle of a circular labyrinth of cypresses, laurel, myrtle and roses, had a bronze statue by Giambologna which showed the goddess Venus wringing her hair. The planet Venus was governed by Capricorn, which was the emblem of Cosimo; the fountain symbolized that he was the absolute master of Florence.[30]

By the middle Renaissance, fountains had become a form of theater, with cascades and jets of water coming from marble statues of animals and mythological figures. The most famous fountains of this kind were found in the Villa d'Este (1550–1572), at Tivoli near Rome, which featured a hillside of basins, fountains and jets of water, as well as a fountain which produced music by pouring water into a chamber, forcing air into a series of flute-like pipes. The gardens also featured giochi d'acqua, water jokes, hidden fountains which suddenly soaked visitors.[31] Between 1546 and 1549, the merchants of Paris built the first Renaissance-style fountain in Paris, the Fontaine des Innocents, to commemorate the ceremonial entry of the King into the city. The fountain, which originally stood against the wall of the church of the Holy Innocents, as rebuilt several times and now stands in a square near Les Halles. It is the oldest fountain in Paris.[32]

Henry constructed an Italian-style garden with a fountain shooting a vertical jet of water for his favorite mistress, Diane de Poitiers, next to the Château de Chenonceau (1556–1559). At the royal Château de Fontainebleau, he built another fountain with a bronze statue of Diane, goddess of the hunt, modeled after Diane de Poitiers.[33]

Later, after the death of Henry II, his widow, Catherine de Medici, expelled Diane de Poitiers from Chenonceau and built her own fountain and garden there.

King Henry IV of France made an important contribution to French fountains by inviting an Italian hydraulic engineer, Tommaso Francini, who had worked on the fountains of the villa at Pratalino, to make fountains in France. Francini became a French citizen in 1600, built the Medici Fountain, and during the rule of the young King Louis XIII, he was raised to the position of Intendant général des Eaux et Fontaines of the king, a position which was hereditary. His descendants became the royal fountain designers for Louis XIII and for Louis XIV at Versailles.[34]

In 1630, another Medici, Marie de Medici, the widow of Henry IV, built her own monumental fountain in Paris, the Medici Fountain, in the garden of the Palais du Luxembourg. That fountain still exists today, with a long basin of water and statues added in 1866.[35]

Baroque fountains (17th–18th century) edit

Baroque Fountains of Rome edit

 
Fontana di Trevi, the Trevi Fountain by Nicola Salvi, (1730).

The 17th and 18th centuries were a golden age for fountains in Rome, which began with the reconstruction of ruined Roman aqueducts and the construction by the Popes of mostra, or display fountains, to mark their termini. The new fountains were expressions of the new Baroque art, which was officially promoted by the Catholic Church as a way to win popular support against the Protestant Reformation; the Council of Trent had declared in the 16th century that the Church should counter austere Protestantism with art that was lavish, animated and emotional. The fountains of Rome, like the paintings of Rubens, were examples of the principles of Baroque art. They were crowded with allegorical figures, and filled with emotion and movement. In these fountains, sculpture became the principal element, and the water was used simply to animate and decorate the sculptures. They, like baroque gardens, were "a visual representation of confidence and power."[31]

The first of the Fountains of St. Peter's Square, by Carlo Maderno, (1614) was one of the earliest Baroque fountains in Rome, made to complement the lavish Baroque façade he designed for St. Peter's Basilica behind it. It was fed by water from the Paola aqueduct, restored in 1612, whose source was 266 feet (81 m) above sea level, which meant it could shoot water twenty feet up from the fountain. Its form, with a large circular vasque on a pedestal pouring water into a basin and an inverted vasque above it spouting water, was imitated two centuries later in the Fountains of the Place de la Concorde in Paris.

The Triton Fountain in the Piazza Barberini (1642), by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, is a masterpiece of Baroque sculpture, representing Triton, half-man and half-fish, blowing his horn to calm the waters, following a text by the Roman poet Ovid in the Metamorphoses. The Triton fountain benefited from its location in a valley, and the fact that it was fed by the Aqua Felice aqueduct, restored in 1587, which arrived in Rome at an elevation of 194 feet (59 m) above sea level (fasl), a difference of 130 feet (40 m) in elevation between the source and the fountain, which meant that the water from this fountain jetted sixteen feet straight up into the air from the conch shell of the triton.[36]

The Piazza Navona became a grand theater of water, with three fountains, built in a line on the site of the Stadium of Domitian. The fountains at either end are by Giacomo della Porta; the Neptune fountain to the north, (1572) shows the God of the Sea spearing an octopus, surrounded by tritons, sea horses and mermaids. At the southern end is Il Moro, possibly also a figure of Neptune riding a fish in a conch shell. In the center is the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi, (The Fountain of the Four Rivers) (1648–51), a highly theatrical fountain by Bernini, with statues representing rivers from the four continents; the Nile, Danube, Plate River and Ganges. Over the whole structure is a 54-foot (16 m) Egyptian obelisk, crowned by a cross with the emblem of the Pamphili family, representing Pope Innocent X, whose family palace was on the piazza. The theme of a fountain with statues symbolizing great rivers was later used in the Place de la Concorde (1836–40) and in the Fountain of Neptune in the Alexanderplatz in Berlin (1891). The fountains of Piazza Navona had one drawback - their water came from the Acqua Vergine, which had only a 23-foot (7.0 m) drop from the source to the fountains, which meant the water could only fall or trickle downwards, not jet very high upwards.[37]

The Trevi Fountain is the largest and most spectacular of Rome's fountains, designed to glorify the three different Popes who created it. It was built beginning in 1730 at the terminus of the reconstructed Acqua Vergine aqueduct, on the site of Renaissance fountain by Leon Battista Alberti. It was the work of architect Nicola Salvi and the successive project of Pope Clement XII, Pope Benedict XIV and Pope Clement XIII, whose emblems and inscriptions are carried on the attic story, entablature and central niche. The central figure is Oceanus, the personification of all the seas and oceans, in an oyster-shell chariot, surrounded by Tritons and Sea Nymphs.

In fact, the fountain had very little water pressure, because the source of water was, like the source for the Piazza Navona fountains, the Acqua Vergine, with a 23-foot (7.0 m) drop. Salvi compensated for this problem by sinking the fountain down into the ground, and by carefully designing the cascade so that the water churned and tumbled, to add movement and drama.[38] Wrote historians Maria Ann Conelli and Marilyn Symmes, "On many levels the Trevi altered the appearance, function and intent of fountains and was a watershed for future designs."[39]

Baroque fountains of Versailles edit

Beginning in 1662, King Louis XIV of France began to build a new kind of garden, the Garden à la française, or French formal garden, at the Palace of Versailles. In this garden, the fountain played a central role. He used fountains to demonstrate the power of man over nature, and to illustrate the grandeur of his rule. In the Gardens of Versailles, instead of falling naturally into a basin, water was shot into the sky, or formed into the shape of a fan or bouquet. Dancing water was combined with music and fireworks to form a grand spectacle. These fountains were the work of the descendants of Tommaso Francini, the Italian hydraulic engineer who had come to France during the time of Henry IV and built the Medici Fountain and the Fountain of Diana at Fontainebleau.

Two fountains were the centerpieces of the Gardens of Versailles, both taken from the myths about Apollo, the sun god, the emblem of Louis XIV, and both symbolizing his power. The Fontaine Latone (1668–70) designed by André Le Nôtre and sculpted by Gaspard and Balthazar Marsy, represents the story of how the peasants of Lycia tormented Latona and her children, Diana and Apollo, and were punished by being turned into frogs. This was a reminder of how French peasants had abused Louis's mother, Anne of Austria, during the uprising called the Fronde in the 1650s. When the fountain is turned on, sprays of water pour down on the peasants, who are frenzied as they are transformed into creatures.[38][40]

The other centerpiece of the Gardens, at the intersection of the main axes of the Gardens of Versailles, is the Bassin d'Apollon (1668–71), designed by Charles Le Brun and sculpted by Jean Baptiste Tuby. This statue shows a theme also depicted in the painted decoration in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles: Apollo in his chariot about to rise from the water, announced by Tritons with seashell trumpets. Historians Mary Anne Conelli and Marilyn Symmes wrote, "Designed for dramatic effect and to flatter the king, the fountain is oriented so that the Sun God rises from the west and travels east toward the chateau, in contradiction to nature."[38]

Besides these two monumental fountains, the Gardens over the years contained dozens of other fountains, including thirty-nine animal fountains in the labyrinth depicting the fables of Jean de La Fontaine.

There were so many fountains at Versailles that it was impossible to have them all running at once; when Louis XIV made his promenades, his fountain-tenders turned on the fountains ahead of him and turned off those behind him. Louis built an enormous pumping station, the Machine de Marly, with fourteen water wheels and 253 pumps to raise the water three hundred feet from the River Seine, and even attempted to divert the River Eure to provide water for his fountains, but the water supply was never enough.[41]

Baroque fountains of Peterhof edit

In Russia, Peter the Great founded a new capital at St. Petersburg in 1703 and built a small Summer Palace and gardens there beside the Neva River. The gardens featured a fountain of two sea monsters spouting water, among the earliest fountains in Russia.

In 1709, he began constructing a larger palace, Peterhof Palace, alongside the Gulf of Finland, Peter visited France in 1717 and saw the gardens and fountains of Louis XIV at Versailles, Marly and Fontainebleau. When he returned he began building a vast Garden à la française with fountains at Peterhof. The central feature of the garden was a water cascade, modeled after the cascade at the Château de Marly of Louis XIV, built in 1684. The gardens included trick fountains designed to drench unsuspecting visitors, a popular feature of the Italian Renaissance garden.,[42]

In 1800–1802 the Emperor Paul I of Russia and his successor, Alexander I of Russia, built a new fountain at the foot of the cascade depicting Samson prying open the mouth of a lion, representing Peter's victory over Sweden in the Great Northern War in 1721. The fountains were fed by reservoirs in the upper garden, while the Samson fountain was fed by a specially-constructed aqueduct four kilometers in length.

19th century fountains edit

In the early 19th century, London and Paris built aqueducts and new fountains to supply clean drinking water to their exploding populations. Napoleon Bonaparte started construction on the first canals bringing drinking water to Paris, fifteen new fountains, the most famous being the Fontaine du Palmier in the Place du Châtelet, (1896–1808), celebrating his military victories.

