, by Raphael , 1516 The Via Dolorosa Latin , Way of Grief or Way of Suffering is a street, in two parts ... Capitolina. The Via Dolorosa is the northern decumanus The Via Dolorosa is the modern remnant ... of the Tyropoeon Valley these two cardines converge near the Damascus Gate , close to the Via Dolorosa. If the Via Dolorosa had continued west in a straight line across the two routes, it would ... now the Via Dolorosa west of the Cardo was constructed south of its eastern portion, creating the discontinuity ... no actual stops during the route along the Via Dolorosa itself. ref name Murphy O Connor By the 8th century, however, the route went via the western hill instead starting at Gethsemene, it continued ... name Murphy O Connor Image Via Dolorosa.jpg thumb left 200px Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem. During the Middle ... official tours of the Via Dolorosa, from the Holy Sepulchre to the House of Pilate opposite the direction ... of the Via Dolorosa was intimately linked to devotional practices in Europe. The Friars Minor were .... Necessarily, such devotional literature expanded on the terse accounts of the Via Dolorosa in the Bible ..., a number of events, marked by stations on the Via Dolorosa, emerged in devotional literature and on the physical ... now indicate that the early route of the Via Dolorosa on the Western hill was actually a more realistic ... of the present Via Dolorosa with the biblical route is based on the assumption that the Praetorium ... Jesus took a different path 4VF News April 10, 2009 ref File 19 Shop on the Via Dolorosa near Eece Homo Arch, Jerusalem.jpg thumb Shop on the Via Dolorosa near Eece Homo Arch, Jerusalem, 1891 Current traditional stations Image Via Dolorosa 09 .jpg thumb right 200px Sign along Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem ... east along the Via Dolorosa the opposite direction to the usual westward pilgrimage , began and ended ... , Hebrew language Hebrew , and Arabic language Arabic for their signs, the name Via Dolorosa is used .... Adjacent to the Church of Ecce Homo is an arch, running across the Via Dolorosa this arch was originally ... more details
The Via Casilina was an ancient Roman road in Latium . It was created from the fusion of two other ancient Roman roads, the Via Latina and the Via Labicana . It connected Rome to ancient Casilinum today Capua near Naples . It entered Rome in Porta Maggiore , the most monumental gate of the Aurelian walls . Category Roman roads in Italy Casilina ancient rome stub Italy road stub bg ca Via Casilina es V a Casilina it Via Casilina pl Via Casilina sv Via Casilina ... more details
Via Cavour may refer to Via Cavour, Florence Via Cavour, Palermo Via Cavour, Rome Via Cavour, Torino Roadindex Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Longcomment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. Category Article Feedback 5 it Via Cavour ... more details
Via Ardeatina was an ancient road of Rome leading to the town of Ardea RM Ardea , after which it is named. Ardea lay 24 miles 39 kilometers distant from Rome. External links http penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer E Gazetteer Places Europe Italy Lazio Roma Rome Texts PLATOP Via Ardeatina.html Lacus Curtius Via Ardeatina Category Roman roads in Italy Ardeatina, Via Ancient Rome stub ca Via Ardeatina it Via Ardeatina uk Italy road stub ... more details
Via Nazionale is a street name in several Italian towns and cities, including Cortona Policastro Bussentino Via Nazionale Rome Rome Trieste geodis it Via Nazionale ja ... more details
For the pilgrimage trail in Lower Austria Via Sacra Wienerwald Image sacredroad.jpg thumb right 280px Modern sign of the Via Sacra. The Via Sacra Lang la Sacred Road was the main street of ancient Rome , leading from the top of the Capitoline Hill , through some of the most important religious sites of the Roman Forum Forum where it is the widest street , to the Colosseum . The road was part of the traditional route of the Roman Triumph that began on the outskirts of the city and proceeded through the Roman Forum . In the 5th century BC, the road was supported by a substructure to protect it from the rain. Later it was paved and during the reign of Nero it was lined with colonnades. The