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Anji Bridge

The Anji Bridge (simplified Chinese: 安济桥; traditional Chinese: 安濟橋; pinyin: Ānjì Qiáo; lit. 'Safe crossing bridge') is the world's oldest open-spandrel segmental arch bridge of stone construction.[1] Credited to the design of a craftsman named Li Chun, the bridge was constructed in the years 595–605[2] during the Sui dynasty (581–618). Located in the southern part of Hebei Province, it is the oldest standing bridge in China. It is considered one of the Four Treasures of Hebei.[3]

Anji Bridge
The Anji Bridge, still standing after 1400 years
Coordinates37°43′13″N 114°45′48″E / 37.7203°N 114.7633°E / 37.7203; 114.7633Coordinates: 37°43′13″N 114°45′48″E / 37.7203°N 114.7633°E / 37.7203; 114.7633
CrossesXiao River
LocaleZhao County in Hebei Province, China
Characteristics
DesignOpen-spandrel stone segmental arch bridge
Total length64 metres (210 ft)
Width9.6 metres (31 ft)
Height7.3 metres (24 ft)
Longest span37.37 metres (123 ft)
History
Construction start595 CE
Construction end605 CE
Location

Name and location

The bridge is also commonly known as the Zhaozhou Bridge (simplified Chinese: 赵州桥; traditional Chinese: 趙州橋; pinyin: Zhàozhōu Qiáo), after Zhao County, which was formerly known as Zhaozhou (趙州). Another name for the bridge is the Great Stone Bridge (simplified Chinese: 大石桥; traditional Chinese: 大石橋; pinyin: Dàshí Qiáo). It crosses the Xiaohe River (洨河) south of the town of Zhaoxian, in Zhao County, approximately 52 kilometres (32 mi) southeast of the provincial capital Shijiazhuang. It is a pedestrian bridge and is currently open to the public. In English literature, it is also referred as Chiao Shui Bridge, after the river it crosses.[4][5]

History

Starting from 581 CE, the Sui dynasty reasserted imperial control over the competing powers that had ruled various regions of China since the decline of the Han dynasty in the third century. Thus immense public works projects were carried out, including the rebuilding of two grand imperial capitals, the excavation of the 2400-kilometer-long Grand Canal, and major improvements to the fortifications that predated the Great Wall. Economically, the long-distance transport of goods and men was a critical component to the interests and sustainability of the ruling house. The movement of goods by land south and southwest from the North China Plain to the Central Plains around Kaifeng and Luoyang followed a path that crossed the Xiao River near Luanzhou (later Zhaozhou and now Zhaoxian) in today's Hebei province. Flowing west to east through a plain that was relatively low-lying on both sides, the Xiao River was an important artery for transporting goods, but an impediment to continuous overland movement and the economic integration of China's regions.[6]

It was under these circumstances that Li Chun, who directed masons and other craftsmen, built the Anji (Safe Passage) Bridge, also called Dashi (Great Stone) Bridge. Although Chinese history credits Li Chun with the design and building of the Anji Bridge, no contemporaneous materials recorded the process, however later chronicles do make notes of it in brief.[6]

Among the most remarkable achievements of Chinese bridge building—indeed an advancement unrivaled in the world—was the creation of this segmental arch bridge of wholly stone construction. This innovation, which occurred between the end of the sixth century and beginning of the seventh century, repudiated conventional wisdom that a semicircular arch was necessary to transfer the weight of a bridge downwards to where the arch tangentially meets the pier. The double pair of openings piercing both ends of the arch spandrel, which as well as accentuating its lithe curvature, lightens the weight of the bridge and facilitates the diversion of flood waters by allowing them to pass through the auxiliary arches rather than pound against the spandrels. The Zhaozhou Bridge is celebrated as China's oldest standing bridge and the oldest open spandrel stone bridge in the world.[6]