He also restored and put back into service some of the city's oldest fountains, such as the Medici Fountain. Two of Napoleon's fountains, the Chateau d'Eau and the fountain in the Place des Vosges, were the first purely decorative fountains in Paris, without water taps for drinking water.[43]

Louis-Philippe (1830–1848) continued Napoleon's work, and added some of Paris's most famous fountains, notably the Fontaines de la Concorde (1836–1840) and the fountains in the Place des Vosges.[44]

Following a deadly cholera epidemic in 1849, Louis Napoleon decided to completely rebuild the Paris water supply system, separating the water supply for fountains from the water supply for drinking. The most famous fountain built by Louis Napoleon was the Fontaine Saint-Michel, part of his grand reconstruction of Paris boulevards. Louis Napoleon relocated and rebuilt several earlier fountains, such as the Medici Fountain and the Fontaine de Leda, when their original sites were destroyed by his construction projects.[45]

In the mid-nineteenth century the first fountains were built in the United States, connected to the first aqueducts bringing drinking water from outside the city. The first fountain in Philadelphia, at Centre Square, opened in 1809, and featured a statue by sculptor William Rush. The first fountain in New York City, in City Hall Park, opened in 1842, and the first fountain in Boston was turned on in 1848. The first famous American decorative fountain was the Bethesda Fountain in Central Park in New York City, opened in 1873.[46]

The 19th century also saw the introduction of new materials in fountain construction; cast iron (the Fontaines de la Concorde); glass (the Crystal Fountain in London (1851)) and even aluminium (the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain in Piccadilly Circus, London, (1897)).[47]

The invention of steam pumps meant that water could be supplied directly to homes, and pumped upward from fountains. The new fountains in Trafalgar Square (1845) used steam pumps from an artesian well. By the end of the 19th century fountains in big cities were no longer used to supply drinking water, and were simply a form of art and urban decoration.[47]

Another fountain innovation of the 19th century was the illuminated fountain: The Bartholdi Fountain at the Philadelphia Exposition of 1876 was illuminated by gas lamps. In 1884 a fountain in Britain featured electric lights shining upward through the water. The Exposition Universelle (1889) which celebrated the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution featured a fountain illuminated by electric lights shining up though the columns of water. The fountains, located in a basin forty meters in diameter, were given color by plates of colored glass inserted over the lamps. The Fountain of Progress gave its show three times each evening, for twenty minutes, with a series of different colors.[48]

20th century fountains edit

Paris fountains in the 20th century no longer had to supply drinking water - they were purely decorative; and, since their water usually came from the river and not from the city aqueducts, their water was no longer drinkable. Twenty-eight new fountains were built in Paris between 1900 and 1940; nine new fountains between 1900 and 1910; four between 1920 and 1930; and fifteen between 1930 and 1940.[49]

The biggest fountains of the period were those built for the International Expositions of 1900, 1925 and 1937, and for the Colonial Exposition of 1931. Of those, only the fountains from the 1937 exposition at the Palais de Chaillot still exist. (See Fountains of International Expositions).

Only a handful of fountains were built in Paris between 1940 and 1980. The most important ones built during that period were on the edges of the city, on the west, just outside the city limits, at La Défense, and to the east at the Bois de Vincennes.

Between 1981 and 1995, during the terms of President François Mitterrand and Culture Minister Jack Lang, and of Mitterrand's bitter political rival, Paris Mayor Jacques Chirac (Mayor from 1977 until 1995), the city experienced a program of monumental fountain building that exceeded that of Napoleon Bonaparte or Louis Philippe. More than one hundred fountains were built in Paris in the 1980s, mostly in the neighborhoods outside the center of Paris, where there had been few fountains before These included the Fontaine Cristaux, homage to Béla Bartók by Jean-Yves Lechevallier (1980); the Stravinsky Fountain next to the Pompidou Center, by sculptors Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely (1983); the fountain of the Pyramid of the Louvre by I.M. Pei, (1989), the Buren Fountain by sculptor Daniel Buren, Les Sphérades fountain, both in the Palais-Royal, and the fountains of Parc André-Citroën. The Mitterrand-Chirac fountains had no single style or theme. Many of the fountains were designed by famous sculptors or architects, such as Jean Tinguely, I.M. Pei, Claes Oldenburg and Daniel Buren, who had radically different ideas of what a fountain should be. Some were solemn, and others were whimsical. Most made little effort to blend with their surroundings - they were designed to attract attention.

Fountains built in the United States between 1900 and 1950 mostly followed European models and classical styles. The Samuel Francis Dupont Memorial Fountain, in Dupont Circle, Washington D.C., was designed and created by Henry Bacon and Daniel Chester French, the architect and sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial, in 1921, in a pure neoclassical style.

The Buckingham Fountain in Grant Park in Chicago was one of the first American fountains to use powerful modern pumps to shoot water as high as 150 feet (46 meters) into the air. The Fountain of Prometheus, built at the Rockefeller Center in New York City in 1933, was the first American fountain in the Art-Deco style.

After World War II, fountains in the United States became more varied in form. Some, like Ruth Asawa's Andrea (1968)[50] and the Vaillancourt Fountain (1971), both located in San Francisco, were pure works of sculpture. Other fountains, like the Frankin Roosevelt Memorial Waterfall (1997), by architect Lawrence Halprin, were designed as landscapes to illustrate themes. This fountain is part of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington D.C., which has four outdoor "rooms" illustrating his presidency. Each "room" contains a cascade or waterfall; the cascade in the third room illustrates the turbulence of the years of the World War II. Halprin wrote at an early stage of the design; "the whole environment of the memorial becomes sculpture: to touch, feel, hear and contact - with all the senses."[51]

The end of the 20th century the development of high-shooting fountains, beginning with the Jet d'eau in Geneva in 1951, and followed by taller and taller fountains in the United States and the Middle East. The highest fountain today in the King Fahd's Fountain in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

It also saw the increasing popularity of the musical fountain, which combined water, music and light, choreographed by computers. (See Musical fountain below).

Contemporary fountains (2001–present) edit

 
The new Trafalgar Square fountains in London, with new pumps and lighting, opened in June 2009

The fountain called 'Bit.Fall' by German artist Julius Popp (2005) uses digital technologies to spell out words with water. The fountain is run by a statistical program which selects words at random from news stories on the Internet. It then recodes these words into pictures. Then 320 nozzles inject the water into electromagnetic valves. The program uses rasterization and bitmap technologies to synchronize the valves so drops of water form an image of the words as they fall. According to Popp, the sheet of water is "a metaphor for the constant flow of information from which we cannot escape."[52]

Crown Fountain is an interactive fountain and video sculpture feature in Chicago's Millennium Park. Designed by Catalan artist Jaume Plensa, it opened in July 2004.[53][54] The fountain is composed of a black granite reflecting pool placed between a pair of glass brick towers. The towers are 50 feet (15 m) tall,[53] and they use light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to display digital videos on their inward faces. Construction and design of the Crown Fountain cost US$17 million.[55] Weather permitting, the water operates from May to October,[56] intermittently cascading down the two towers and spouting through a nozzle on each tower's front face.

Few new fountains have been built in Paris since 2000. The most notable is La Danse de la fontaine emergente (2008), located on Place Augusta-Holmes, rue Paul Klee, in the 13th arrondissement. It was designed by the French-Chinese sculptor Chen Zhen (1955-2000), shortly before his death in 2000, and finished through the efforts of his spouse and collaborator. It shows a dragon, in stainless steel, glass and plastic, emerging and submerging from the pavement of the square. The fountain is in three parts. A bas-relief of the dragon is fixed on the wall of the structure of the water-supply plant, and the dragon seems to be emerging from the wall and plunging underground. This part of the dragon is opaque. The second and third parts depict the arch of the dragon's back coming out of the pavement. These parts of the dragon are transparent, and water under pressure flows visibly within, and is illuminated at night.

Musical fountains edit

 
The Tammerkoski's musical fountains during the 2020 Light Festival in Tampere, Finland

Musical fountains create a theatrical spectacle with music, light and water, usually employing a variety of programmable spouts and water jets controlled by a computer.

Musical fountains were first described in the 1st century AD by the Greek scientist and engineer Hero of Alexandria in his book Pneumatics. Hero described and provided drawings of "A bird made to whistle by flowing water," "A Trumpet sounded by flowing water," and "Birds made to sing and be silent alternately by flowing water." In Hero's descriptions, water pushed air through musical instruments to make sounds. It is not known if Hero made working models of any of his designs.[57]

During the Italian Renaissance, the most famous musical fountains were located in the gardens of the Villa d'Este, in Tivoli. which were created between 1550 and 1572. Following the ideas of Hero of Alexandria, the Fountain of the Owl used a series of bronze pipes like flutes to make the sound of birds. The most famous feature of the garden was the great Organ Fountain. It was described by the French philosopher Michel de Montaigne, who visited the garden in 1580: "The music of the Organ Fountain is true music, naturally created ... made by water which falls with great violence into a cave, rounded and vaulted, and agitates the air, which is forced to exit through the pipes of an organ. Other water, passing through a wheel, strikes in a certain order the keyboard of the organ. The organ also imitates the sound of trumpets, the sound of cannon, and the sound of muskets, made by the sudden fall of water ...[58] The Organ Fountain fell into ruins, but it was recently restored and plays music again.

Louis XIV created the idea of the modern musical fountain by staging spectacles in the Gardens of Versailles, using music and fireworks to accompany the flow of the fountains.

The great international expositions held in Philadelphia, London and Paris featured the ancestors of the modern musical fountain. They introduced the first fountains illuminated by gas lights (Philadelphia in 1876); and the first fountains illuminated by electric lights (London in 1884 and Paris in 1889).[59] The Exposition Universelle (1900) in Paris featured fountains illuminated by colored lights controlled by a keyboard.[60] The Paris Colonial Exposition of 1931 presented the Théâtre d'eau, or water theater, located in a lake, with performance of dancing water. The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (1937) had combined arches and columns of water from fountains in the Seine with light, and with music from loudspeakers on eleven rafts anchored in the river, playing the music of the leading composers of the time. (See International Exposition Fountains, above.)

Today some of the best-known musical fountains in the world are at the Bellagio Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, (2009); the Dubai Fountain in the United Arab Emirates; the World of Color at Disney California Adventure Park (2010) and Aquanura at the Efteling in the Netherlands (2012).[citation needed]

Splash fountains edit

 
The Splash Fountain in Jakarta, Indonesia.
 
The magic fountain in Montjuic, Spain.

A splash fountain or bathing fountain is intended for people to come in and cool off on hot summer days. These fountains are also referred to as interactive fountains. These fountains are designed to allow easy access, and feature nonslip surfaces, and have no standing water, to eliminate possible drowning hazards, so that no lifeguards or supervision is required. These splash pads are often located in public pools, public parks, or public playgrounds (known as "spraygrounds"). In some splash fountains, such as Dundas Square in Toronto, Canada, the water is heated by solar energy captured by the special dark-colored granite slabs. The fountain at Dundas Square features 600 ground nozzles arranged in groups of 30 (3 rows of 10 nozzles). Each group of 30 nozzles is located beneath a stainless steel grille. Twenty such grilles are arranged in two rows of 10, in the middle of the main walkway through Dundas Square.

Drinking fountain edit

A water fountain or drinking fountain is designed to provide drinking water and has a basin arrangement with either continuously running water or a tap. The drinker bends down to the stream of water and swallows water directly from the stream. Modern indoor drinking fountains may incorporate filters to remove impurities from the water and chillers to reduce its temperature. In some regional dialects, water fountains are called bubblers. Water fountains are usually found in public places, like schools, rest areas, libraries, and grocery stores. Many jurisdictions require water fountains to be wheelchair accessible (by sticking out horizontally from the wall), and to include an additional unit of a lower height for children and short adults. The design that this replaced often had one spout atop a refrigeration unit.

In 1859, The Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association was established to promote the provision of drinking water for people and animals in the United Kingdom and overseas. More recently, in 2010, the FindaFountain campaign was launched in the UK to encourage people to use drinking fountains instead of environmentally damaging bottled water. A map showing the location of UK drinking water fountains is published on the FindaFountain website.

