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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAll roads in ancient Rome stretched far longer than previously known, study shows
WASHINGTON (AP) As the saying went, all roads once led to Rome and those roads stretched 50% longer than previously known, according to a new digital atlas published Thursday.
The last major atlas of ancient Roman road networks was published 25 years ago. Since then, advances in technology and other newly accessible sources have greatly expanded researchers ability to locate ancient roadways.
Over five years, a team of archaeologists combed through historical records, ancient journals, locations of milestones and other archival data. Scientists then looked for clues in satellite imagery and aerial photography, including recently digitized photos taken from planes during World War II.
When ancient accounts hinted at lost roads in a certain area, researchers analyzed the terrain from above to spot subtle traces things like faint differences in vegetation, soil variations or shifts in elevation, as well as traces of ancient engineering like raised mounds or cut hillsides that revealed where Roman lanes once ran.
https://apnews.com/article/ancient-rome-roads-discovered-satellite-photos-ee51c5dbc8d4912bf5b8a7895bf1d440
cachukis
(3,563 posts)culturally. They managed pretty well for a long time.
GJGCA
(156 posts)... and in fact this quote establishes your point, I think:colonies tended to become culturally integrated in their surroundings within a few generations
But Rome and colony are like PB&J:
A Roman colonia was originally a settlement of Roman citizens, establishing a Roman outpost in federated or conquered territory, for the purpose of securing it. ... It is also the origin of the modern term "colony".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonia_(Roman)
cachukis
(3,563 posts)erected shrines in Rome. They invited what was left of management to a ceremony to consecrate that shrine.
Management of such a widespread realm worked well with enthusiasm. But it seems the real blow during Justinian's reign, was a debilitating plague.
Lot going on.
Norrrm
(3,399 posts)Watch this video on Youtube itself and do a topic search for --- Roman roads.
Many articles.
ornotna
(11,388 posts)Very interesting. Some of the data came from old WW2 Aerial Photos' And early satellite data.
canetoad
(19,821 posts)I came upon this site - map of Roman roads online. https://itiner-e.org/
There is also a kmz file for Google Earth (not maps) with Roman roads, forts etc.