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Ponte Sant'Angelo: Difference between revisions

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historical context
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{{Era|AC2|ACB}}
{{Era|AC2|ACB}}
[[File:Ponte Sant'Angelo 2 v.png|thumb|270px|The Ponte Sant'Angelo.]]
[[File:Ponte Sant'Angelo 2 v.png|thumb|270px|The Ponte Sant'Angelo.]]
'''Ponte Sant'Angelo''' (English: '''Hadrian's Bridge''') connects the [[Vaticano district]] to the [[Centro district]] across the [[Tiber River]] in [[Rome]].<ref name="brotherhood"/>
'''Ponte Sant'Angelo''' (English: '''Hadrian's Bridge''') was a structure that connected the [[Vaticano district]] to the [[Centro district]] across the [[Tiber River]] in the [[Italy|Italian]] city of [[Rome]].<ref name="brotherhood"/>


==Database Entry==
==Database Entry==
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==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*This is one of the few landmarks to appear in both ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''.
*Ponte Sant'Angelo is one of the few landmarks to appear in both ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''.
*The bridge is a restricted area in ''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' except for some missions.
*The bridge is a restricted area in ''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'', except for certain missions.
*The bridge is not a restricted area during the memory [[The Ezio Auditore Affair]].
*The bridge is not a restricted area during the memory [[The Ezio Auditore Affair]].  
*The bridge was formerly known as Pons Aelius or Ponte Aelius.
*The bridge was formerly known as Pons Aelius or Ponte Aelius.



Revision as of 09:33, 21 September 2011


The Ponte Sant'Angelo.

Ponte Sant'Angelo (English: Hadrian's Bridge) was a structure that connected the Vaticano district to the Centro district across the Tiber River in the Italian city of Rome.[1]

Database Entry

This build was built to cross the Tevere from the city centre to Hadrian's freshly completed mausoleum which later became the Castel Sant'Angelo. In 1450, its balustrades buckled due a[sic] surging mob of pilgrims making their way to the Basilica San Pietro, leading to a mass drowning. Later, in the 16th century, the structure was used to display the bodies of executed men to the public. Is it just me, or was this bridge not particularly cheery?[2][1]

Trivia

References

Gallery