 
Fontana Della Pupporona


How fountains work edit

 
Illuminated fountain
 
The book The Theory and Practice of Gardening by Dezallier d'Argenville (1709) showed different types of fountain nozzles which would create different shapes of water, from bouquets to fans.
 
Fountain nozzles which water gets cut off.

From Roman times until the end of the 19th century, fountains operated by gravity, requiring a source of water higher than the fountain itself to make the water flow. The greater the difference between the elevation of the source of water and the fountain, the higher the water would go upwards from the fountain.

In Roman cities, water for fountains came from lakes and rivers and springs in the hills, brought into city in aqueducts and then distributed to fountains through a system of lead pipes.

From the Middle Ages onwards, fountains in villages or towns were connected to springs, or to channels which brought water from lakes or rivers. In Provence, a typical village fountain consisted of a pipe or underground duct from a spring at a higher elevation than the fountain. The water from the spring flowed down to the fountain, then up a tube into a bulb-shaped stone vessel, like a large vase with a cover on top. The inside of the vase, called the bassin de répartition, was filled with water up to a level just above the mouths of the canons, or spouts, which slanted downwards. The water poured down through the canons, creating a siphon, so that the fountain ran continually.

In cities and towns, residents filled vessels or jars of water jets from the canons of the fountain or paid a water porter to bring the water to their home. Horses and domestic animals could drink the water in the basin below the fountain. The water not used often flowed into a separate series of basins, a lavoir, used for washing and rinsing clothes. After being used for washing, the same water then ran through a channel to the town's kitchen garden. In Provence, since clothes were washed with ashes, the water that flowed into the garden contained potassium, and was valuable as fertilizer.[5]

The most famous fountains of the Renaissance, at the Villa d'Este in Tivoli, were located on a steep slope near a river; the builders ran a channel from the river to a large fountain at top of the garden, which then fed other fountains and basins on the levels below. The fountains of Rome, built from the Renaissance through the 18th century, took their water from rebuilt Roman aqueducts which brought water from lakes and rivers at a higher elevation than the fountains. Those fountains with a high source of water, such as the Triton Fountain, could shoot water 16 feet (4.9 m) in air. Fountains with a lower source, such as the Trevi Fountain, could only have water pour downwards. The architect of the Trevi Fountain placed it below street level to make the flow of water seem more dramatic.

The fountains of Versailles depended upon water from reservoirs just above the fountains. As King Louis XIV built more fountains, he was forced to construct an enormous complex of pumps, called the Machine de Marly, with fourteen water wheels and 220 pumps, to raise water 162 meters above the Seine River to the reservoirs to keep his fountains flowing. Even with the Machine de Marly, the fountains used so much water that they could not be all turned on at the same time. Fontainiers watched the progress of the King when he toured the gardens and turned on each fountain just before he arrived.[63]

The architects of the fountains at Versailles designed specially-shaped nozzles, or tuyaux, to form the water into different shapes, such as fans, bouquets, and umbrellas.

In Germany, some courts and palace gardens were situated in flat areas, thus fountains depending on pumped pressurized water were developed at a fairly early point in history. The Great Fountain in Herrenhausen Gardens at Hanover was based on ideas of Gottfried Leibniz conceived in 1694 and was inaugurated in 1719 during the visit of George I. After some improvements, it reached a height of some 35 m in 1721 which made it the highest fountain in European courts. The fountains at the Nymphenburg Palace initially were fed by water pumped to water towers, but as from 1803 were operated by the water powered Nymphenburg Pumping Stations which are still working.

Beginning in the 19th century, fountains ceased to be used for drinking water and became purely ornamental. By the beginning of the 20th century, cities began using steam pumps and later electric pumps to send water to the city fountains. Later in the 20th century, urban fountains began to recycle their water through a closed recirculating system. An electric pump, often placed under the water, pushes the water through the pipes. The water must be regularly topped up to offset water lost to evaporation, and allowance must be made to handle overflow after heavy rain.

In modern fountains a water filter, typically a media filter, removes particles from the water—this filter requires its own pump to force water through it and plumbing to remove the water from the pool to the filter and then back to the pool. The water may need chlorination or anti-algal treatment, or may use biological methods to filter and clean water.

The pumps, filter, electrical switch box and plumbing controls are often housed in a "plant room". Low-voltage lighting, typically 12 volt direct current, is used to minimise electrical hazards. Lighting is often submerged and must be suitably designed. High wattage lighting (incandescent and halogen) either as submerged lighting or accent lighting on waterwall fountains have been implicated in every documented Legionnaires' disease outbreak associated with fountains. This is detailed in the "Guidelines for Control of Legionella in Ornamental Features". Floating fountains are also popular for ponds and lakes; they consist of a float pump nozzle and water chamber.

The tallest fountains in the world edit

 
King Fahd's Fountain

Gallery of notable fountains around the world edit

See also edit

  • Wishing well, for the practice of dropping coins into fountains

Bibliography edit

  • Helen Attlee, Italian Gardens – A Cultural History. Frances Lincoln Limited, London, 2006.
  • Paris et ses Fontaines, del la Renaissance a nos jours, edited by Béatrice de Andia, Dominique Massounie, Pauline Prevost-Marcilhacy and Daniel Rabreau, from the Collection Paris et son Patrimoine, Paris, 1995.
  • Les Aqueducs de la ville de Rome, translation and commentary by Pierre Grimal, Société d'édition Les Belles Lettres, Paris, 1944.
  • Louis Plantier, Fontaines de Provence et de la Côte d'Azur, Édisud, Aix-en-Provence, 2007
  • Frédérick Cope and Tazartes Maurizia, Les Fontaines de Rome, Éditions Citadelles et Mazenod, 2004
  • André Jean Tardy, Fontaines toulonnaises, Les Éditions de la Nerthe, 2001. ISBN 2-913483-24-0
  • Hortense Lyon, La Fontaine Stravinsky, Collection Baccalauréat arts plastiques 2004, Centre national de documentation pédagogique
  • Marilyn Symmes (editor), Fountains-Splash and Spectacle- Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present. Thames and Hudson, in cooperation with the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum of the Smithsonian Institution. (1998).
  • Yves Porter et Arthur Thévenart, Palais et Jardins de Perse, Flammarion, Paris (2002). (ISBN 978-2-08-010838-8).
  • Raimund O.A. Becker-Ritterspach, Water Conduits in the Kathmandu Valley, Munshriram Manoharlal Publishers, Pvt.Ltd, New Delhi 1995, ISBN 81-215-0690-5

References edit

  1. ^ Philippe Prévot, Histoire des jardins, Editions Sud Ouest, Bordeaux, 2006.
  2. ^ SAMIRAD (Saudi Arabia Market Information Resource Directory)
  3. ^ "fountain". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  4. ^ Herodotus, The Histories, 1.59
  5. ^ a b Louis Plantier, Fontaines de Provence et de la Côte d'Azur, Édisud, Aix-en-Provence, 2007
  6. ^ Frontin, Les Aqueducs de la ville de Rome, translation and commentary by Pierre Grimal, Société d'édition Les Belles Lettres, Paris, 1944.
  7. ^ Philippe Prevot, pg. 20
  8. ^ Philippe Prevot, pg. 21
  9. ^ Water Conduits in the Kathmandu Valley (2 vols.) by Raimund O.A. Becker-Ritterspach, ISBN 9788121506908, Published by Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, India, 1995
  10. ^ Psalms 36:9; Proverbs 13:14; Revelation 22:1; Dante's Paradisio XXV 1–9.
  11. ^ Molina, Nathalie, 1999: Le Thoronet Abbey, Monum – Éditions du patrimoine.
  12. ^ Marilyn Simmes, Fountains, Splash and Spectacle. pg.63
  13. ^ Allain and Christiany, L'Art des jardins en Europe This type of "water joke" later became popular in Renaissance and baroque gardens.
  14. ^ Yves-Marie Allain and Janine Christiany, L'Art des jardins en Europe, Citadelles & Mazenod, Paris, 2006
  15. ^ According to the Qur'an, the dead going to paradise would be given water from the spring Salsabil: "And there they will be given a cup whose mixture is of Zanjabil (ginger). A fountain there, called Salsabil." (76:17–18)
  16. ^ Bent Sorensen (November 1995), "History of, and Recent Progress in, Wind-Energy Utilization", Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, 20: 387–424, doi:10.1146/annurev.eg.20.110195.002131
  17. ^ Banu Musa (1979), The book of ingenious devices (Kitāb al-ḥiyal), translated by Donald Routledge Hill, Springer, p. 44, ISBN 90-277-0833-9
  18. ^ Yves Porter and Arthur Thevenart, Palais et Jardins de Perse, pg. 40.
  19. ^ Azraqi, H. Massé, Anthologie persane, pg. 44. English translation of excerpt by D.R. Siefkin.
  20. ^ Ahmad Y Hassan. The Crank-Connecting Rod System in a Continuously Rotating Machine 12 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  21. ^ See the official site of the Alhambra complex for the history of the fountains
  22. ^ Allain and Christiany, L'art des jardins en Europe . See also See the official site of the Alhambra complex for the history of the fountains
  23. ^ Naomi Miller, Fountains as Metaphor, in Fountains- Splash and Spectacle -Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present, edited by Marilyn Symmes, London, 1998.
  24. ^ Helena Attlee, Italian Gardens, A Cultural History, pp. 11–12
  25. ^ Pinto, John A. The Trevi Fountain. Yale University Press, New Haven, 1986.
  26. ^ The fountain in Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere originally had two upper basins, but the water pressure in the early Renaissance was so low that the water was unable to reach the upper basin, so the top basin was removed.
  27. ^ cited in Helena Attlee, Italian Gardens, a Cultural History, p. 21
  28. ^ Symmes, Fountains – Splash and Spectacle, pg. 126
  29. ^ Marilyn Symmes, Fountains- Splash and Spectacle- Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present. pg. 78
  30. ^ Helena Attlee, Italian Gardens – A Cultural History, p. 30
  31. ^ a b Helena Attlee, Italian Gardens – A Cultural History
  32. ^ Marion Boudon, "La Fontaine des Innocents", in Paris et ses fontaines, de la Renaissance à nos jours, 1995.
  33. ^ Le Guide du Patrimoine en France, Éditions du Patrimoine, Centre des Monuments Nationaux, 2009
  34. ^ A. Muesset, Les Francinis, Paris, 1930, cited in Luigi Gallo, La Présence italienne au 17e siècle, in Paris et ses fontaines de la Renaissance à nos jours, Collection Paris et son patrimoine, (1995).
  35. ^ Luigi Gallo, La Présence italienne au 17e siècle, in Paris et ses fontaines de la Renaissance à nos jours, Collection Paris et son patrimoine,
  36. ^ Katherine Wentworth Rinne, The Fall and Rise of the Waters of Rome, collected in Marilyn Symmes, Fountains- Splash and Spectacle. (pg. 54).
  37. ^ Wentworth Rinne, The Fall and Rise of the Waters of Rome, collected in Marilyn Symmes, Fountains- Splash and Spectacle. (pg. 54).
  38. ^ a b c Maria Ann Conneli and Marilyn Symmes, Fountains as propaganda, in Fountains, Splash and Spectacle – Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present. Edited by Marilyn Symmes. Thames and Hudson, London
  39. ^ Conelli and Symmes, p. 90
  40. ^ Allain and Christiany, L'art des jardins en Europe
  41. ^ Robert W. Berger, The Chateau of Louis XIV, University Park, PA. 1985, and Gerald van der Kemp, Versailles, New York, 1978.
  42. ^ Alexandre Orloff and Dimitri Chvidkovski, Saint-Petersbourg, l'architecture des tsars Editions Place des Victoires, Paris, 2000.
  43. ^ Katia Frey, L'enterprise napoléonienne, in Paris et ses fontaines, p. 104.
  44. ^ Beatrice Lamoitier, L'Essor des fontaines monumentales, in Paris et ses fontaines. pg. 171.
  45. ^ Beatrice LaMoitier, "Le Règne de Davioud", in Paris et ses fontaines, pg. 180
  46. ^ Ric Burns and James Sanders, New York, an Illustrated History, Alfred Knopf, New Yorkm, 1999, pg. 78–79.
  47. ^ a b Stephen Astley, The Fountains in Trafalagar Square, in Fountains- Splash and Spectacle – Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present, edited by Marilyn Symmes, 1998.
  48. ^ Virginie Grandval, Fontaines éphéméres, in Paris et ses fontaines, pg. 209–247
  49. ^ Figures cited by Pauline Prevost-Marcilhacy, Doctor of the History of Art at the University of Paris IV - Sorbonne, in her essay on fountains, 1900-1940- Entre tradition et modernité, in Paris et ses fontaines, pg. 257.
  50. ^ ""Fountain Lady": Ruth Asawa in San Francisco | Broad Strokes Blog". NMWA. 16 February 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  51. ^ Halprin, Lawrence, Notebooks 1959–1971, Cambridge Massachusetts (1972)
  52. ^ From the label on the fountain displayed at the Moscow bienalle of contemporary art, October 2009. To see a short documentary about Bit.Fall, BitFall project
  53. ^ a b . Merchandise Mart Properties, Inc. 2007. Archived from the original on 5 November 2007. Retrieved 13 June 2007.
  54. ^ . Archi•Tech. Stamats Business Media. July–August 2005. Archived from the original on 2 December 2006. Retrieved 13 June 2007.
  55. ^ "Chicago's stunning Crown Fountain uses LED lights and displays". LEDs Magazine. PennWell Corporation. May 2005. Retrieved 18 March 2008.
  56. ^ . City of Chicago. Archived from the original on 7 March 2009. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
  57. ^ . Archived from [v the original] on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2010. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  58. ^ Montaigne, M. E.. de, Journal de voyage en Italie, Le Livre de poche, 1974.
  59. ^ Fontaines éphéméres, in Paris et ses fontaines, pg. 209–247
  60. ^ Virginie Grandval, pg. 229
  61. ^ "About fountain :: Europe's largest floating fountain". www.fountainroshen.com. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 November 2015. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  63. ^ Marilyn Symmes, "Fountains as Propaganda", in "Fountains, Splash and Spectacle", pp. 82–83
  64. ^ Steve (27 June 2015). "Top 6 Tallest Fountains in the World". Life in Saudi Arabia. Retrieved 26 March 2021.