Construction

 
the elevation and arch-to-span ratio of a 1/4 circle arch bridge

The Anji bridge is about 64 metres (210 ft) long with a central span of 37.37 metres (122.6 ft). It stands 7.3 metres (24 ft) tall and has a width of 9 metres (30 ft). The arch covers a circular segment less than half of a semicircle (84°) and with a radius of 27.27 metres (89.5 ft), has a rise-to-span ratio of approximately 0.197 (7.3 to 37 metres (24 to 121 ft)). This is considerably smaller than the rise-to-span ratio of 0.5 of a semicircular arch bridge and slightly smaller than the rise-to-span ratio of 0.207 of a quarter circle. The arch length to span ratio is 1.1, less than the arch-to-span ratio of 1.57 of a semicircle arch bridge by 43%, thus the saving in material is about 40%, making the bridge lighter in weight. The elevation of the arch is about 45°, which subjects the abutments of the bridge to downward force and sideways force. This bridge was built in 605.

The central arch is made of 28 thin, curved limestone slabs which are joined with iron butterfly joints. This allows the arch to adjust to shifts in its supports and prevents the bridge from collapsing even when a segment of the arch breaks. The bridge has two small side arches on either side of the main arch. These side arches serve two important functions: first, they reduce the total weight of the bridge by about 15.3% or approximately 700 tons, which is vital because of the low rise-to-span ratio and the large forces on the abutments it creates. Second, when the bridge is submerged during a flood, they allow water to pass through, thereby reducing the forces on the structure of the bridge.

Li Chun's innovative spandrel-arch construction, while economising in materials, was also of considerable aesthetic merit. An inscription left on the bridge by Tang dynasty officials seventy years after its construction reads:

This stone bridge over the Xiao River is the result of the work of the Sui engineer Li Chun. Its construction is indeed unusual, and no one knows on what principle he made it. But let us observe his marvellous use of stone-work. Its convexity is so smooth, and the wedge-shaped stones fit together so perfectly... How lofty is the flying-arch! How large is the opening, yet without piers!.. Precise indeed are the cross-bondings and joints between the stones, masonry blocks delicately interlocking like mill wheels, or like the walls of wells; a hundred forms (organised into) one. And besides the mortar in the crevices there are slender-waisted iron cramps to bind the stones together. The four small arches inserted, on either side two, break the anger of the roaring floods, and protect the bridge mightily. Such a master-work could never have been achieved if this man had not applied his genius to the building of a work which would last for centuries to come.[7]

Later history and reputation

 
The Anji Bridge in 2011

During the next 1,400 years, the bridge survived at least eight wars, ten major floods and numerous earthquakes, the most recent being the 7.2-magnitude Xingtai earthquake in 1966. Yet, the support structure remains intact and the bridge is still in use. Only the ornamental railings have been replaced every few hundred years.

The Anji bridge influenced the design of later Chinese bridge structures, such as the similar Yongtong Bridge near Zhaoxian in Hebei. The Yongtong Bridge is a 26 m (85 ft) long stone segmental-arch bridge built in 1130 by the Song structural engineer Pou Qianer.[8][9]

The intriguing design of the Anji bridge has given rise to many legends. According to one legend, the bridge was built by a master architect of the mid-1st millennium BC named Lu Ban in a single night. In another story the bridge was put to the test by two immortals who crossed it at the same time, and Lu Ban saved it by wading into the water and supporting the structure.

Although Ming dynasty (1368–1644) authors compared the bridge to "a new moon rising above the clouds" and "a long rainbow hanging on a mountain waterfall",[7] it later fell into obscurity. When Professor Liang Sicheng of Tsinghua University rediscovered the bridge on a field exploration of ancient architecture in Hebei province, he made detailed measurements and published a report and drawing,[10] after which the bridge became world-famous.

