Origins of Roman Engineering
Although the ancient Romans are generally famous for their advanced
engineering accomplishments, most of their own inventions were improvements on older ideas, concepts and inventions.
Cement was originally invented in Egypt, although the Romans improved the formula. Technology for bringing running water into cities was also invented in the east. The architecture used in Rome was strongly influenced by
Greek and
Etruscan sources.
Roads were common at that time, but the Romans improved their design and perfected the construction methodologies to the extent that many of their roads are still in use today.
Use of Water
Main articles: Aqueduct (Roman)
Three hundred million gallons of water were brought into Rome by 11 different
aqueducts each day. Per capita water usage in Rome matched that of modern-day cities like New York City or modern Rome. Most water was for public uses, such as
baths and sewers. The aqueducts could stretch from ten to sixty miles long, and decreased from an elevation of one thousand feet above sea level at the source, to two hundred feet when they reached the reservoirs around the city. Roman engineers used
Siphons to force water uphill when they judged it impractical to build a raised aqueduct across a particular depression.
The Romans were among the first civilizations to harness the power of water. They built some of the first
watermills outside of Greece for grinding flour and spread the technology for constructing watermills throughout the Mediterranean.
Architecture
Main articles: Roman architecture
The buildings and architecture of Ancient Rome were impressive even by modern standards. The
Circus Maximus, for example, was large enough to be used as a stadium, and at other times could be flooded with water to create naval battles, purely for entertainment.
Materials
The most common materials used were
brick,
cement and
marble. Brick came in many different shapes. Curved bricks were used to build columns, and triangular bricks were used to build walls.
Marble was mainly a decorative material. Caesar
Augustus once boasted that he had turned Rome from a city of stone to a city of marble. The Romans had originally brought marble over from Greece, but later found their own quarries in northern Italy.
Cement, also known as
mortar, was originally invented in Asia. It was made of hydrated lime (calcium oxide) mixed with sand and water. The Romans discovered that substituting or supplementing the sand with a
pozzolanic additive, such as volcanic ash, would produce a very hard cement, known as hydraulic mortar or
hydraulic cement. They used it for more repetitive tasks, especially their roads.
Roman Roads
Main articles: Roman roads

Via Appia, a road connecting the city of
Rome to the Southern parts of
Italy, remains usable even today.
Roman roads were constructed to be immune to floods and other environmental hazards. Many roads built by the Romans are still in use today.
There was no standard design to a Roman road. However, most roads were composed of five layers. The bottom layer, called ''pavimentum'', was one inch thick and made of mortar. Above this were four strata of masonry. The layer directly above the pavimentum was called the ''statumen''. It was one foot thick, and was made of stones bound together by cement or clay. Above that, there were the ''rudens'', which were made of ten inches of rammed concrete. The next layer, the ''nucleus'', was made of twelve to eighteen inches of successively laid and rolled layers of concrete. ''Ass Crusta''of silex or lava polygonal slabs, one to three feet in diameter and eight to twelve inches thick, were laid on top of the rudens. The final upper surface was made of concrete or well smoothed and fitted flint.
Generally, when a road encountered an obstacle, the Romans preferred to engineer a solution to the obstacle rather than redirecting the road around it. Bridges were constructed over all sizes of waterway, marshy ground called for the construction of raised causeways with firm foundations, and hills and outcroppings were frequently cut or tunneled through rather than avoided.
Roman military engineering
Main articles: Roman military engineering
Engineering was also institutionally ingrained in the Roman military, who constructed forts, camps, bridges, roads, ramps, pallisades, and siege equipment amongst others.
See also
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Ancient Roman cranes
External links
★
Traianus - Technical investigation of Roman public works