- Aqua Claudia
"Aqua Claudia" (Latin, literally "the Claudian water") was an
aqueduct which like the "Anio Novus " was begun byCaligula in38 A.D. and completed by Claudius in52 ¹. Its main springs, the Caeruleus and Curtius, were situated 300 paces to the left of the thirty-eighth milestone of the "Via Sublacensis ". After being in use for ten years, the supply failed, and was interrupted for nine years, untilVespasian restored it in71 and ten years laterTitus once more.tructure
The channel length was 45-46 miles (ca. 69 km, most of which was underground) in different times and volume at the springs was 191,190 cubic metres in 24 hours. After building the "Arcus Neroniani" by
Nero , one of the branches of the "Aqua Claudia", the aqueduct could provide all 14 Roman districts with water. Directly after its filtering tank, near the seventh mile of the "Via Latina ", it finally emerged on to arches, which increase in height as the ground falls towards the city. It is also one of the two ancient aqueducts that flowed through thePorta Maggiore , the other being the Anio Novus. It is described in some detail byFrontinus in his work published in the later first century, "De Aqueductae".Note
1-
Frontius (Aq. 1.13)External links
* [http://www.roman-empire.net/maps/rome/aqua-claudia.html Map of Rome with "Aqua Claudia" running (red)]
ee also
*
Ancient Roman technology
*Frontinus
*List of aqueducts in the city of Rome
*List of aqueducts in the Roman Empire
*List of Roman aqueducts by date
*Roman technology
*Roman engineering
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