Anji bridge was dedicated as an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1991.[11] In 1996, the Chinese authorities nominated it for inclusion in the World Heritage List as having "a very important place in the world bridge building history".[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ This title strictly applies only to the sum of attributes given (O’Connor, Colin: Roman Bridges, Cambridge University Press 1993, ISBN 0-521-39326-4, p.171): Various Roman stone pillar bridges featured wooden open-spandrel segmental arches as early as the 2nd century CE, among them Trajan's bridge, the longest bridge of the world to have been built for over a thousand years. Also, a dozen or more Roman close-spandrel stone segmental arch bridges are known from the 1st century BC onwards, such as the Ponte San Lorenzo (Padua), Alconétar Bridge and the Makestos Bridge (Turkey), the last having half-open spandrels. The 27 segmental arches of the Bridge at Limyra (300 ce) feature span to rise ratios between 5.3 and 6.5 to 1, making it an earlier example of a stone quarter circle segmental arch bridge. This leaves the Anji bridge the title of "the oldest open-spandrel stone quarter circle segmental arch bridge in the world".
  2. ^ Anji Bridge at Structurae
  3. ^ ""华北四宝"收集攻略及周边景点介绍 - 马蜂窝".
  4. ^ [1] The Golden Age Project
  5. ^ Dick Parry (2005). Engineering the Ancient World. History Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7524-9550-7.
  6. ^ a b c Knapp, Ronald G. (2008). Chinese Bridges: Living Architecture From China's Past. Singapore: Tuttle Publishing. pp. 122–127. ISBN 978-0-8048-3884-9.
  7. ^ a b Needham, Joseph. The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China. Cambridge University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-521-29286-7. Pages 145–147.
  8. ^ Needham, Joseph. (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 3, Civil Engineering and Nautics. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd. Page Plate CCCL.
  9. ^ http://en.structurae.de/structures/data/index.cfm?id=s0019517 Yongtong Bridge
  10. ^ Liang, Ssu-ch'eng (January 1938). "Open Spandrel Bridges of Ancient China. I. The An-chi Ch'iao at Chao-chou, Hopei". Pencil Points: 25–32.
  11. ^ "Artisan and Magician". China Today. Beijing. February 2005.
  12. ^ Anji Bridge February 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, World Heritage Site.

External links

  • Zhaozhou Bridge American Society of Civil Engineers: History and Heritage of Civil Engineering
  • Site sponsored by the Ministry of Culture of the People's Republic of China