road provided the setting for many deeds and misdeeds of Rome s history, the solemn religious festivals, the magnificent triumphs of victorious generals, and the daily throng assembling in the Basilicas to chat, throw dice, engage in business, or secure justice. DEFAULTSORT Sacra, Via Category Ancient Roman roads in Rome Category Streets in Rome Category Topography of ancient Rome Italy road stub bs Via Sacra bg ca Via Sacra cs Via Sacra cy Via Sacra de Via Sacra es V a Sacra eu Via Sacra fr Voie Sacr e Rome it Via Sacra he la Via Sacra nl Via Sacra no Via Sacra pl Via Sacra pt Via Sacra ru sk Via Sacra fi Via sacra sv Via Sacra tr Via Sacra uk Via Sacra vi Via Sacra zh ... more details
File Via popilia.jpg thumb A sector of the Via Popilia Capua Rhegium in the modern province of Reggio Calabria . The Via Popilia is the name of two different ancient Roman road s begun in the consulship of Publius Popilius Laenas . The first road was an extension of the Via Flaminia from Ariminum around the north of the Adriatic through the region that later became Venice . The name of this road continues as a street name in modern Rimini , which, as Ariminum, was the junction point between the Via Flaminia from Rome, the Via Aemilia along the edge of the Po River Po valley, and the northern Via Popilia. The second ran from Capua to Rhegium on the Straits of Messina . An archaeological discovery of part of its itinerarium engraved on stone The Polla Tablet brought it more fully into the light of history. Roman bridges main List of Roman bridges There are the remains of at least one Roman bridge along the road, which is the Ponte sul Savuto. See also Roman road Roman bridge Roman engineering External links http www.csun.edu hcfll004 polla.html The Polla Tablet http www.omnesviae.org nl iter Capvae Regio Omnes Viae Via Popilia on the Peutinger Map br List of Roman roads coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Popilia Italy road stub bg de Via Popilia el es V a Popilia fr Via Popilia it Via Capua Rhegium la Via Popilia pl Via Popillia Annia sv Via Popilia ... more details
italictitle Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Image Iberian Peninsula in 125.svg thumb 330px right The Iberian peninsula in 125, showing the Via Augusta by its other name, Via Herculea . Image Via Augusta map fr.svg thumb right 330px Map of Via Augusta in Roman Hispania, between Gades Cadiz and Narbo Martius Narbonne . Via Augusta also known as Via Herculea or Via Exterior was a Ancient Rome Roman road crossing all the Hispania Province, from C diz in the southern tip of current Spain , to the Coll de Panissars, where it crossed the Pyrenees close to the Mediterranean Sea , and joined the Via Domitia . The road stretched around convert 1500 km mi 2 , passing through the cities of C diz Gades C diz , Cartagena, Spain Carthago Nova Cartagena , Valencia, Spain Valentia Valencia , Sagunto Saguntum Sagunto , Tarragona Tarraco Tarragona , Barcelona Barcino Barcelona , and Girona Gerunda Girona . It had branches passing through Seville Hispalis Seville where it joined the Via Lusitanorum , C rdoba, Spain C rdoba , and M rida, Spain Emerita Augusta M rida . The road was named after Emperor Augustus , who ordered it renovated between 8 BC and 2 BC . It was mainly a commercial road. Its path is currently followed by the N 340 road and the A 7 highway. North of Tarragona there remains a Roman Triumphal arch , the Arc de Ber , around which the road divides. At Martorell , the ancient Via crosses the river Llobregat on the Pont del Diable which dates from the High Middle Ages in its current form. List of Roman roads Coord missing Spain Category Roman roads in Spain Augusta, Via Ancient Rome stub Europe road stub ca Via Augusta de Via Augusta es V a Augusta eu Via Augusta fr Via Augusta it Via Augusta he la Via Augusta nl Via Augusta pt Via Augusta sv Via Augusta ... more details
