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The
Roman Empire, c125 ADThe transport system of the Roman Empire was a reflection of the
geographical characteristics and constraints of the Mediterranean basin.
The Mediterranean Ocean provided a central role to support trade between
a network of coastal cities, the most important of the Empire (Rome,
Constantinople, Alexandria, Carthage, etc.). These cities were serviced
by a road network permitting trade within their respective hinterlands.
Little fluvial transportation took place since the major pan-European
rivers, the Rhine and the Danube, were military frontiers, not the core
of the Empire. The road served numerous functions, such as military
movements, political control, cultural and economic (trade). To improve
the traveling speed posthouses with fresh horses were laid every 15
kilometers along the route and lodgings for travelers could be found
about every 40 kilometers. This 40 km corresponded to the average
distance a traveler could cross each day. Courier services could
travel twice that daily distance.The Appian Way (Via Appia), about 560 kilometers in length, was one
of the first Roman roads (Via) to be constructed (around 312 BC) under
the initiative of emperor Appius Claudius Caecus. It linked Rome to
Brundisium (Brindisi). As the empire grew,
this system was expanded to cover 80,000 kilometers of first class roads
at the height of the Roman Empire (around 200 AD). Most of the roads
were constructed by soldiers, prisoners of war and slaves. The minimum
requirement of a first class road was a width of 5 meters and a drained
stone surface. The Romans also built the world's first dual carriageway,
Via Portuensis, between Rome and its port Ostia at the mouth of the
Tiber. The Roman Road network covered most of the conquered provinces,
with Rome as the focal point (thus the saying "All roads lead to Rome").
At the center of Rome was located the milliareum aureum (the
golden milestone), from which the Roman roads radiated. Maintenance
was the responsibility of the inhabitants of the district through which
the road passed by, but access was public. Way stations where travelers
could rest and eat dotted the network. The system collapsed during the
Middle Ages because of the lack of maintenance and plundering for construction
material, but still, the remains of the Roman network provided transportation
in Europe for a thousand years. Only small segments of this system are
left today.