The walls surrounding the fountain were built with red and white stones which were probably taken from nearby Genzano di Sassa and closely resemble the stones of the facade of St. Mary of Collemaggio, which was completed about the same time. The square stones are placed in 13 rows, alternating a red and a white stone, creating a kind of chessboard pattern.
All along the perimeter are 93 spouts jutting out of stone faces, placed at man's height, so that an average-height adult would be face-to-face with the stone figures, and about one metre from each other, separated by red stone square tiles (but 6 of these separating stones are white) all having a flower in relief but one, and along the right side, which is longer than the left, also by a further small rectangular tile with a diamond figure in relief; 6 more spouts possibly added later are situated in a lower position to the right corner of the entrance. In a 1578 renovation lower basins were added, to make it easier for women to wash their laundry.
A Latin inscription with an eagle at the top is engraved in an ancient stone on the front wall of the fountain.
Fountain of 99 Spouts in L'Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy
The Fountain is situated a few hundred yards from the railway station, in the Piazza San Vito, immediately inside the Porta della Rivera in the XIV-century city walls, opposite the small Romanesque Church of St. Vito. Just like with the Trevi Fountain in Rome, the sound of flowing water is really impressive and can already be heard from afar.
ARCHITECTURE

History
In 1578 the lowest basins were added to allow women to do their washing there; the clothes were rubbed with soap and left on the fountain stairways under the sun in order to obtain a thoroughly white washing, and as a consequence the stairways were always slippery. In 1657, at the time of the great plague which killed four Aquilans out of ten, four big boilers were placed in the fountain courtyard to sterilize the clothes of the whole city. Under happier occasions, banquets used to be held in the honour of some very important persons.
The legend
Buccio wrote that the fountain was a kind of "memorial monument" for the founders, 99 castles (actually no more than 80) in the Aquilan Valley which joined to build the new town (the "urbs nova" of the inscription), each building a square with a church and a fountain surrounded by houses, and moving the population from the village of the original castle to the newly-founded city.
The monument is therefore closely connected to the origins of L'Aquila, and marked the importance of the area near the river for the newborn community, not only as a source of water but also because it allowed leather and wool crafts to flourish. The Rivera quarter had a spring of clear, perennial waters, which were channeled during the construction of the fountain. The actual location of the spring is lost and no more traceable, being the area all built up in the following centuries.
Another legend says that under a stone much bigger than the others the architect Tancredi was buried, after being executed because (different versions are given) either he refused to reveal the location of the spring, or in order that he would never reveal the location of the spring, or because, being asked whether he would be able to build another similar fountain, he said sure, he would.
How many are the 99 spouts?
The mysteries of the fountain
- What do the stone faces represent, and is there a logical sequence in them or are they just casually placed?
- Why are 6 of the separating stones white, and is there a logic in their position?
- Why only one of the 6 stones has no flower in relief, but a motif that looks like a sun or an eye?
- What is the symbolic meaning of the "corner stone" placed in the south corner, so much different from the others, representing a fish with a human face?
- What is the meaning of the numbers underlying the construction project - 93, 6, 13, and of course the legendary 99?
Special features of the Fountain
The 93 stone faces, left to right
Suggested Bibliography
- "La Rivelazione dell'Aquila", by Luca Ceccarelli and Paolo Cautilli, 2009
- "The mysteries of L'Aquila" (in Italian), seminal studies on the foundation and historical background to the monuments of the town, see a YouTube trailer of the documentary-movie based on the book.
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