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The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum)
 
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The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) [Hardcover]

Romolo Staccioli (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum February 26, 2004
While the ancient Romans were not the first society to construct a system of great roads, they did introduce important technical advancements and develop a highly organized and pervasive network that joined their territories in a gigantic web. Spanning over 50,000 miles and three continents, the network was a defensive matrix as well as a means to integrate the provinces into their empire. Without it, the empire would never have grown so vast or lasted as long. Beginning with the city streets of Rome, Romolo Staccioli's study progresses outward to the suburban routes linking Rome with surrounding towns; the Via Latina, the national road that was the backbone of the entire system; and the great "consular" roads such as the Via Appia that connected Rome with the distant regions of its sprawling empire. Staccioli considers the infrastructure (bridges, viaducts, and tunnels) that supported the system as well as the facilities (rest stations as well as vehicle and sundry services) that supported its travelers. Finally, he discusses the extent to which this system survived the end of the ancient world and remained operative, with various modifications, into the modern age.

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The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) + The Appian Way: From Its Foundation to the Middle Ages (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) + Roman Aqueducts and Water Supply (Duckworth Archaeology)
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 132 pages
  • Publisher: J. Paul Getty Museum; 1 edition (February 26, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0892367326
  • ISBN-13: 978-0892367320
  • Product Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.7 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #224,930 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Excellent Getty Museum book!, December 23, 2006
By 
Pio (Orange County, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) (Hardcover)
I visited the Getty Villa and their antiquities collection this month. In their bookstore, I was reminded of how many great books about Ancient Rome and Greece have been written with the support of the Getty. This is one of them. It was very thorough yet didn't bog me down in dry academic verbiage. I could easily choose which parts interested me and skip the rest. What I skipped were the descriptions of which roads went where. I was interested in the background of why and how the roads were made and maintained, what rules existed about useage by whom and when. You get a real sense of what life was like for the citizens and slaves of the Roman empire as they all lived their daily lives using these roads. For some reason, I found the fact that Rome had serious traffic jam problems reassuring! This book was chock full of quality photos and contained a few drawings for clearer explanations. It also had a couple of nice, colored maps showing the Roman road system in what is now present day Italy and also the system that stretched across the entire Roman Empire. I have been to several Roman ruins in Rome, Turkey and Syria so have a general interest in the subject but didn't pay too much attention to the paved paths I walked on. I was very pleased to find this book much more interesting than I expected and wish I had paid much more attention to what was under my feet. The book's cover is very attractive and its overall material quality is high. It would make a wonderful addition to the library of anyone interested in Rome or be a great gift to any modern civil engineer.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Seriously Flawed, July 22, 2011
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This review is from: The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) (Hardcover)
This book has a couple of fine qualities but is nevertheless seriously flawed. First the good news: The book is filled with a well-chosen set of excellent photographs. Also, while the text is briefer than I would have liked, it conveys maximal information for the space allotted. The text starts with the development of the streets of the city of Rome. Next, the chronology of the creation of the major roads (and some minor ones) in Italy is given along with reasonably detailed information about the places each road went to. The miltary, governmental, commercial and private uses of the roads are described. As the Empire grew, the system was expanded to encompass the entire Mediterranean world and much of Europe, and the major routes are described. Way-stations, bridges and tunnels are given due coverage. Contruction methods are described.

Now the debilitating flaw: There are only two small maps, one of Italy and another of the Empire as a whole. The maps might be appropriate to a book aimed at pre-teens, but nothing more. Imagine a book describing development of the whole U.S. highway system that only has a small map of the Interstate System that shows only the twenty-five largest cities in the country and you see how inadequate the maps are.

As good as the pictures and text are, I would not have bought this book had I known how skimpy the maps were.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Romans knew what mattered, November 28, 2009
This review is from: The Roads of the Romans (Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum) (Hardcover)
I was an army brat and I lived for some years in Europe as a kid. It seemed normal to me at the time, of course, but it wasn't until I was back in the States and in high school that it began to dawn on me just how insular the life experiences of many of my classmates were. This was especially true of history. To most of them, "history" was a theoretical subject, involving the American Revolution, and the Founding Fathers, and the Civil War, and various other iconic national experiences written with capital letters. But I had a friend in Rome whose family lived in a house that was older than the United States -- and they thought nothing of it. The bus I rode on to school traveled down streets the routes of which were twenty centuries old. That was what really got to me, deep down: The roads and the streets. They weren't museums, or even locations that people paid conscious attention to as encompassing the deep past -- not like the Pantheon or the Coliseum. That's when I knew I was going to be some sort of historian. Walk down a street in Italy or France or Germany, and you're traveling through time. Staccioli knows all about that feeling. This engrossing small volume (only about 130 pages) is filled with more than 100 color plates of the system of thoroughfares and highways constructed by Republican and Imperial Rome -- not the first road-building culture but certainly the greatest. The roads were what held the Empire together, politically and commercially, and "all roads led to Rome." Start at the Forum in the center of the city and travel in any direction -- up into Europe or down into the Mediterranean, east into Asia, or west to Britain -- the way you follow will almost certainly be laid atop an original Roman surface. The first ones were constructed not by a central bureaucracy but by individuals with private wealth, and by consular acts, almost entirely to facilitate trade. Later routes were constructed to accommodate military movement as well. That meant milestones, many of which survive, and bridges and gates and inns in every town and city the roads reached. Some routes became lined with family tombs, the ruins of which may still be seen. Gates and bridges often were built over in later centuries and many are still in use. The author shows you all of these, from all over Europe -- samples of all of them, anyway -- accompanied by detailed text that explains exactly what you're looking at and what it means. I wish I could plan a long summer vacation around this book.
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