Design and construction of Roman roads; the case of Via Egnatia in the Aegean Thrace, northern Greece
Romans, the first real road designers, designed and constructed the
first organized road system in Europe. This system was
in use for almost 2,000 years with some parts still
in use as secondary roads. Via Egnatia, the first highway to cross the
Balkan Peninsula, was the first road built by
Romans outside Italy. It was constructed in the second century B.C. The
road
began in Dyrrachium (modern Durres), by the
Adriatic sea, and passed through Serbia, Macedonia (Thessaloniki) and
Thrace terminating
at Cypsela (east of Evros river) and later extended
up to Konstantinoupolis. The total length of the road from Dirrachium
to Cypsela was about 750 km. From the study of
sections of the road surviving in the Thrace region, Greece, it appears
that
the design and the construction of the road (in the
area under discussion) was based on well-known specifications.
Specifically,
the road was always adapted to local topography,
geomorphology and ground conditions. Thus the road avoided the difficult
and unstable ground, the close curves and the steep
grades. The thickness and the layering of the pavement varied according
to the foundation conditions. In stable, rocky
ground, the pavement consisted of only one layer of well-fitted cobble
stones;
whereas, in soft and unstable ground the soft soil
was excavated and replaced by several layers of cobbles, gravels and
rubbles
held together with compacted sandy soil or lime
mortar. Up to four stone layers have been found in an archaeological
excavation
in the road pavement in the Thrace area. Some
layers were made waterproof by well-compacted clay soil. The thickness
of the
pavement varied from 25 cm to more than 150 cm. The
materials used were mainly of local origin. The width of the road
ranged
from 4 m to 8 m, depending on the ground conditions
and the traffic demand. In cities its width reached up to 20 m to
accommodate
the increased traffic. The horizontal curvature
(curves) of the road was usually more than 100 m (R>100 m). Only in a
few
cases in mountainous areas curvatures of R = 10-20 m
were found. The grade of the pavement normally was 1 to 2 percent, but
in mountain regions gradients of 16 to 18 percent
were observed. Gradients up to 20 percent were measured in a stretch of
the road 2 km west of Kavala. The cross section of
the pavement was convex, with grades perpendicular to its axis from 5 to
10 percent, for rapid drainage. Large rock blocks
were placed at the sides of the pavement, raised above the surface, to
prevent
lateral spreading of the pavement and deterring
carts and wagons from sliding off the road. A series of elongated rock
blocks
were constructed in the middle of the pavement,
possibly for separating the opposite traffic. It is suggested that the
remnants
of this Roman road be preserved not only for their
historic value, but also for their engineering significance.
GeoRef, Copyright 2004, American Geological Institute
- G. S. Xeidakis and
- E. G. Varagouli
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