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Roads Of The Romans


Guest Scanderbeg

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Guest Scanderbeg

I am devoting this topic to pictures of Roman roads throughout the world. My main focus are on small unknown ones. Doesn't mean you shouldnt put roads like the Appian way. I'm just going to post the underdogs:lol: . No 6000 slave rebels were put up on these ones.

 

This is the Via Egnatia. It stretches from Dyrrhachium on the Adriatic with Thessalonica, Adrianople, and finally Constantinople on the Bosporus. Built orginally in 146 after Gaius Ignatius, Pro-Consul of Macedon. The road was a very important one and repaired several times throughout the Middle-Ages by the Byzantine Empire.

 

http://holylandphotos.org/browse.asp?s=1,4...24&img=GNMTVE03

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Guest Scanderbeg

Here is a very long and big road named Via Aemilia. A road still used today. It was built by consul Marcus Aemilius Lepidus and went from the towns of Piacenza with Rimini, and also passing through the towns of Fidenza, Parma, Reggio, Modena, Bologna, Imola. Its remains were found in 1890. it was named after the Region of Emilia which was originally called Gallia Cisalpina or Provincia Ariminum

 

http://www.regione.liguria.it/conosc/9_vie/f_aes10.jpg

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Guest Scanderbeg

Unfortunately I cannot find any info on this road outisde of the fact that it looks damn nice. if someone can get some info of this please do. But what I do know is that is an AMAZING place to visit. Hopefully I will be able to go there soon. The city lies in Jordan. It is filled with great ruins that are in excellent shape. Here are a large number of striking monuments: Hadrian's Arch, a circus/ hippodrome, two immense temples (to Zeus and Artemis), the nearly unique Oval Piazza with a fine colonnade around it, a long colonnaded street, two theatres (the Large South Theatre and smaller North Theatre), two baths, a scatter of small temples and an almost complete circuit of city walls. In its later history, Chritianity came to dominate religion and is represented by at least 14 churches, many with superb mosaic floors. Another great area in Jordan is called Petra and it that place has even better ruins.

 

http://www.vkrp.org/studies/historical/rom...info/photos.asp

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it is a great testamony to Roman engineering that these roads are still there. Between these and their aquaducts and bridges I think we can qualify them as great builders and smart ones too. There are of course no Romans roads in the US. ;) Wish there were, in Michigan the snow and heat make for soem great potholes. :lol:

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  • 1 year later...

An equivalent of a modern day highway.

 

 

Ancient engineers did such a good job that the Via Egnatia remained in use for some 2,000 years.

 

 

http://www.hindu.com/2005/07/28/images/2005072807581501.jpg

 

 

 

 

Milestone of the Via Egnatia

Milestone of the Via Egnatia, found near the river Gallikos, circa 130 BC, Thessaloniki, Archaeological Museum.

 

http://www.macedonian-heritage.gr/Hellenic...mb240/a176a.jpg

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