Eleutherna Bridge | |
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View to the south
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Coordinates | 35°20′17″N 24°40′15″E / 35.33806°N 24.67083°E |
Carries | Footpath to Eleutherna |
Crosses | Confluence of Pharangitis and Chalopota streams |
Locale | Prines, Crete, Greece |
Characteristics | |
Design | Corbel arch bridge |
Material | Limestone |
Total length | 9.35 m |
Width | 5.05−5.2 m |
Height | 4−4.2 m |
Longest span | 3.95 m |
No. of spans | 1 |
History | |
Construction end | Hellenistic period |
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The Eleutherna Bridge is an ancient Greek corbel arch bridge near the Cretan town of Eleutherna, Greece.
The well-preserved structure has a single span of 3.95 m, which is quite large for a false arch. The opening is cut from the unmortared limestone blocks in the shape of an isosceles triangle, the height of which is 1.84 m. The overall length of the bridge measures 9.35 m. Its width varies from 5.1 to 5.2 m, with the structure converging slightly towards its center point above the arch (5.05 m width there). The height is between 4 and 4.2 m.
The bridge which is still in use was first described by the Englishman T.A.B. Spratt in his Travels and Researches in Crete, after he had paid a visit to the site in 1853. At the time, another ancient bridge with a triangular arch was still standing a few hundred metres away, but, judging from a later report, was destroyed some unknown time before 1893.
While there is general agreement that the two bridges of Eleutherna date to the pre-Roman period, a more precise dating is hampered by the lack of proper finds. According to Nakassis, the extant bridge was built sometime during the Hellenistic period, while the Italian scholar Galliazzo dates the construction more precisely to the end of the 4th or beginning of the 3rd century BC.