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Aqueduct of Bourgas, near Constantinople.

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Three Aqueducts exist in the valley of Bourgas, 8 miles from Constantinople, for conducting water into the city. One of them is remarkable for the beautiful architectural arrangement and the solidity of its construction. It is 115 feet high, and was built under the Emperor Justinian, A.D. 527. It has two ranges of arches, one above the other, and the Aqueduct supported upon the second. These Aqueducts are in some parts unlike those of Rome, which were formed on a continuous line for many miles, with a regular inclination from the source to the city, but are interrupted by reversed syphons. Instead of crossing deep and wide valleys in the usual manner of stone structures, the Aqueduct terminates on one bank in a reservoir or cistern, and a pipe is laid from it down the sloping side of the hill to a stone pier erected at a suitable distance; the pipe rises up the pier to the top where the water is discharged into a small cistern nearly as high as that in the reservoir. From the cistern, another conduit pipe descends to the bottom of the pier, passes along the ground to a second pier at a proper distance and rises to another cistern on the top of it, and so on till it rises on the crest of the opposite bank, where the water resumes its regular motion along the Aqueduct.

This plan was probably adopted with a view to avoid the expense of constructing a bridge which should preserve the general inclination of the channel-way; but it is difficult to imagine any advantage arising from the construction of the piers, instead of laying the pipe along the bottom of the valley.

Illustrations of the Croton Aqueduct

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