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Roman Aqueducts and Water Supply
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Description
How did a Roman waterworks work? How were the aqueducts planned and built? What happened to the water before it arrived in the aqueduct and after it left, in catchment, urban distribution and drainage? What were the hydraulics and drainage involved?
In a comprehensive, generously illustrated study ranging through the Roman aqueducts of France, Germany, Spain, North Africa, Turkey and Israel as well as the Roman heartland of Italy, A. Trevor Hodge introduces us to these often neglected aspects of what the Romans themselves regarded as one of the greatest glories of their civilisation. Roman Aqueducts is now available for the first time in paperback, brought completely up-to-date with a new Preface and additional Bibliography.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. The Predecessors of Rome
3. Wells and Cisterns
4. The Source
5. The Auqeduct
6. Engineering Works
7. Planning and Surveying
8. Hydraulics
9. Special Uses
10. Urban Distribution
11. The Domestic Supply
12. Drains and Sewers
Appendix: facts, figures, and formulae
Abbreviations
Supplemental bibliography, 2002
Bibliography
Notes
Index
Product details
Published | Mar 26 2002 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 2nd |
Extent | 512 |
ISBN | 9780715631713 |
Imprint | Bristol Classical Press |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Brings together a vast quantity of information in a lively and highly readable form, with extensive notes and illustrations and a comprehensive bibliography. The index is particularly well done. Anyone seriously interested in the working of Roman aqueducts (and even the casually curious) will be using this valuable survey again and again.
Harry B. Evans, American Journal of Archaeology
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Hodge triumphantly combines deep scholarship and lucid interpretation, while guiding non-technical readers considerately and painlessly through the inevitable quagmire of hydraulic principles. … the book is thorough, utterly practical and highly readable – at times even funny – and it will be a long time before it is superseded.
M.J.T. Lewis, Nature