External links edit

King Fahd Fountain tops in the World as Tallest fountain

fountain, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, song, drake, song, cistercian, abbey, england, abbey, fountain, from, latin, fons, genitive, fontis, meaning, source, spring, decorative, reservoir, used, discharging, water, also, structure, that, jets, . For other uses see Fountain disambiguation Fountains redirects here For the song by Drake see Fountains song For the Cistercian abbey in England see Fountains Abbey A fountain from the Latin fons genitive fontis meaning source or spring is a decorative reservoir used for discharging water It is also a structure that jets water into the air for a decorative or dramatic effect Center Jet d eau Geneva Switzerland Clockwise from top right 1 Fontana di Trevi Rome 2 Place de la Concorde Paris 3 Fountain in the Garden of Versailles Versailles 4 The Hundred Fountains Villa d Este Tivoli Italy 5 Fuente de los Leones The Alhambra Granada 6 Fountain in St Peter s Square Rome 7 Samson and the Lion fountain Peterhof St Petersburg Russia 8 Dubai Fountain Dubai Fountains were originally purely functional connected to springs or aqueducts and used to provide drinking water and water for bathing and washing to the residents of cities towns and villages Until the late 19th century most fountains operated by gravity and needed a source of water higher than the fountain such as a reservoir or aqueduct to make the water flow or jet into the air In addition to providing drinking water fountains were used for decoration and to celebrate their builders Roman fountains were decorated with bronze or stone masks of animals or heroes In the Middle Ages Moorish and Muslim garden designers used fountains to create miniature versions of the gardens of paradise King Louis XIV of France used fountains in the Gardens of Versailles to illustrate his power over nature The baroque decorative fountains of Rome in the 17th and 18th centuries marked the arrival point of restored Roman aqueducts and glorified the Popes who built them 1 By the end of the 19th century as indoor plumbing became the main source of drinking water urban fountains became purely decorative Mechanical pumps replaced gravity and allowed fountains to recycle water and to force it high into the air The Jet d Eau in Lake Geneva built in 1951 shoots water 140 metres 460 ft in the air The highest such fountain in the world is King Fahd s Fountain in Jeddah Saudi Arabia which spouts water 260 metres 850 ft above the Red Sea 2 Fountains are used today to decorate city parks and squares to honor individuals or events for recreation and for entertainment A splash pad or spray pool allows city residents to enter get wet and cool off in summer The musical fountain combines moving jets of water colored lights and recorded music controlled by a computer for dramatic effects Fountains can themselves also be musical instruments played by obstruction of one or more of their water jets Drinking fountains provide clean drinking water in public buildings parks and public spaces Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient fountains 1 2 Ancient Roman fountains 1 3 Medieval fountains 1 4 Fountains of the Islamic World 1 5 Renaissance fountains 15th 17th centuries 1 6 Baroque fountains 17th 18th century 1 6 1 Baroque Fountains of Rome 1 6 2 Baroque fountains of Versailles 1 6 3 Baroque fountains of Peterhof 1 7 19th century fountains 1 8 20th century fountains 1 9 Contemporary fountains 2001 present 2 Musical fountains 3 Splash fountains 4 Drinking fountain 5 How fountains work 6 The tallest fountains in the world 7 Gallery of notable fountains around the world 8 See also 9 Bibliography 10 References 11 External linksHistory editAncient fountains edit nbsp An Egyptian fountain on the Temple of DenderaAncient civilizations built stone basins to capture and hold precious drinking water A carved stone basin dating to around 700 BC was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash in modern Iraq The ancient Assyrians constructed a series of basins in the gorge of the Comel River carved in solid rock connected by small channels descending to a stream The lowest basin was decorated with carved reliefs of two lions 3 The ancient Egyptians had ingenious systems for hoisting water up from the Nile for drinking and irrigation but without a higher source of water it was not possible to make water flow by gravity There are lion shaped fountains in the Temple of Dendera in Qena nbsp Attic Greek vase from South Italy about 480 B C The ancient Greeks used aqueducts and gravity powered fountains to distribute water According to ancient historians fountains existed in Athens Corinth and other ancient Greek cities in the 6th century BC as the terminating points of aqueducts which brought water from springs and rivers into the cities In the 6th century BC the Athenian ruler Peisistratos built the main fountain of Athens the Enneacrounos in the Agora or main square It had nine large cannons or spouts which supplied drinking water to local residents 4 nbsp Hellenistic fountain head from the Pergamon museumGreek fountains were made of stone or marble with water flowing through bronze pipes and emerging from the mouth of a sculpted mask that represented the head of a lion or the muzzle of an animal Most Greek fountains flowed by simple gravity but they also discovered how to use principle of a siphon to make water spout as seen in pictures on Greek vases 5 Ancient Roman fountains edit nbsp Reconstruction of a Roman courtyard fountain in Pompeii 1st century AD The Ancient Romans built an extensive system of aqueducts from mountain rivers and lakes to provide water for the fountains and baths of Rome The Roman engineers used lead pipes instead of bronze to distribute the water throughout the city The excavations at Pompeii which revealed the city as it was when it was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD uncovered free standing fountains and basins placed at intervals along city streets fed by siphoning water upwards from lead pipes under the street The excavations of Pompeii also showed that the homes of wealthy Romans often had a small fountain in the atrium or interior courtyard with water coming from the city water supply and spouting into a small bowl or basin Ancient Rome was a city of fountains According to Sextus Julius Frontinus the Roman consul who was named curator aquarum or guardian of the water of Rome in 98 AD Rome had nine aqueducts which fed 39 monumental fountains and 591 public basins not counting the water supplied to the Imperial household baths and owners of private villas Each of the major fountains was connected to two different aqueducts in case one was shut down for service 6 The Romans were able to make fountains jet water into the air by using the pressure of water flowing from a distant and higher source of water to create hydraulic head or force Illustrations of fountains in gardens spouting water are found on wall paintings in Rome from the 1st century BC and in the villas of Pompeii 7 The Villa of Hadrian in Tivoli featured a large swimming basin with jets of water Pliny the Younger described the banquet room of a Roman villa where a fountain began to jet water when visitors sat on a marble seat The water flowed into a basin where the courses of a banquet were served in floating dishes shaped like boats 8 Roman engineers built aqueducts and fountains throughout the Roman Empire Examples can be found today in the ruins of Roman towns in Vaison la Romaine and Glanum in France in Augst Switzerland and other sites Medieval fountains edit nbsp Lavabo at Le Thoronet Abbey Provence 12th century In Nepal there were public drinking fountains at least as early as 550 AD They are called dhunge dharas or hitis They consist of intricately carved stone spouts through which water flows uninterrupted from underground water sources They are found extensively in Nepal and some of them are still operational Construction of water conduits like hitis and dug wells are considered as pious acts in Nepal 9 During the Middle Ages Roman aqueducts were wrecked or fell into decay and many fountains throughout Europe stopped working so fountains existed mainly in art and literature or in secluded monasteries or palace gardens Fountains in the Middle Ages were associated with the source of life purity wisdom innocence and the Garden of Eden 10 In illuminated manuscripts like the Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry 1411 1416 the Garden of Eden was shown with a graceful gothic fountain in the center see illustration The Ghent Altarpiece by Jan van Eyck finished in 1432 also shows a fountain as a feature of the adoration of the mystic lamb a scene apparently set in Paradise The cloister of a monastery was supposed to be a replica of the Garden of Eden protected from the outside world Simple fountains called lavabos were placed inside Medieval monasteries such as Le Thoronet Abbey in Provence and were used for ritual washing before religious services 11 Fountains were also found in the enclosed medieval jardins d amour gardens of courtly love ornamental gardens used for courtship and relaxation The medieval romance The Roman de la Rose describes a fountain in the center of an enclosed garden feeding small streams bordered by flowers and fresh herbs Some Medieval fountains like the cathedrals of their time illustrated biblical stories local history and the virtues of their time The Fontana Maggiore in Perugia dedicated in 1278 is decorated with stone carvings representing prophets and saints allegories of the arts labors of the months the signs of the zodiac and scenes from Genesis and Roman history 12 Medieval fountains could also provide amusement The gardens of the Counts of Artois at the Chateau de Hesdin built in 1295 contained famous fountains called Les Merveilles de Hesdin The Wonders of Hesdin which could be triggered to drench surprised visitors 13 Fountains of the Islamic World edit nbsp Shalimar Gardens in Lahore Pakistan 1641 nbsp Fountain in Baku Azerbaijan nbsp Pasargadae Persian GardensShortly after the spread of Islam the Arabs incorporated into their city planning the famous Islamic gardens Islamic gardens after the 7th century were traditionally enclosed by walls and were designed to represent paradise The paradise gardens were laid out in the form of a cross with four channels representing the rivers of Paradise dividing the four parts of the world 14 Water sometimes spouted from a fountain in the center of the cross representing the spring or fountain Salsabil described in the Qur an as the source of the rivers of Paradise 15 In the 9th century the Banu Musa brothers a trio of Persian Inventors were commissioned by the Caliph of Baghdad to summarize the engineering knowledge of the ancient Greek and Roman world They wrote a book entitled the Book of Ingenious Devices describing the works of the 1st century Greek Engineer Hero of Alexandria and other engineers plus many of their own inventions They described fountains which formed water into different shapes and a wind powered water pump 16 but it is not known if any of their fountains were ever actually built 17 The Persian rulers of the Middle Ages had elaborate water distribution systems and fountains in their palaces and gardens Water was carried by a pipe into the palace from a source at a higher elevation Once inside the palace or garden it came up through a small hole in a marble or stone ornament and poured into a basin or garden channels The gardens of Pasargades had a system of canals which flowed from basin to basin both watering the garden and making a pleasant sound The Persian engineers also used the principle of the syphon called shotor gelu in Persian literally neck of the camel to create fountains which spouted water or made it resemble a bubbling spring The garden of Fin near Kashan used 171 spouts connected to pipes to create a fountain called the Howz e jush or boiling basin 18 The 11th century Persian poet Azraqi described a Persian fountain From a marvelous faucet of gold pours a wave whose clarity is more pure than a soul The turquoise and silver form ribbons in the basin coming from this faucet of gold 19 Reciprocating motion was first described in 1206 by Arab Muslim engineer and inventor al Jazari when the kings of the Artuqid dynasty in Turkey commissioned him to manufacture a machine to raise water for their palaces The finest result was a machine called the double acting reciprocating piston pump which translated rotary motion to reciprocating motion via the crankshaft connecting rod mechanism 20 