The bridge was built under
Augustus around 27 BC using marble blocks. The 30 m high structure was one of the largest bridges constructed by the Romans. According to the Umbrian Superintendence of Archaeological Heritage: :The complexity of the structure and a number of irregularities suggest that its construction was a lengthy affair. Evident signs of ancient restorations reveal structural failures resulting from intense use or from natural calamities. Chronicles from the Middle Ages report collapses caused by floods and earthquakes. Documentation gives a definite date for the collapsing of the third pylon, which occurred in 1855. During the 1970s reinforcement work was done on the bridge. The surviving arch has suffered damage from recent earthquakes, in particular, the 2000 quake. Restoration work is now in progress. '', an 1826 painting by
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot The bridge was a popular destination on the
Grand Tour.
James Hakewill wrote in
A picturesque tour of Italy (1816–1817): :There are few relics of antiquity that impress the traveller with greater ideas of Roman magnificence that the sight of this bridge affords... It is built with large blocks of white marble, neatly squared and fitted in, but without any appearance of cement having been used, or even cramps of iron to connect them together. Hakewill states that a description of the bridge is to be found in
Roma antiqua et restaurata by Biondo, of Forli, 1558 [sic]; and he also quotes from antiquity an epigram of
Martial in which the bridge is mentioned. The English painter
J. M. W. Turner made sketches of the bridge in 1819, which are now held by the
Tate Gallery. The French painter
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796–1875) produced in 1826 the famous painting
The Bridge at Narni, which today hangs in the
Louvre. == Dimensions ==