healey36 wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Stone - yes.
Keeping others company, in a way, yes....
I feel like I've seen this before...is this a Roman road? The blocks are set far enough apart that the wheels of a chariot will pass through...
Correct?
healey36 wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Stone - yes.
Keeping others company, in a way, yes....
I feel like I've seen this before...is this a Roman road? The blocks are set far enough apart that the wheels of a chariot will pass through...
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:healey36 wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Stone - yes.
Keeping others company, in a way, yes....
I feel like I've seen this before...is this a Roman road? The blocks are set far enough apart that the wheels of a chariot will pass through...
Correct?
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Their purpose was to allow pedestrians to cross over what, at times, could be effluence and horse-droppings.
Roy wrote:Well, that was suitable for a Jeopardy Tournament of Champions Final Jeopardy question...
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Their purpose was to allow pedestrians to cross over what, at times, could be effluence and horse-droppings.
Good to have a safe passage over what was an open sewer // roadway.
Roy wrote:Note the wheel grooves end. Gets me wondering if they were built into the road.
webenda wrote:Roy wrote:Note the wheel grooves end. Gets me wondering if they were built into the road.
In some places, ruts were purposely cut into narrow streets to help guide carts between the stones. In other places no ruts were found in the streets so so maybe the street was closed to wheeled traffic.
webenda wrote:Roy wrote:Note the wheel grooves end. Gets me wondering if they were built into the road.
"In some places, ruts were purposely cut into narrow streets to help guide carts between the stones. In other places no ruts were found in the streets so so maybe the street was closed to wheeled traffic."
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:webenda wrote:Roy wrote:Note the wheel grooves end. Gets me wondering if they were built into the road.
"In some places, ruts were purposely cut into narrow streets to help guide carts between the stones. In other places no ruts were found in the streets so so maybe the street was closed to wheeled traffic."
Or maybe those were private streets?
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Rufus T. Firefly wrote:webenda wrote:"In some places, ruts were purposely cut into narrow streets to help guide carts between the stones. In other places no ruts were found in the streets so so maybe the street was closed to wheeled traffic."
Or maybe those were private streets?
Interesting. I have never heard of such a concept there, nor in Ancient Rome itself. Can you elaborate from personal observations or what you have learned about such streets in the Roman Empire, Rufus?
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