At a time when European cities depended on three sources of fresh water for their domestic and industrial needs – rivers, spring-fed aqueducts and groundwater wells – early modern Venice added a fourth possibility: a dense network of cisterns for capturing, filtering and storing rainwater. Venice was not unique in relying on rainwater cisterns; but nowhere in Italy (indeed in Europe) was the approach so systematic and widespread, the city concerned so populous, the technology so sophisticated and the management so carefully regulated as in the lagoon city. To explore Venice's cisternsystem, a range of primary sources (medical treatises, travellers’ accounts, archival records) and the contributions of architectural, medical and socia...