Roman Structures > Roman Roads > Via Aurelia
Via Aurelia
The Via Aurelia (Aurelian Way) was a Roman road in Italy constructed in approximately the year 241 BCE. The project was undertaken by C. Aurelius Cotta, who at that time was censor.[1] Cotta had a history of building roads for Rome, as he had overseen the construction of a military road in Sicily (as consul in 252 BCE, during the First Punic War) connecting Agrigentum (modern Agrigento) and Panormus (modern Palermo).[2]Contents [hide]1Background2Route3Roman bridges4See also5Notes6External linksBackground[edit]In the middle Republic, a series of roads were built throughout Italy to serve the needs of Roman expansion, including swift army movements and reasonably quick communication with Roman colonies spread throughout Italy. There also was the unintended (but beneficial) consequence of an increase in trade among Italian cities and with Rome. The roads were standardized to 15 feet (4.6 m) wide allowing two chariots to pass, and distance was marked with milestones.[3] The Via Aurelia was constructed as a part of this road construction campaign, which began in 312 BCE with the building of the Via Appia. Other roads included in this construction period were the Viae Amerina (c. 241 BCE), Flaminina, Clodia, Aemilia, Cassia, Valeria (c. 307 BCE), and Caecilia (c. 283 BCE).[4]Route[edit]The Via Aurelia crossed the Tiber River by way of the bridge Pons Aemilius, then exited Rome from its western side. After the Emperor Aurelian built a wall around Rome (c. 270–273 CE), the Via Aurelia exited from the Porta Aurelia (gates). The road then ran about 25 miles (40 km) to Alsium on the Tyrrhenian coast, north along the coast to Vada Volaterrana, Cosa, and Pisae (modern Pisa). There the original length of the Via Aurelia terminated.[5] This was an especially important route during the early and middle Republic because it linked Rome, Cosa, and Pisae. Cosa was an important colony and military outpost in Etruria, and Pisae was the only port between Genua and Rome. Consequently, it was an important naval base for the Romans in their wars against the Ligurians, Gauls and Carthaginians.[6]The Via Aurelia later was extended by roughly 320 km (200 mi) in 109 BCE by the Via Aemilia Scaura, constructed by M. Aemilius Scaurus. This road led to Dertona (modern Tortona), Placentia, Cremona, Aquilea, and Genua, from which travellers could proceed to Gallia Narbonensis (southern France) by way of the Via Postumia.[1] This followed some rebuilding of the road by the same person during his consulship in 119 BCE.[7] By the time of the high Empire, travellers could go from Rome by way of the Via Aurelia across the Alps on the Via Julia Augusta to either northern France or Gades (modern Cadiz, Spain).[8]The modern Strada Statale 1 occupies the same route, and colloquially is still referred to as, La Via Aurelia.Roman bridges[edit]For an overview of the location of Roman bridges, see List of Roman bridges.There are the remains of several Roman bridges along the road, including the Cloaca di Porta San Clementino, Ponte del Diavolo, Primo Ponte, and the Secondo Ponte (the last three in Sta Marinella).See also[edit]Roman roadRoman bridgeRoman engineeringNotes[edit]^ Jump up to: a b Hornblower, Simon, & Antony Spawforth. The Oxford Classical Dictionary. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.Jump up ^ The Cambridge Ancient History. [New] ed. London: Cambridge University Press, 1970. Volume 7, p. 548 & 643Jump up ^ Via Aurelia: The Roman Empire's Lost Highway Smithsonian Magazine, June 2009Jump up ^ The Cambridge Ancient History. [New] ed. London: Cambridge University Press, 1970. Volume 8, p. 484.Jump up ^ Platner, Samuel Ball. A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. London, Oxford University Press, H. Milford, 1929. p. 561.Jump up ^ Boatwright, Mary T., Daniel J. Gargola & Richard J.A. Talbert. A Brief History of the Romans. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2006. p. 48-49.Jump up ^ Fentress, E., 'Via Aurelia, Via Aemilia', Papers of the British School at Rome LII, 1984, 72-76Jump up ^ Boumphrey, Geoffrey Maxwell. Along the Roman Roads. London: Allen & Unwin, 1935.External links[edit]Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Aurelia, Via.Samuel Ball Platner, Via Aurelia, from A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (London: Oxford University Press, 1929).Joshua Hammer, Via Aurelia: The Roman Empire's Lost Highway, Smithsonian magazine, June 2009.Omnes Viae: Via Aurelia on the Tabula PeutingerianaRoman Roads
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- Roman Roads in Africa
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- Roman Roads in Londium
- Roman Roads in Nord
- Via Aemilia
- Via Aemilia Scauri
- Via Agrippa
- Via Amerina
- Via Anicia
- Via Annia
- Via Appia
- Via Aquillia
- Via Aquitania
- Via Argentaria
- Via Asturica Burdigalam
- Via Augusta
- Via Augusta Pretoria
- Via Aurelia
- Via Bracara Asturicam
- Via Caecilia
- Via Campana
- Via Cassia
- Via Claudia Augusta
- Via Claudia Nova
- Via Clodia
- Via Confluentana
- Via Corsica
- Via Decia
- Via Delapidata
- Via Devana Strata Diocletiana
- Via Domitia
- Via Domiziana
- Via Egnatia
- Via Fenollentis
- Via Flaminia
- Via Flavia
- Via Gallica
- Via Gemina
- Via Hadriana
- Via Heraclea
- Via Julia Augusta
- Via Labicana
- Via Latina
- Via Laurentina
- Via Lusitanorum
- Via Mala
- Via Maris
- Via Militaris
- Via Nomentana
- Via Ostiensis
- Via Pontica
- Via Popilia
- Via Portuensis
- Via Praenestina
- Via Postumia
- Via Salaria
- Via Severiana
- Via Sublacensis
- Via Traiana
- Via Traiana Nova
- Via Valeria
- Via Vallespiri
- Via Vitellia