Information about Sanitation In Ancient Rome
Trash
Roman trash was often left to collect in alleys between buildings in the poorer districts of the city. It sometimes became so thick that stepping stones were needed. "Unfortunately its functions did not include house to house garbage collection, and this led to indiscriminate dumping of refuse, even to the heedless tossing of it out windows." [1] As a consequence the street level in the city rose as new buildings were constructed on top of rubble and rubbish.Sewage
The first sewers of ancient Rome are estimated to have been built between 800 and 735 B.C. Drainage systems had been slowly evolving and began, primarily, as a means to drain marshes and for storm water runoff. The sewage system as a whole didn’t really take off until the arrival of the Cloaca Maxima, probably one of the best known examples of sanitation from the ancient world. Most sources credit its construction as having taken place during the reign of the three Etruscan kings in the sixth century B.C... This “great sewer” was originally built for the purpose of draining the low-lying land that ran through the Forum. Over time the network of sewers that ran through the city expanded and most of them, including some drains, hooked up with the Cloaca Maxima, the contents of which were emptied into the Tiber River. In 33 B.C., under the emperor Augustus, the Cloaca Maxima was enclosed, creating a large tunnel. From very early times the Romans, in imitation of the Etruscans, learned how to carry off by underground channels the excessive rains that might otherwise wash away the precious top-soil that farmers needed, and to drain swamps ( such as the Pontine marshes) by ditches, or marshy regions by subterranean channels; the Cloaca Maxima ( first built, according to tradition, under the kings, but probably actually built in the fourth century and reconstructed under Augustus) still drains the Forum Romanum and the hills about it. Strabo, a Greek author who lived from about 60 B.C. to 24 A.D., admired the ingenuity of the Romans in his Geography Book by saying that,“The sewers, covered with a vault of tightly fitted stones, have room in some places for hay wagons to drive through them. And the quantity of water brought into the city by aqueducts is so great that rivers, as it were, flow through the city and the sewers; almost every house has water tanks, and service pipes, and plentiful streams of water...In short, the ancient Romans gave little thought to the beauty of Rome because they were occupied with other, greater and more necessary matters” (Shelton, 67).
References
- ^ Casson, Lionel. Everyday Life in Ancient Rome, revised and expanded edition. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. p 40.
- Amulree, Lord. “Hygienic Conditions in Ancient Rome and Modern London.” Medical History.(Great Britain), 1973, 17(3) pp.244-255.
- Greene, William Chase. The Achievement of Rome; A Chapter in Civilization. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1938
- James, Peter and Nick Thorpe. Ancient Inventions. New York: Balentine Books, 1994.
- Owens, E.J. The City in the Greek and Roman World. London: Routledge, 1991.
- Shelton, Joann. As the Romans Did: A Source Book in Roman Social History. New York: Oxford University Press,1988
- Stambaugh, John E. The Ancient Roman City. Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988.
See also
External links
- The History of Plumbing - Pompeii & Herculaneum
- Waters Of Rome
- http://www.plumbingworld.com/historyroman.html The History of Roman plumbing and sewers
- http://www.sewerhistory.org/chronos/early_roots.htm Ancient Sewage
- Imperial Rome Water Systems
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The Cloaca Maxima was one of the world's earliest sewage systems. Constructed in ancient Rome in order to drain local marshes and remove the waste of one of the world's most populous cities, it carried an effluent to the River..... Click the link for more information.
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Dictator of the Roman Republic
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Dictator of the Roman Republic
Reign October, 49 BC–March 15, 44 BC
Full name Gaius Julius Caesar
Born 12 July 100 BC - 102 BC
Rome, Roman Republic
Died 15 March 44 BC (aged 57)
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For the album by CMX, see .
The Cloaca Maxima was one of the world's earliest sewage systems. Constructed in ancient Rome in order to drain local marshes and remove the waste of one of the world's most populous cities, it carried an effluent to the River..... Click the link for more information.
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