The Roman Empire had an impressive road network. A new dataset now visualizes the road map, adding over 100,000 kilometers of ...
A new comprehensive map reveals the true scale of the ancient Roman road network – but it is still incomplete.
It’s no secret that the Romans liked to build roads. But European researchers say they've discovered an extra 100,000 ...
Meet Itiner-e, a new high-resolution digital dataset and map of the Roman Empire’s roads around 150 CE. A team of researchers ...
At the height of its dominance, the Roman Empire included over 55 million people, stretching from Britain to Egypt and Syria ...
By 150 CE, the Empire was carved up and maintained by a network of stone/gravel/sand highways stretching 180,000 miles.
Archaeologists have compiled the most detailed map yet of roads throughout the Roman Empire in AD 150, totalling almost ...
What – to dip briefly into the world of Monty Python’s Life Of Brian – did the Romans ever do for us? Apart, of course, from ...
“These Roman roads—both paved and unpaved—gave structure to massive cultural shifts that affected Western history for the ...
A new high resolution digital dataset and map — named Itiner-e — of roads throughout the Roman Empire around the year 150 CE is presented in research ...