(1896) Legend tells us that the bridge was made entirely of wood. The name comes from
Latin pons, pontis, "bridge", and the adjective
sublicius, "resting on pilings", from the stem of
sublicae, pilings. As a
sublica was a pick,
sublicae implies pointed sticks; that is, the bridge was supported by pilings driven into the riverbed.
Julius Caesar’s engineers used this construction to bridge the
Rhine. The bridge was rebuilt repeatedly. The date of its final disappearance is not known, but it is not in classical times. The
Via Latina went over the bridge and connected to the
Via Cassia, a road built over an old Etruscan road that led to
Veii. The bridge was a favorite resort for beggars, who used to sit upon it and demand alms, hence the Latin expression "aliquis de ponte" for a beggar. The bridge was downstream from the
Pons Aemilius, a good stone bridge with which it is sometimes confused. Between the two, the
Cloaca Maxima, or Great Sewer, was effluent into the Tiber. In the drawing by Friedrich Polack (published 1896) included with this article the pile bridge is falsely shown as a pile pier. Presumably some structure still existed prior to 1896, which was incorrectly identified. Otherwise the drawing appears to be accurate in the major details. The observer is standing on the Via Ostiensis at the foot of the Aventine, which is at his back. The river flows toward him. The stone bridge in evidence is the Pons Aemilius. The
Servian Wall goes along the bank of the river, is pierced by the
Porta Trigemina (you can see the three openings) and starts up the
Aventine. Beyond the gate is the
Forum Boarium. In the immediate foreground are the docks, or
Navalia. The pier is highly unlikely, as any ship tied up at it as shown would be unstable in the full force of the current. Moreover, the masts would have to be shipped for passage under the bridges. One can readily see how unsuitable the river was for sea-going traffic and how necessary the port of Ostia would have been to Rome. The opening of the Cloaca Maxima is between the docks and the stone bridge. Beyond the bridge you can just see the
Aesculapium on Tiber Island. Looming over the whole scene is the
Capitoline, with the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus upon it. The rising ground on the opposite side of the stone bridge is the
Janiculum. == Horatius Cocles at the bridge ==