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Aqua Virgo - Wikipedia The Aqua Virgo was one of the eleven Roman aqueducts that supplied the city of ancient Rome It was completed in 19 BC by Marcus Agrippa, during the reign of the emperor Augustus [1]: 28 [2]: §10 (p 350-1) [3]: 149 [4]: 167 [5][6] and was built mainly to supply the contemporaneous Baths of Agrippa in the Campus Martius [4]: 167
Aqua Virgo: A 2000-year Roman aqueduct that still works The conduit of the Aqua Virgo ran underground within a closed channel (specus) before appearing on the Pincian Hill just beneath the Horti Luculliani, or the gardens of Lucullus, located above what is now the modern Piazza di Spagna
The Fall Of Aqua Virgo: Reasons Behind Its Termination The Aqua Virgo, one of ancient Rome's most enduring aqueducts, was terminated in the 8th century AD during the Gothic Wars, primarily due to deliberate destruction by the Ostrogoths under Vitiges
Roman Aqueducts | Aqua Virgo The aqueduct fell into disuse with the fall of the Western Roman Empire, but was fully restored nearly a whole millennium later during the Renaissance to take its current form as the Acqua Vergine The Aqua Virgo was completed in 19 BC by Marcus Agrippa, during the reign of the emperor Augustus
Summary Of The Aqua Virgo (19 BC) | Memory Wizards Step back in time to ancient Rome, where the Aqua Virgo, a marvel of engineering, brought life-giving water to the bustling city Dive into the world of Agrippa, the visionary behind this aqueduct, and discover the secrets of its construction in 19 BC
Aqua Virgo: the only still functioning Roman Aqueduct of the Roman . . . The Aqua Virgo route crossed the Campo Marzio and ended at the Terme di Agrippa and, thanks to a secondary branch, to Trastevere Initially the Aqua Virgo supplied private homes and public works, bringing in the city something like 103 thousand cubic meters of water per day, 1,202 liters per second
Virgo Aqueduct - Aqua Virgo - CulturalHeritageOnline. com The Virgin Aqueduct (Aqua Virgo) is the only one of the eleven main aqueducts of ancient Rome that has remained in operation uninterrupted to this day, feeding the monumental fountains of the Baroque city, including the Trevi Fountain
Aqua Virgo | Digital Augustan Rome The Virgo, which served the *Thermae of Agrippa, the *Stagnum Agrippae, and the *Euripus (Evans 105), was instrumental to Agrippa’s building program in the Campus Martius
Roman Monographs - Aqueducts · part III, page 3 - the Aqua Virgo, the . . . After the 6th century, the Aqua Virgo was left the main source of running water in Rome, yet with a reduced flow, so in order to keep it working, it was restored and partly altered several times The earliest works were sponsored by pope Hadrian I in the late 8th century
Aqua Virgo - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia The Aqua Virgo was one of the eleven Roman aqueducts that supplied the city of ancient Rome The aqueduct fell into disuse with the fall of the Western Roman Empire, but was fully restored nearly a whole millennium later during the Renaissance to take its current form as the Acqua Vergine The Aqua