nbsp The Fountain of the Court of the Lions in the Alhambra 14th century nbsp Fountain of Ahmed III next to Topkapi Palace in Istanbul TurkeyThe palaces of Moorish Spain particularly the Alhambra in Granada had famous fountains The patio of the Sultan in the gardens of Generalife in Granada 1319 featured spouts of water pouring into a basin with channels which irrigated orange and myrtle trees The garden was modified over the centuries the jets of water which cross the canal today were added in the 19th century 21 The fountain in the Court of the Lions of the Alhambra built from 1362 to 1391 is a large vasque mounted on twelve stone statues of lions Water spouts upward in the vasque and pours from the mouths of the lions filling four channels dividing the courtyard into quadrants 22 The basin dates to the 14th century but the lions spouting water are believed to be older dating to the 11th century 23 The design of the Islamic garden spread throughout the Islamic world from Moorish Spain to the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent The Shalimar Gardens built by Emperor Shah Jahan in 1641 were said to be ornamented with 410 fountains which fed into a large basin canal and marble pools In the Ottoman Empire rulers often built fountains next to mosques so worshippers could do their ritual washing Examples include the Fountain of Qasim Pasha 1527 Temple Mount Jerusalem an ablution and drinking fountain built during the Ottoman reign of Suleiman the Magnificent the Fountain of Ahmed III 1728 at the Topkapi Palace Istanbul another Fountain of Ahmed III in Uskudar 1729 and Tophane Fountain 1732 Palaces themselves often had small decorated fountains which provided drinking water cooled the air and made a pleasant splashing sound One surviving example is the Fountain of Tears 1764 at the Bakhchisarai Palace in Crimea which was made famous by a poem of Alexander Pushkin The sebil was a decorated fountain that was often the only source of water for the surrounding neighborhood It was often commissioned as an act of Islamic piety by a rich person Renaissance fountains 15th 17th centuries edit nbsp Tivoli Villa d Este nbsp Le Cento Fontane The Hundred Fountains nbsp The Fontana Masini in Piazza del Popolo in CesenaIn the 14th century Italian humanist scholars began to rediscover and translate forgotten Roman texts on architecture by Vitruvius on hydraulics by Hero of Alexandria and descriptions of Roman gardens and fountains by Pliny the Younger Pliny the Elder and Varro The treatise on architecture De re aedificatoria by Leon Battista Alberti which described in detail Roman villas gardens and fountains became the guidebook for Renaissance builders 24 In Rome Pope Nicholas V 1397 1455 himself a scholar who commissioned hundreds of translations of ancient Greek classics into Latin decided to embellish the city and make it a worthy capital of the Christian world In 1453 he began to rebuild the Acqua Vergine the ruined Roman aqueduct which had brought clean drinking water to the city from eight miles 13 km away He also decided to revive the Roman custom of marking the arrival point of an aqueduct with a mostra a grand commemorative fountain He commissioned the architect Leon Battista Alberti to build a wall fountain where the Trevi Fountain is now located The aqueduct he restored with modifications and extensions eventually supplied water to the Trevi Fountain and the famous baroque fountains in the Piazza del Popolo and Piazza Navona 25 One of the first new fountains to be built in Rome during the Renaissance was the fountain in the piazza in front of the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere 1472 which was placed on the site of an earlier Roman fountain Its design based on an earlier Roman model with a circular vasque on a pedestal pouring water into a basin below became the model for many other fountains in Rome and eventually for fountains in other cities from Paris to London 26 In 1503 Pope Julius II decided to recreate a classical pleasure garden in the same place The new garden called the Cortile del Belvedere was designed by Donato Bramante The garden was decorated with the Pope s famous collection of classical statues and with fountains The Venetian Ambassador wrote in 1523 On one side of the garden is a most beautiful loggia at one end of which is a lovely fountain that irrigates the orange trees and the rest of the garden by a little canal in the center of the loggia 27 The original garden was split in two by the construction of the Vatican Library in the 16th century but a new fountain by Carlo Maderno was built in the Cortile del Belvedere with a jet of water shooting up from a circular stone bowl on an octagonal pedestal in a large basin 28 In 1537 in Florence Cosimo I de Medici who had become ruler of the city at the age of only 17 also decided to launch a program of aqueduct and fountain building The city had previously gotten all its drinking water from wells and reservoirs of rain water which meant that there was little water or water pressure to run fountains Cosimo built an aqueduct large enough for the first continually running fountain in Florence the Fountain of Neptune in the Piazza della Signoria 1560 1567 This fountain featured an enormous white marble statue of Neptune resembling Cosimo by sculptor Bartolomeo Ammannati 29 Under the Medicis fountains were not just sources of water but advertisements of the power and benevolence of the city s rulers They became central elements not only of city squares but of the new Italian Renaissance garden The great Medici Villa at Castello built for Cosimo by Benedetto Varchi featured two monumental fountains on its central axis one showing with two bronze figures representing Hercules slaying Antaeus symbolizing the victory of Cosimo over his enemies and a second fountain in the middle of a circular labyrinth of cypresses laurel myrtle and roses had a bronze statue by Giambologna which showed the goddess Venus wringing her hair The planet Venus was governed by Capricorn which was the emblem of Cosimo the fountain symbolized that he was the absolute master of Florence 30 By the middle Renaissance fountains had become a form of theater with cascades and jets of water coming from marble statues of animals and mythological figures The most famous fountains of this kind were found in the Villa d Este 1550 1572 at Tivoli near Rome which featured a hillside of basins fountains and jets of water as well as a fountain which produced music by pouring water into a chamber forcing air into a series of flute like pipes The gardens also featured giochi d acqua water jokes hidden fountains which suddenly soaked visitors 31 Between 1546 and 1549 the merchants of Paris built the first Renaissance style fountain in Paris the Fontaine des Innocents to commemorate the ceremonial entry of the King into the city The fountain which originally stood against the wall of the church of the Holy Innocents as rebuilt several times and now stands in a square near Les Halles It is the oldest fountain in Paris 32 Henry constructed an Italian style garden with a fountain shooting a vertical jet of water for his favorite mistress Diane de Poitiers next to the Chateau de Chenonceau 1556 1559 At the royal Chateau de Fontainebleau he built another fountain with a bronze statue of Diane goddess of the hunt modeled after Diane de Poitiers 33 Later after the death of Henry II his widow Catherine de Medici expelled Diane de Poitiers from Chenonceau and built her own fountain and garden there King Henry IV of France made an important contribution to French fountains by inviting an Italian hydraulic engineer Tommaso Francini who had worked on the fountains of the villa at Pratalino to make fountains in France Francini became a French citizen in 1600 built the Medici Fountain and during the rule of the young King Louis XIII he was raised to the position of Intendant general des Eaux et Fontaines of the king a position which was hereditary His descendants became the royal fountain designers for Louis XIII and for Louis XIV at Versailles 34 In 1630 another Medici Marie de Medici the widow of Henry IV built her own monumental fountain in Paris the Medici Fountain in the garden of the Palais du Luxembourg That fountain still exists today with a long basin of water and statues added in 1866 35 Baroque fountains 17th 18th century edit Baroque Fountains of Rome edit nbsp Fontana di Trevi the Trevi Fountain by Nicola Salvi 1730 The 17th and 18th centuries were a golden age for fountains in Rome which began with the reconstruction of ruined Roman aqueducts and the construction by the Popes of mostra or display fountains to mark their termini The new fountains were expressions of the new Baroque art which was officially promoted by the Catholic Church as a way to win popular support against the Protestant Reformation the Council of Trent had declared in the 16th century that the Church should counter austere Protestantism with art that was lavish animated and emotional The fountains of Rome like the paintings of Rubens were examples of the principles of Baroque art They were crowded with allegorical figures and filled with emotion and movement In these fountains sculpture became the principal element and the water was used simply to animate and decorate the sculptures They like baroque gardens were a visual representation of confidence and power 31 The first of the Fountains of St Peter s Square by Carlo Maderno 1614 was one of the earliest Baroque fountains in Rome made to complement the lavish Baroque facade he designed for St Peter s Basilica behind it It was fed by water from the Paola aqueduct restored in 1612 whose source was 266 feet 81 m above sea level which meant it could shoot water twenty feet up from the fountain Its form with a large circular vasque on a pedestal pouring water into a basin and an inverted vasque above it spouting water was imitated two centuries later in the Fountains of the Place de la Concorde in Paris The Triton Fountain in the Piazza Barberini 1642 by Gian Lorenzo Bernini is a masterpiece of Baroque sculpture representing Triton half man and half fish blowing his horn to calm the waters following a text by the Roman poet Ovid in the Metamorphoses The Triton fountain benefited from its location in a valley and the fact that it was fed by the Aqua Felice aqueduct restored in 1587 which arrived in Rome at an elevation of 194 feet 59 m above sea level fasl a difference of 130 feet 40 m in elevation between the source and the fountain which meant that the water from this fountain jetted sixteen feet straight up into the air from the conch shell of the triton 36 The Piazza Navona became a grand theater of water with three fountains built in a line on the site of the Stadium of Domitian The fountains at either end are by Giacomo della Porta the Neptune fountain to the north 1572 shows the God of the Sea spearing an octopus surrounded by tritons sea horses and mermaids At the southern end is Il Moro possibly also a figure of Neptune riding a fish in a conch shell In the center is the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi The Fountain of the Four Rivers 1648 51 a highly theatrical fountain by Bernini with statues representing rivers from the four continents the Nile Danube Plate River and Ganges Over the whole structure is a 54 foot 16 m Egyptian obelisk crowned by a cross with the emblem of the Pamphili family representing Pope Innocent X whose family palace was on the piazza The theme of a fountain with statues symbolizing great rivers was later used in the Place de la Concorde 1836 40 and in the Fountain of Neptune in the Alexanderplatz in Berlin 1891 The fountains of Piazza Navona had one drawback their water came from the Acqua Vergine which had only a 23 foot 7 0 m drop from the source to the fountains which meant the water could only fall or trickle downwards not jet very high upwards 37 The Trevi Fountain is the largest and most spectacular of Rome s fountains designed to glorify the three different Popes who created it It was built beginning in 1730 at the terminus of the reconstructed Acqua Vergine aqueduct on the site of Renaissance fountain by Leon Battista Alberti It was the work of architect Nicola Salvi and the successive project of Pope Clement XII Pope Benedict XIV and Pope Clement XIII whose emblems and inscriptions are carried on the attic story entablature and central niche The central figure is Oceanus the personification of all the seas and oceans in an oyster shell chariot surrounded by Tritons and Sea Nymphs In fact the fountain had very little water pressure because the source of