- Via Annia
The Via Annia was the consular
Roman road throughCisalpine Gaul [Merged into Italia about 43–42 BCE] which linked Atria (modernAdria ) toAquileia , passing through Patavium (modernPadua ), then, skirting the barely-inhabited lagoon, throughAltinum (a "frazione" of modernQuarto d'Altino ) andConcordia . The artery had its influence on theRomanization of the region it traversed, and was a major connection to the northeastern province ofNoricum .The road was constructed by the praetor Titus Annius Rufus and completed in 131 BCE. Through stretches of marshland in the lower valley of the Po, causeways raised the paved road above the level of the marshes. The abutments of several stone bridges have been rediscovered: one passing over the Grassaga canal was rediscovered in 1922; another passed over the former riverbed of the
Bidoggia . Some sections of the road never fell out of use. Other sections became so thoroughly lost they have only been precisely identified with the development ofaerial photography . [One such stretch of the Via Annia is that passing throughSan Donà di Piave .] Between Padua and Altino, varying lengths of the road appear in the Roman sources, leading to disagreement over which bank of theBrenta the road followed: two posting stations ("mansio nes") are known to have been established along this stretch, where fresh horses and a night's accommodation could be found.Notes
External links
* [http://sbmp.provincia.venezia.it/mir/english/musei/annia.htm Via Annia]
* [http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/viaeromanae.html Roman roads.] Bibliography for Roman roads in general.
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