anji, bridge, simplified, chinese, 安济桥, traditional, chinese, 安濟橋, pinyin, Ānjì, qiáo, safe, crossing, bridge, world, oldest, open, spandrel, segmental, arch, bridge, stone, construction, credited, design, craftsman, named, chun, bridge, constructed, years, du. The Anji Bridge simplified Chinese 安济桥 traditional Chinese 安濟橋 pinyin Anji Qiao lit Safe crossing bridge is the world s oldest open spandrel segmental arch bridge of stone construction 1 Credited to the design of a craftsman named Li Chun the bridge was constructed in the years 595 605 2 during the Sui dynasty 581 618 Located in the southern part of Hebei Province it is the oldest standing bridge in China It is considered one of the Four Treasures of Hebei 3 Anji BridgeThe Anji Bridge still standing after 1400 yearsCoordinates37 43 13 N 114 45 48 E 37 7203 N 114 7633 E 37 7203 114 7633 Coordinates 37 43 13 N 114 45 48 E 37 7203 N 114 7633 E 37 7203 114 7633CrossesXiao RiverLocaleZhao County in Hebei Province ChinaCharacteristicsDesignOpen spandrel stone segmental arch bridgeTotal length64 metres 210 ft Width9 6 metres 31 ft Height7 3 metres 24 ft Longest span37 37 metres 123 ft HistoryConstruction start595 CEConstruction end605 CELocation Contents 1 Name and location 2 History 3 Construction 4 Later history and reputation 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksName and location EditThe bridge is also commonly known as the Zhaozhou Bridge simplified Chinese 赵州桥 traditional Chinese 趙州橋 pinyin Zhaozhōu Qiao after Zhao County which was formerly known as Zhaozhou 趙州 Another name for the bridge is the Great Stone Bridge simplified Chinese 大石桥 traditional Chinese 大石橋 pinyin Dashi Qiao It crosses the Xiaohe River 洨河 south of the town of Zhaoxian in Zhao County approximately 52 kilometres 32 mi southeast of the provincial capital Shijiazhuang It is a pedestrian bridge and is currently open to the public In English literature it is also referred as Chiao Shui Bridge after the river it crosses 4 5 History EditStarting from 581 CE the Sui dynasty reasserted imperial control over the competing powers that had ruled various regions of China since the decline of the Han dynasty in the third century Thus immense public works projects were carried out including the rebuilding of two grand imperial capitals the excavation of the 2400 kilometer long Grand Canal and major improvements to the fortifications that predated the Great Wall Economically the long distance transport of goods and men was a critical component to the interests and sustainability of the ruling house The movement of goods by land south and southwest from the North China Plain to the Central Plains around Kaifeng and Luoyang followed a path that crossed the Xiao River near Luanzhou later Zhaozhou and now Zhaoxian in today s Hebei province Flowing west to east through a plain that was relatively low lying on both sides the Xiao River was an important artery for transporting goods but an impediment to continuous overland movement and the economic integration of China s regions 6 It was under these circumstances that Li Chun who directed masons and other craftsmen built the Anji Safe Passage Bridge also called Dashi Great Stone Bridge Although Chinese history credits Li Chun with the design and building of the Anji Bridge no contemporaneous materials recorded the process however later chronicles do make notes of it in brief 6 Among the most remarkable achievements of Chinese bridge building indeed an advancement unrivaled in the world was the creation of this segmental arch bridge of wholly stone construction This innovation which occurred between the end of the sixth century and beginning of the seventh century repudiated conventional wisdom that a semicircular arch was necessary to transfer the weight of a bridge downwards to where the arch tangentially meets the pier The double pair of openings piercing both ends of the arch spandrel which as well as accentuating its lithe curvature lightens the weight of the bridge and facilitates the diversion of flood waters by allowing them to pass through the auxiliary arches rather than pound against the spandrels The Zhaozhou Bridge is celebrated as China s oldest standing bridge and the oldest open spandrel stone bridge in the world 6 Construction Edit the elevation and arch to span ratio of a 1 4 circle arch bridge The Anji bridge is about 64 metres 210 ft long with a central span of 37 37 metres 122 6 ft It stands 7 3 metres 24 ft tall and has a width of 9 metres 30 ft The arch covers a circular segment less than half of a semicircle 84 and with a radius of 27 27 metres 89 5 ft has a rise to span ratio of approximately 0 197 7 3 to 37 metres 24 to 121 ft This is considerably smaller than the rise to span ratio of 0 5 of a semicircular arch bridge and slightly smaller than the rise to span ratio of 0 207 of a quarter circle The arch length to span ratio is 1 1 less than the arch to span ratio of 1 57 of a semicircle arch bridge by 43 thus the saving in material is about 40 making the bridge lighter in weight The elevation of the arch is about 45 which subjects the abutments of the bridge to downward force and sideways force This bridge was built in 605 The central arch is made of 28 thin curved limestone slabs which are joined with iron butterfly joints This allows the arch to adjust to shifts in its supports and prevents the bridge from collapsing even when a segment of the arch breaks The bridge has two small side arches on either side of the main arch These side arches serve two important functions first they reduce the total weight of the bridge by about 