water was like the source for the Piazza Navona fountains the Acqua Vergine with a 23 foot 7 0 m drop Salvi compensated for this problem by sinking the fountain down into the ground and by carefully designing the cascade so that the water churned and tumbled to add movement and drama 38 Wrote historians Maria Ann Conelli and Marilyn Symmes On many levels the Trevi altered the appearance function and intent of fountains and was a watershed for future designs 39 Further information List of fountains in Rome nbsp Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi by Bernini 1648 51 nbsp Fontana della Barcaccia 1627 nbsp Fountains of St Peter s Square by Carlo Maderno 1614 and Bernini 1677 nbsp Triton Fountain by Bernini 1642 nbsp Fontana delle Api Fountains of the Bees 1644 Baroque fountains of Versailles edit Beginning in 1662 King Louis XIV of France began to build a new kind of garden the Garden a la francaise or French formal garden at the Palace of Versailles In this garden the fountain played a central role He used fountains to demonstrate the power of man over nature and to illustrate the grandeur of his rule In the Gardens of Versailles instead of falling naturally into a basin water was shot into the sky or formed into the shape of a fan or bouquet Dancing water was combined with music and fireworks to form a grand spectacle These fountains were the work of the descendants of Tommaso Francini the Italian hydraulic engineer who had come to France during the time of Henry IV and built the Medici Fountain and the Fountain of Diana at Fontainebleau Two fountains were the centerpieces of the Gardens of Versailles both taken from the myths about Apollo the sun god the emblem of Louis XIV and both symbolizing his power The Fontaine Latone 1668 70 designed by Andre Le Notre and sculpted by Gaspard and Balthazar Marsy represents the story of how the peasants of Lycia tormented Latona and her children Diana and Apollo and were punished by being turned into frogs This was a reminder of how French peasants had abused Louis s mother Anne of Austria during the uprising called the Fronde in the 1650s When the fountain is turned on sprays of water pour down on the peasants who are frenzied as they are transformed into creatures 38 40 The other centerpiece of the Gardens at the intersection of the main axes of the Gardens of Versailles is the Bassin d Apollon 1668 71 designed by Charles Le Brun and sculpted by Jean Baptiste Tuby This statue shows a theme also depicted in the painted decoration in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles Apollo in his chariot about to rise from the water announced by Tritons with seashell trumpets Historians Mary Anne Conelli and Marilyn Symmes wrote Designed for dramatic effect and to flatter the king the fountain is oriented so that the Sun God rises from the west and travels east toward the chateau in contradiction to nature 38 Besides these two monumental fountains the Gardens over the years contained dozens of other fountains including thirty nine animal fountains in the labyrinth depicting the fables of Jean de La Fontaine There were so many fountains at Versailles that it was impossible to have them all running at once when Louis XIV made his promenades his fountain tenders turned on the fountains ahead of him and turned off those behind him Louis built an enormous pumping station the Machine de Marly with fourteen water wheels and 253 pumps to raise the water three hundred feet from the River Seine and even attempted to divert the River Eure to provide water for his fountains but the water supply was never enough 41 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Baroque fountains of Peterhof edit In Russia Peter the Great founded a new capital at St Petersburg in 1703 and built a small Summer Palace and gardens there beside the Neva River The gardens featured a fountain of two sea monsters spouting water among the earliest fountains in Russia In 1709 he began constructing a larger palace Peterhof Palace alongside the Gulf of Finland Peter visited France in 1717 and saw the gardens and fountains of Louis XIV at Versailles Marly and Fontainebleau When he returned he began building a vast Garden a la francaise with fountains at Peterhof The central feature of the garden was a water cascade modeled after the cascade at the Chateau de Marly of Louis XIV built in 1684 The gardens included trick fountains designed to drench unsuspecting visitors a popular feature of the Italian Renaissance garden 42 In 1800 1802 the Emperor Paul I of Russia and his successor Alexander I of Russia built a new fountain at the foot of the cascade depicting Samson prying open the mouth of a lion representing Peter s victory over Sweden in the Great Northern War in 1721 The fountains were fed by reservoirs in the upper garden while the Samson fountain was fed by a specially constructed aqueduct four kilometers in length nbsp Samson and the Lion fountain at Peterhof Palace Russia 1800 1802 nbsp Sea Canal nbsp Roman Fountains 1763 80 nbsp Danaida Fountain19th century fountains edit nbsp Fontaine du Palmier Paris 1809 nbsp Fountain in the Place de la Concorde in Paris 1840 nbsp Fountain in Trafalgar Square 1845 nbsp Bethesda Fountain in Central Park New York City 1873 In the early 19th century London and Paris built aqueducts and new fountains to supply clean drinking water to their exploding populations Napoleon Bonaparte started construction on the first canals bringing drinking water to Paris fifteen new fountains the most famous being the Fontaine du Palmier in the Place du Chatelet 1896 1808 celebrating his military victories He also restored and put back into service some of the city s oldest fountains such as the Medici Fountain Two of Napoleon s fountains the Chateau d Eau and the fountain in the Place des Vosges were the first purely decorative fountains in Paris without water taps for drinking water 43 Louis Philippe 1830 1848 continued Napoleon s work and added some of Paris s most famous fountains notably the Fontaines de la Concorde 1836 1840 and the fountains in the Place des Vosges 44 Following a deadly cholera epidemic in 1849 Louis Napoleon decided to completely rebuild the Paris water supply system separating the water supply for fountains from the water supply for drinking The most famous fountain built by Louis Napoleon was the Fontaine Saint Michel part of his grand reconstruction of Paris boulevards Louis Napoleon relocated and rebuilt several earlier fountains such as the Medici Fountain and the Fontaine de Leda when their original sites were destroyed by his construction projects 45 In the mid nineteenth century the first fountains were built in the United States connected to the first aqueducts bringing drinking water from outside the city The first fountain in Philadelphia at Centre Square opened in 1809 and featured a statue by sculptor William Rush The first fountain in New York City in City Hall Park opened in 1842 and the first fountain in Boston was turned on in 1848 The first famous American decorative fountain was the Bethesda Fountain in Central Park in New York City opened in 1873 46 The 19th century also saw the introduction of new materials in fountain construction cast iron the Fontaines de la Concorde glass the Crystal Fountain in London 1851 and even aluminium the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain in Piccadilly Circus London 1897 47 The invention of steam pumps meant that water could be supplied directly to homes and pumped upward from fountains The new fountains in Trafalgar Square 1845 used steam pumps from an artesian well By the end of the 19th century fountains in big cities were no longer used to supply drinking water and were simply a form of art and urban decoration 47 Another fountain innovation of the 19th century was the illuminated fountain The Bartholdi Fountain at the Philadelphia Exposition of 1876 was illuminated by gas lamps In 1884 a fountain in Britain featured electric lights shining upward through the water The Exposition Universelle 1889 which celebrated the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution featured a fountain illuminated by electric lights shining up though the columns of water The fountains located in a basin forty meters in diameter were given color by plates of colored glass inserted over the lamps The Fountain of Progress gave its show three times each evening for twenty minutes with a series of different colors 48 20th century fountains edit nbsp The Pont d eau from the 1931 Paris Colonial Exhibit created a bridge of water forty meters long and six meters wide nbsp Buckingham Fountain in Chicago 1933 nbsp Fountain of Prometheus at the Rockefeller Center in New York City 1933 nbsp The battery of water cannons at the Palais de Chaillot at the World Expo in Paris 1937 The water cannons still function nbsp Stravinsky Fountain next to the Pompidou Center Paris 1983 nbsp Fontaine de la Pyramide Cour Napoleon of the Louvre 1988 nbsp Fontaine Cristaux Homage to Bela Bartok Jean Yves Lechevallier Paris 1980 nbsp Fountain at Raisina Hill Rajpath near Rashtrapati Bhavan in Delhi 1929 Paris fountains in the 20th century no longer had to supply drinking water they were purely decorative and since their water usually came from the river and not from the city aqueducts their water was no longer drinkable Twenty eight new fountains were built in Paris between 1900 and 1940 nine new fountains between 1900 and 1910 four between 1920 and 1930 and fifteen between 1930 and 1940 49 The biggest fountains of the period were those built for the International Expositions of 1900 1925 and 1937 and for the Colonial Exposition of 1931 Of those only the fountains from the 1937 exposition at the Palais de Chaillot still exist See Fountains of International Expositions Only a handful of fountains were built in Paris between 1940 and 1980 The most important ones built during that period were on the edges of the city on the west just outside the city limits at La Defense and to the east at the Bois de Vincennes Between 1981 and 1995 during the terms of President Francois Mitterrand and Culture Minister Jack Lang and of Mitterrand s bitter political rival Paris Mayor Jacques Chirac Mayor from 1977 until 1995 the city experienced a program of monumental fountain building that exceeded that of Napoleon Bonaparte or Louis Philippe More than one hundred fountains were built in Paris in the 1980s mostly in the neighborhoods outside the center of Paris where there had been few fountains before These included the Fontaine Cristaux homage to Bela Bartok by Jean Yves Lechevallier 1980 the Stravinsky Fountain next to the Pompidou Center by sculptors Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely 1983 the fountain of the Pyramid of the Louvre by I M Pei 1989 the Buren Fountain by sculptor Daniel Buren Les Spherades fountain both in the Palais Royal and the fountains of Parc Andre Citroen The Mitterrand Chirac fountains had no single style or theme Many of the fountains were designed by famous sculptors or architects such as Jean Tinguely I M Pei Claes Oldenburg and Daniel Buren who had radically different ideas of what a fountain should be Some were solemn and others were whimsical Most made little effort to blend with their surroundings they were designed to attract attention Fountains built in the United States between 1900 and 1950 mostly followed European models and classical styles The Samuel Francis Dupont Memorial Fountain in Dupont Circle Washington D C was designed and created by Henry Bacon and Daniel Chester French the architect and sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial in 1921 in a pure neoclassical style The Buckingham Fountain in Grant Park in Chicago was one of the first American fountains to use powerful modern pumps to shoot water as high as 150 feet 46 meters into the air The Fountain of Prometheus built at the Rockefeller Center in New York City in 1933 was the first American fountain in the Art Deco style After World War II fountains in the United States became more varied in form Some like Ruth Asawa s Andrea 1968 50 and the Vaillancourt Fountain 1971 both located in San Francisco were pure works of sculpture Other fountains like the Frankin Roosevelt Memorial Waterfall 1997 by architect Lawrence Halprin were designed as landscapes to illustrate themes This fountain is part of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington D C which has four outdoor rooms illustrating his presidency Each room contains a cascade or waterfall the cascade in the third room illustrates the turbulence of the years of the World War II Halprin wrote at