San Leone (river)
Appearance
(Redirected from Sant'Anna (river))
San Leone | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Region | Sicily |
Physical characteristics | |
Mouth | Mediterranean Sea |
• location | San Leone |
• coordinates | 37°15′52″N 13°34′40″E / 37.2644°N 13.5777°E |
Length | 26 km2 (10 sq mi) |
Basin size | 206 km2 (80 sq mi) |
The San Leone is a river in the Province of Agrigento, Sicily, Italy. Its main stream is 26 kilometres (16 mi) long, and it has a drainage basin of 206 square kilometres (80 sq mi).[1] Its source is in the commune of Santa Elisabetta and it discharges into the Mediterranean Sea in San Leone, a frazione of the city of Agrigento. It has various names along its course: at its source it is called Akragas, further downstream Drago, then Sant'Anna (the ancient Hypsas)[2] and the final 3 km until its mouth San Leone. Its largest tributary is the San Biagio (also: San Benedetto).[1] In the 19th century it was known as Fiume di Girgenti.[3]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Bacino Idrografico del Fiume San Leone ed Area Intermedia compresa fra i Bacini del F. San Leone e del F. Naro (067), Regione Siciliana, p. 89
- ^ Polybius is the only author who mentions the Agrigentine Hypsas by name, and he states distinctly that it was the river flowing at the foot of the hill of Agrigentum on the W. and SW. See Polybius, Histories, tr. by W. R. Paton (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1922–1927), IV : Fragments of Books 9-15 (1925), 9.27.
- ^ Edward Herbert Bunbury, ‘Agrigentum’, in Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, ed. by William Smith (London: Walton and Maberly; John Murray, 1854).