15 3 or approximately 700 tons which is vital because of the low rise to span ratio and the large forces on the abutments it creates Second when the bridge is submerged during a flood they allow water to pass through thereby reducing the forces on the structure of the bridge Li Chun s innovative spandrel arch construction while economising in materials was also of considerable aesthetic merit An inscription left on the bridge by Tang dynasty officials seventy years after its construction reads This stone bridge over the Xiao River is the result of the work of the Sui engineer Li Chun Its construction is indeed unusual and no one knows on what principle he made it But let us observe his marvellous use of stone work Its convexity is so smooth and the wedge shaped stones fit together so perfectly How lofty is the flying arch How large is the opening yet without piers Precise indeed are the cross bondings and joints between the stones masonry blocks delicately interlocking like mill wheels or like the walls of wells a hundred forms organised into one And besides the mortar in the crevices there are slender waisted iron cramps to bind the stones together The four small arches inserted on either side two break the anger of the roaring floods and protect the bridge mightily Such a master work could never have been achieved if this man had not applied his genius to the building of a work which would last for centuries to come 7 Later history and reputation Edit The Anji Bridge in 2011 During the next 1 400 years the bridge survived at least eight wars ten major floods and numerous earthquakes the most recent being the 7 2 magnitude Xingtai earthquake in 1966 Yet the support structure remains intact and the bridge is still in use Only the ornamental railings have been replaced every few hundred years The Anji bridge influenced the design of later Chinese bridge structures such as the similar Yongtong Bridge near Zhaoxian in Hebei The Yongtong Bridge is a 26 m 85 ft long stone segmental arch bridge built in 1130 by the Song structural engineer Pou Qianer 8 9 The intriguing design of the Anji bridge has given rise to many legends According to one legend the bridge was built by a master architect of the mid 1st millennium BC named Lu Ban in a single night In another story the bridge was put to the test by two immortals who crossed it at the same time and Lu Ban saved it by wading into the water and supporting the structure Although Ming dynasty 1368 1644 authors compared the bridge to a new moon rising above the clouds and a long rainbow hanging on a mountain waterfall 7 it later fell into obscurity When Professor Liang Sicheng of Tsinghua University rediscovered the bridge on a field exploration of ancient architecture in Hebei province he made detailed measurements and published a report and drawing 10 after which the bridge became world famous Anji bridge was dedicated as an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1991 11 In 1996 the Chinese authorities nominated it for inclusion in the World Heritage List as having a very important place in the world bridge building history 12 See also EditGuyue Bridge a stone arch bridge completed in 1213 in Zhejiang List of bridges in ChinaReferences Edit This title strictly applies only to the sum of attributes given O Connor Colin Roman Bridges Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 0 521 39326 4 p 171 Various Roman stone pillar bridges featured wooden open spandrel segmental arches as early as the 2nd century CE among them Trajan s bridge the longest bridge of the world to have been built for over a thousand years Also a dozen or more Roman close spandrel stone segmental arch bridges are known from the 1st century BC onwards such as the Ponte San Lorenzo Padua Alconetar Bridge and the Makestos Bridge Turkey the last having half open spandrels The 27 segmental arches of the Bridge at Limyra 300 ce feature span to rise ratios between 5 3 and 6 5 to 1 making it an earlier example of a stone quarter circle segmental arch bridge This leaves the Anji bridge the title of the oldest open spandrel stone quarter circle segmental arch bridge in the world Anji Bridge at Structurae 华北四宝 收集攻略及周边景点介绍 马蜂窝 1 The Golden Age Project Dick Parry 2005 Engineering the Ancient World History Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 7524 9550 7 a b c Knapp Ronald G 2008 Chinese Bridges Living Architecture From China s Past Singapore Tuttle Publishing pp 122 127 ISBN 978 0 8048 3884 9 a b Needham Joseph The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China Cambridge University Press 1994 ISBN 0 521 29286 7 Pages 145 147 Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 4 Physics and Physical Technology Part 3 Civil Engineering and Nautics Taipei Caves Books Ltd Page Plate CCCL http en structurae de structures data index cfm id s0019517 Yongtong Bridge Liang Ssu ch eng January 1938 Open Spandrel Bridges of Ancient China I The An chi Ch iao at Chao chou Hopei Pencil Points 25 32 Artisan and Magician China Today Beijing February 2005 Anji Bridge Archived February 21 2010 at the Wayback Machine World Heritage Site External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anji Bridge Zhaozhou Bridge American Society of Civil Engineers History and Heritage of Civil Engineering Asian Research Chinaculture org Site sponsored by the Ministry of Culture of the People s Republic of China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anji Bridge amp oldid 1120423909, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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