an early stage of the design the whole environment of the memorial becomes sculpture to touch feel hear and contact with all the senses 51 The end of the 20th century the development of high shooting fountains beginning with the Jet d eau in Geneva in 1951 and followed by taller and taller fountains in the United States and the Middle East The highest fountain today in the King Fahd s Fountain in Jeddah Saudi Arabia It also saw the increasing popularity of the musical fountain which combined water music and light choreographed by computers See Musical fountain below Contemporary fountains 2001 present edit nbsp The new Trafalgar Square fountains in London with new pumps and lighting opened in June 2009The fountain called Bit Fall by German artist Julius Popp 2005 uses digital technologies to spell out words with water The fountain is run by a statistical program which selects words at random from news stories on the Internet It then recodes these words into pictures Then 320 nozzles inject the water into electromagnetic valves The program uses rasterization and bitmap technologies to synchronize the valves so drops of water form an image of the words as they fall According to Popp the sheet of water is a metaphor for the constant flow of information from which we cannot escape 52 Crown Fountain is an interactive fountain and video sculpture feature in Chicago s Millennium Park Designed by Catalan artist Jaume Plensa it opened in July 2004 53 54 The fountain is composed of a black granite reflecting pool placed between a pair of glass brick towers The towers are 50 feet 15 m tall 53 and they use light emitting diodes LEDs to display digital videos on their inward faces Construction and design of the Crown Fountain cost US 17 million 55 Weather permitting the water operates from May to October 56 intermittently cascading down the two towers and spouting through a nozzle on each tower s front face Few new fountains have been built in Paris since 2000 The most notable is La Danse de la fontaine emergente 2008 located on Place Augusta Holmes rue Paul Klee in the 13th arrondissement It was designed by the French Chinese sculptor Chen Zhen 1955 2000 shortly before his death in 2000 and finished through the efforts of his spouse and collaborator It shows a dragon in stainless steel glass and plastic emerging and submerging from the pavement of the square The fountain is in three parts A bas relief of the dragon is fixed on the wall of the structure of the water supply plant and the dragon seems to be emerging from the wall and plunging underground This part of the dragon is opaque The second and third parts depict the arch of the dragon s back coming out of the pavement These parts of the dragon are transparent and water under pressure flows visibly within and is illuminated at night Musical fountains edit nbsp The Tammerkoski s musical fountains during the 2020 Light Festival in Tampere FinlandMusical fountains create a theatrical spectacle with music light and water usually employing a variety of programmable spouts and water jets controlled by a computer Musical fountains were first described in the 1st century AD by the Greek scientist and engineer Hero of Alexandria in his book Pneumatics Hero described and provided drawings of A bird made to whistle by flowing water A Trumpet sounded by flowing water and Birds made to sing and be silent alternately by flowing water In Hero s descriptions water pushed air through musical instruments to make sounds It is not known if Hero made working models of any of his designs 57 During the Italian Renaissance the most famous musical fountains were located in the gardens of the Villa d Este in Tivoli which were created between 1550 and 1572 Following the ideas of Hero of Alexandria the Fountain of the Owl used a series of bronze pipes like flutes to make the sound of birds The most famous feature of the garden was the great Organ Fountain It was described by the French philosopher Michel de Montaigne who visited the garden in 1580 The music of the Organ Fountain is true music naturally created made by water which falls with great violence into a cave rounded and vaulted and agitates the air which is forced to exit through the pipes of an organ Other water passing through a wheel strikes in a certain order the keyboard of the organ The organ also imitates the sound of trumpets the sound of cannon and the sound of muskets made by the sudden fall of water 58 The Organ Fountain fell into ruins but it was recently restored and plays music again Louis XIV created the idea of the modern musical fountain by staging spectacles in the Gardens of Versailles using music and fireworks to accompany the flow of the fountains The great international expositions held in Philadelphia London and Paris featured the ancestors of the modern musical fountain They introduced the first fountains illuminated by gas lights Philadelphia in 1876 and the first fountains illuminated by electric lights London in 1884 and Paris in 1889 59 The Exposition Universelle 1900 in Paris featured fountains illuminated by colored lights controlled by a keyboard 60 The Paris Colonial Exposition of 1931 presented the Theatre d eau or water theater located in a lake with performance of dancing water The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne 1937 had combined arches and columns of water from fountains in the Seine with light and with music from loudspeakers on eleven rafts anchored in the river playing the music of the leading composers of the time See International Exposition Fountains above Today some of the best known musical fountains in the world are at the Bellagio Hotel amp Casino in Las Vegas 2009 the Dubai Fountain in the United Arab Emirates the World of Color at Disney California Adventure Park 2010 and Aquanura at the Efteling in the Netherlands 2012 citation needed nbsp The Organ Fountain at the Villa d Este Tivoli 1550 1572 nbsp The Chateau d eau and plaza of the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900 The fountains were illuminated with different colors at night nbsp The musical fountain of the Bellagio Hotel amp Casino in Las Vegas with pivoting nozzles to vary the patterns of the water controlled by computers and accompanied by music 1998 nbsp Dubai Fountain in the United Arab Emirates 2009 can shoot water 150 meters in the air or present computer choreographed water dancing to music nbsp Multimedia Fountain Roshen is the only one in Ukraine and the largest floating fountain in Europe built in the river Southern Buh in Vinnytsia City near Festivalny Isle Kempa Isle 61 nbsp Multimedia Fountain Kangwon Land is considered Asia s largest musical fountain 62 Splash fountains edit nbsp The Splash Fountain in Jakarta Indonesia nbsp The magic fountain in Montjuic Spain A splash fountain or bathing fountain is intended for people to come in and cool off on hot summer days These fountains are also referred to as interactive fountains These fountains are designed to allow easy access and feature nonslip surfaces and have no standing water to eliminate possible drowning hazards so that no lifeguards or supervision is required These splash pads are often located in public pools public parks or public playgrounds known as spraygrounds In some splash fountains such as Dundas Square in Toronto Canada the water is heated by solar energy captured by the special dark colored granite slabs The fountain at Dundas Square features 600 ground nozzles arranged in groups of 30 3 rows of 10 nozzles Each group of 30 nozzles is located beneath a stainless steel grille Twenty such grilles are arranged in two rows of 10 in the middle of the main walkway through Dundas Square Drinking fountain editMain article Drinking fountain A water fountain or drinking fountain is designed to provide drinking water and has a basin arrangement with either continuously running water or a tap The drinker bends down to the stream of water and swallows water directly from the stream Modern indoor drinking fountains may incorporate filters to remove impurities from the water and chillers to reduce its temperature In some regional dialects water fountains are called bubblers Water fountains are usually found in public places like schools rest areas libraries and grocery stores Many jurisdictions require water fountains to be wheelchair accessible by sticking out horizontally from the wall and to include an additional unit of a lower height for children and short adults The design that this replaced often had one spout atop a refrigeration unit In 1859 The Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association was established to promote the provision of drinking water for people and animals in the United Kingdom and overseas More recently in 2010 the FindaFountain campaign was launched in the UK to encourage people to use drinking fountains instead of environmentally damaging bottled water A map showing the location of UK drinking water fountains is published on the FindaFountain website nbsp Fontana Della PupporonaHow fountains work edit nbsp Illuminated fountain nbsp The book The Theory and Practice of Gardening by Dezallier d Argenville 1709 showed different types of fountain nozzles which would create different shapes of water from bouquets to fans nbsp Fountain nozzles which water gets cut off From Roman times until the end of the 19th century fountains operated by gravity requiring a source of water higher than the fountain itself to make the water flow The greater the difference between the elevation of the source of water and the fountain the higher the water would go upwards from the fountain In Roman cities water for fountains came from lakes and rivers and springs in the hills brought into city in aqueducts and then distributed to fountains through a system of lead pipes From the Middle Ages onwards fountains in villages or towns were connected to springs or to channels which brought water from lakes or rivers In Provence a typical village fountain consisted of a pipe or underground duct from a spring at a higher elevation than the fountain The water from the spring flowed down to the fountain then up a tube into a bulb shaped stone vessel like a large vase with a cover on top The inside of the vase called the bassin de repartition was filled with water up to a level just above the mouths of the canons or spouts which slanted downwards The water poured down through the canons creating a siphon so that the fountain ran continually In cities and towns residents filled vessels or jars of water jets from the canons of the fountain or paid a water porter to bring the water to their home Horses and domestic animals could drink the water in the basin below the fountain The water not used often flowed into a separate series of basins a lavoir used for washing and rinsing clothes After being used for washing the same water then ran through a channel to the town s kitchen garden In Provence since clothes were washed with ashes the water that flowed into the garden contained potassium and was valuable as fertilizer 5 The most famous fountains of the Renaissance at the Villa d Este in Tivoli were located on a steep slope near a river the builders ran a channel from the river to a large fountain at top of the garden which then fed other fountains and basins on the levels below The fountains of Rome built from the Renaissance through the 18th century took their water from rebuilt Roman aqueducts which brought water from lakes and rivers at a higher elevation than the fountains Those fountains with a high source of water such as the Triton Fountain could shoot water 16 feet 4 9 m in air Fountains with a lower source such as the Trevi Fountain could only have water pour downwards The architect of the Trevi Fountain placed it below street level to make the flow of water seem more dramatic The fountains of Versailles depended upon water from reservoirs just above the fountains As King Louis XIV built more fountains he was forced to construct an enormous complex of pumps called the Machine de Marly with fourteen water wheels and 220 pumps to raise water 162 meters above the Seine River to the reservoirs to keep his fountains flowing Even with the Machine de Marly the fountains used so much water that they could not be all turned on at the same time Fontainiers watched the progress of the King when he toured the gardens and turned on each fountain just before he arrived 63 The architects of the fountains at Versailles designed specially shaped nozzles or tuyaux to form the water into different shapes such as fans bouquets and umbrellas In Germany some courts and palace gardens were situated in