the roman contribution: achievement in building

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The Roman Contribution: Achievement in Building . Circus Maximus. Expanded by Julius Caesar in ~ 50 B.C.E., its purpose was to host ~4 mile-long chariot races – this required a few laps by the 12 chariots because the track was ~600 meters long and ~80 meters wide. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building
Page 2: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

Expanded by Julius Caesar in ~ 50 B.C.E., its purpose was to host ~4 mile-long chariot races – this required a few laps by the 12 chariots because the track

was ~600 meters long and ~80 meters wide

Note the starting gates (B) and the diagonal layout of the central divider

Page 3: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building
Page 4: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

Many stones have been removed for other building projects, but at times, the wall was 20 feet high.

Page 5: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

An amphitheater capable of seating 50,000(often used for gladiatorial contests)

Page 6: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

Underground vaults and tunnels were usedto house animals and slaves

Page 7: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building
Page 8: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

This arena, in modern-day France, was built around 70-100 C.E. and can hold about 16,000 people.

Page 9: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

Once a temple to Roman gods,today the Pantheon is a Christian church

Page 10: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

"M·AGRIPPA·L·F·COS·TERTIVM·FECIT", standing for Marcus Agrippa, Lucii filius, consul tertium fecit meaning, "'Made by Marcus Agrippa, son of Lucius, consul for the third time"

Was originally built by Marcus Agrippa in 27 BCE. It was destroyed by a fire in 80 CE then rebuilt under Hadrian in 125 CE.

Page 11: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

This was the first major

Roman road - it connected

Rome with SE Italy.

Page 12: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

“All Roads Lead to Rome”

Page 13: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

The Pont du Gard—This Roman-built structure is in modern-day France and was powered by gravity (descended only 17 meters over 31 miles)

Page 14: The Roman Contribution:  Achievement in  Building

49 m high, and the longest level is 275 m (~300 yards) long.

Lower level: 6 arches, 142 m long, 6 m thick, 22 m high

Middle level: 11 arches, 242 m long, 4 m thick, 20 m high

Upper level: 47 arches, 275 m long, 3 m thick, 7 m high

Was probably built sometime in the 1st century C.E.