flat areas thus fountains depending on pumped pressurized water were developed at a fairly early point in history The Great Fountain in Herrenhausen Gardens at Hanover was based on ideas of Gottfried Leibniz conceived in 1694 and was inaugurated in 1719 during the visit of George I After some improvements it reached a height of some 35 m in 1721 which made it the highest fountain in European courts The fountains at the Nymphenburg Palace initially were fed by water pumped to water towers but as from 1803 were operated by the water powered Nymphenburg Pumping Stations which are still working Beginning in the 19th century fountains ceased to be used for drinking water and became purely ornamental By the beginning of the 20th century cities began using steam pumps and later electric pumps to send water to the city fountains Later in the 20th century urban fountains began to recycle their water through a closed recirculating system An electric pump often placed under the water pushes the water through the pipes The water must be regularly topped up to offset water lost to evaporation and allowance must be made to handle overflow after heavy rain In modern fountains a water filter typically a media filter removes particles from the water this filter requires its own pump to force water through it and plumbing to remove the water from the pool to the filter and then back to the pool The water may need chlorination or anti algal treatment or may use biological methods to filter and clean water The pumps filter electrical switch box and plumbing controls are often housed in a plant room Low voltage lighting typically 12 volt direct current is used to minimise electrical hazards Lighting is often submerged and must be suitably designed High wattage lighting incandescent and halogen either as submerged lighting or accent lighting on waterwall fountains have been implicated in every documented Legionnaires disease outbreak associated with fountains This is detailed in the Guidelines for Control of Legionella in Ornamental Features Floating fountains are also popular for ponds and lakes they consist of a float pump nozzle and water chamber The tallest fountains in the world edit nbsp King Fahd s FountainKing Fahd s Fountain 1985 in Jeddah Saudi Arabia The fountain jets water 260 meters 853 feet above the Red Sea and is currently the tallest fountain in the world 64 The World Cup Fountain in the Han gang River in Seoul Korea 2002 advertises a height of 202 meters 663 feet The Gateway Geyser 1995 next to the Mississippi River in St Louis Missouri shoots water 192 meters 630 feet in the air It is the tallest fountain in the United States Port Fountain 2006 in Karachi Pakistan rises to height of 190 meters 620 feet making it the fourth tallest fountain Fountain Park Fountain Hills Arizona 1970 Can reach 171 meters 561 feet when all three pumps are operating but normally runs at 91 meters 300 feet The Dubai Fountain opened in 2009 next to Burj Khalifa the world s tallest building The fountain performs once every half hour to recorded music and shoots water to height of 73 meters 240 feet The fountain also has extreme shooters not used in every show which can reach 150 meters 490 feet The Captain James Cook Memorial Jet in Canberra 1970 147 meters 482 feet The Jet d eau in Geneva 1951 140 meters 460 feet Magic Fountain of Montjuic 1929 Barcelona Catalonia Spain 170 Feet Created by Carles Buigas Tallest Fountains in the WorldGallery of notable fountains around the world edit nbsp The Fonte Gaia Piazza del Campo Siena Italy by Jacopo della Quercia 1419 replaced by a copy in 1868 nbsp Fountain at Het Loo Palace in Apeldoorn Netherlands nbsp The Jet d Eau fountain in Geneva Switzerland 1951 the first modern high shooting fountain nbsp The Schoner Brunnen Beautiful Fountain in Nuremberg Germany 1385 96 nbsp Samson and the Lion Fountain 1800 02 Peterhof Russia nbsp Buckingham Fountain 1927 in Chicago nbsp Dubai Fountain 2008 a computer programmed musical fountain is 250 m 820 ft long and can jet water 150 m 490 ft into the air nbsp The El Alamein Fountain 1959 61 in Sydney designed by Robert Woodward was the first dandelion fountain nbsp The Emil Aaltonen Memorial 1969 a 4 5 metres 15 ft tall fountain at the Tammela Square in Tampere designed by Raimo Utriainen nbsp Fountains in the Park of the Reserve Lima PeruSee also editWishing well for the practice of dropping coins into fountainsBibliography editHelen Attlee Italian Gardens A Cultural History Frances Lincoln Limited London 2006 Paris et ses Fontaines del la Renaissance a nos jours edited by Beatrice de Andia Dominique Massounie Pauline Prevost Marcilhacy and Daniel Rabreau from the Collection Paris et son Patrimoine Paris 1995 Les Aqueducs de la ville de Rome translation and commentary by Pierre Grimal Societe d edition Les Belles Lettres Paris 1944 Louis Plantier Fontaines de Provence et de la Cote d Azur Edisud Aix en Provence 2007 Frederick Cope and Tazartes Maurizia Les Fontaines de Rome Editions Citadelles et Mazenod 2004 Andre Jean Tardy Fontaines toulonnaises Les Editions de la Nerthe 2001 ISBN 2 913483 24 0 Hortense Lyon La Fontaine Stravinsky Collection Baccalaureat arts plastiques 2004 Centre national de documentation pedagogique Marilyn Symmes editor Fountains Splash and Spectacle Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present Thames and Hudson in cooperation with the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum of the Smithsonian Institution 1998 Yves Porter et Arthur Thevenart Palais et Jardins de Perse Flammarion Paris 2002 ISBN 978 2 08 010838 8 Raimund O A Becker Ritterspach Water Conduits in the Kathmandu Valley Munshriram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt Ltd New Delhi 1995 ISBN 81 215 0690 5References edit Philippe Prevot Histoire des jardins Editions Sud Ouest Bordeaux 2006 SAMIRAD Saudi Arabia Market Information Resource Directory fountain Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 18 March 2010 Herodotus The Histories 1 59 a b Louis Plantier Fontaines de Provence et de la Cote d Azur Edisud Aix en Provence 2007 Frontin Les Aqueducs de la ville de Rome translation and commentary by Pierre Grimal Societe d edition Les Belles Lettres Paris 1944 Philippe Prevot pg 20 Philippe Prevot pg 21 Water Conduits in the Kathmandu Valley 2 vols by Raimund O A Becker Ritterspach ISBN 9788121506908 Published by Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt Ltd New Delhi India 1995 Psalms 36 9 Proverbs 13 14 Revelation 22 1 Dante s Paradisio XXV 1 9 Molina Nathalie 1999 Le Thoronet Abbey Monum Editions du patrimoine Marilyn Simmes Fountains Splash and Spectacle pg 63 Allain and Christiany L Art des jardins en Europe This type of water joke later became popular in Renaissance and baroque gardens Yves Marie Allain and Janine Christiany L Art des jardins en Europe Citadelles amp Mazenod Paris 2006 According to the Qur an the dead going to paradise would be given water from the spring Salsabil And there they will be given a cup whose mixture is of Zanjabil ginger A fountain there called Salsabil 76 17 18 Bent Sorensen November 1995 History of and Recent Progress in Wind Energy Utilization Annual Review of Energy and the Environment 20 387 424 doi 10 1146 annurev eg 20 110195 002131 Banu Musa 1979 The book of ingenious devices Kitab al ḥiyal translated by Donald Routledge Hill Springer p 44 ISBN 90 277 0833 9 Yves Porter and Arthur Thevenart Palais et Jardins de Perse pg 40 Azraqi H Masse Anthologie persane pg 44 English translation of excerpt by D R Siefkin Ahmad Y Hassan The Crank Connecting Rod System in a Continuously Rotating Machine Archived 12 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine See the official site of the Alhambra complex for the history of the fountains Allain and Christiany L art des jardins en Europe See also See the official site of the Alhambra complex for the history of the fountains Naomi Miller Fountains as Metaphor in Fountains Splash and Spectacle Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present edited by Marilyn Symmes London 1998 Helena Attlee Italian Gardens A Cultural History pp 11 12 Pinto John A The Trevi Fountain Yale University Press New Haven 1986 The fountain in Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere originally had two upper basins but the water pressure in the early Renaissance was so low that the water was unable to reach the upper basin so the top basin was removed cited in Helena Attlee Italian Gardens a Cultural History p 21 Symmes Fountains Splash and Spectacle pg 126 Marilyn Symmes Fountains Splash and Spectacle Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present pg 78 Helena Attlee Italian Gardens A Cultural History p 30 a b Helena Attlee Italian Gardens A Cultural History Marion Boudon La Fontaine des Innocents in Paris et ses fontaines de la Renaissance a nos jours 1995 Le Guide du Patrimoine en France Editions du Patrimoine Centre des Monuments Nationaux 2009 A Muesset Les Francinis Paris 1930 cited in Luigi Gallo La Presence italienne au 17e siecle in Paris et ses fontaines de la Renaissance a nos jours Collection Paris et son patrimoine 1995 Luigi Gallo La Presence italienne au 17e siecle in Paris et ses fontaines de la Renaissance a nos jours Collection Paris et son patrimoine Katherine Wentworth Rinne The Fall and Rise of the Waters of Rome collected in Marilyn Symmes Fountains Splash and Spectacle pg 54 Wentworth Rinne The Fall and Rise of the Waters of Rome collected in Marilyn Symmes Fountains Splash and Spectacle pg 54 a b c Maria Ann Conneli and Marilyn Symmes Fountains as propaganda in Fountains Splash and Spectacle Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present Edited by Marilyn Symmes Thames and Hudson London Conelli and Symmes p 90 Allain and Christiany L art des jardins en Europe Robert W Berger The Chateau of Louis XIV University Park PA 1985 and Gerald van der Kemp Versailles New York 1978 Alexandre Orloff and Dimitri Chvidkovski Saint Petersbourg l architecture des tsars Editions Place des Victoires Paris 2000 Katia Frey L enterprise napoleonienne in Paris et ses fontaines p 104 Beatrice Lamoitier L Essor des fontaines monumentales in Paris et ses fontaines pg 171 Beatrice LaMoitier Le Regne de Davioud in Paris et ses fontaines pg 180 Ric Burns and James Sanders New York an Illustrated History Alfred Knopf New Yorkm 1999 pg 78 79 a b Stephen Astley The Fountains in Trafalagar Square in Fountains Splash and Spectacle Water and Design from the Renaissance to the Present edited by Marilyn Symmes 1998 Virginie Grandval Fontaines ephemeres in Paris et ses fontaines pg 209 247 Figures cited by Pauline Prevost Marcilhacy Doctor of the History of Art at the University of Paris IV Sorbonne in her essay on fountains 1900 1940 Entre tradition et modernite in Paris et ses fontaines pg 257 Fountain Lady Ruth Asawa in San Francisco Broad Strokes Blog NMWA 16 February 2016 Retrieved 21 April 2022 Halprin Lawrence Notebooks 1959 1971 Cambridge Massachusetts 1972 From the label on the fountain displayed at the Moscow bienalle of contemporary art October 2009 To see a short documentary about Bit Fall BitFall project a b Artropolis Merchandise Mart Properties Inc 2007 Archived from the original on 5 November 2007 Retrieved 13 June 2007 Crown Fountain Archi Tech Stamats Business Media July August 2005 Archived from the original on 2 December 2006 Retrieved 13 June 2007 Chicago s stunning Crown Fountain uses LED lights and displays LEDs Magazine PennWell Corporation May 2005 Retrieved 18 March 2008 Frequently Asked Questions City of Chicago Archived from the original on 7 March 2009 Retrieved 8 June 2008 The Pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria Archived from v the original on 8 December 2010 Retrieved 8 December 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Montaigne M E de Journal de voyage en Italie Le Livre de poche 1974 Fontaines ephemeres in Paris et ses fontaines pg 209 247 Virginie Grandval pg 229 About fountain Europe s largest floating fountain www fountainroshen com Retrieved 25 October 2015 High One Resort South Korea Gangwon do Attraction Review Archived from the original on 23 November 2015 Retrieved 9 November 2015 Marilyn Symmes Fountains as Propaganda in Fountains Splash and Spectacle pp 82 83 Steve 27 June 2015 Top 6 Tallest Fountains in the World Life in Saudi Arabia Retrieved 26 March 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fountains King Fahd Fountain tops in the World as Tallest fountain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fountain amp oldid 1202635406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.