Via Tiburtina is an ancient road in Italy leading east northeast from Rome to Tivoli, Italy Tivoli Latin, Tibur . It was built by the Roman empire Roman consul Marcus Valerius Maximus around 286 BC and later lengthened to the territories of the Marsi and the Equi , in the Abruzzo , as Via Tiburtina Valeria Via Valeria . Its total length was approximately 200  km from Rome to Aternum the modern Pescara . It exited Rome through the Aurelian Wall at the Porta Tiburtina , and through the Servian Wall at the Porta Esquilina . A former state road with the same name exists today and follows the same path. Historians assert that the Via Tiburtina must have come into existence as a trail during the establishment of the Latin League . Though afterward it became an important thoroughfare, the first portion of the Via Tiburtina always retained its original name of Via Valeria , which applied only to the portion of the road beyond Tibur. It is difficult to determine the last portion of the course of the Via Tiburtina from the Albulae Aquae to Tibur. Roman bridges File Ponte Lucano.jpg thumb 350px The Ponte Lucano, with tomb of Plautius Lucanus, c. 1840 For an overview of the location of Roman bridges, see List of Roman bridges . There are the remains of several Roman bridges along the road, including the Ponte Lucano and Ponte Mammolo. See also Roman road Roman bridge Roman engineering Via Valeria References 1911 External links http www.omnesviae.org iter ROMA Tibori Omnes Viae Via Tiburtina on the Peutinger map List of Roman roads coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Tiburtina, Via Category Transport in Abruzzo Italy road stub bg de Via Tiburtina fr Voie Tiburtine it Via Tiburtina Valeria la Via Tiburtina nl Via Tiburtina ja no Via Tiburtina pl Via Tiburtina pt Via Tiburtina ru sv Via Tiburtina Valeria uk ... more details
Image CPU VIA EDEN ESP N8000.jpg Eden N 800MHz processor, next to capacitors and VIA CLE266 northbridge. Its size is only 1.5 1.5cm heatsink removed . thumb right VIA Eden is a name of a variant of VIA Technologies VIA s VIA C3 C3 VIA C7 C7 CPU processors , designed to be used in embedded devices. They have smaller package sizes, lower power consumption, and somewhat lower computing performance than their C equivalents, due to reduced clock rates. They are often used in VIA EPIA EPIA mini ITX , nano ITX , and Pico ITX motherboard s. The Eden is available in four main versions Eden ESP Samuel 2 and Nehemiah cores 300  MHz 1.0  GHz EBGA 35mm 35mm package, 66 100 133  MHz FSB Eden N Nehemiah core 533  MHz 1.0  GHz NanoBGA 15mm 15mm package, 133  MHz FSB Eden Esther core 400  MHz 1.2  GHz NanoBGA2 21mm 21mm package, 400 MT s FSB Eden ULV Esther core 500  MHz 1.5  GHz NanoBGA2 21mm 21mm package, 400 MT s FSB The Eden ULV 500  MHz was the first variant to achieve a 1W TDP ref http www.via.com.tw en resources pressroom pressrelease.jsp?press release no 1467 VIA Eden ULV 500MHz press release ref . See also List of VIA Eden microprocessors References Reflist External links http www.via.com.tw en products processors eden VIA Eden Processors Low Power Fanless Processing http www.silentpcreview.com article17 page1.html VIA s Small & Quiet Eden Platform VIA Category VIA Technologies Compu hardware stub de VIA Eden eo Eden ULV ja VIA Eden sh VIA Eden zh VIA Eden ... more details
orphan date June 2010 refimprove date November 2009 VIA Primo is a Bus Rapid Transit service to be provided by VIA Metropolitan Transit in San Antonio, Texas. It will be located along the Fredricksburg Road Corridor from the South Texas Medical Center , through to Deco District to Downtown San Antonio . It is also going to connect the University of Texas at San Antonio s main campus to its downtown campus. ref VIA Reforms http www.mysanantonio.com news traffic VIA well along road to change.html ref VIA Primo is scheduled to open in 2012 and will be VIA Metropolitan Transit s first non conventional bus offering. ref VIA Bus Rapid Transit http viabrt.net Content BRTMain.aspx ref Notes references Category Bus rapid transit in Texas Category Proposed public transportation in the United States ... more details
File Voieprenestine planlatium.jpg thumb 250px Route of Via Praenestina from Rome in a map of ancient Latium . The Via Praenestina modern Italian Via Prenestina was an ancient Roman road of central Italy . It was initially called Via Gabina , from Gabii , the ancient city of Latium where it ended. It received the new name having been prolonged to Praeneste modern Palestrina after the latter city it continued towards the Apennines towards the source of the Anio River until joining the Via Latina at Anagni . References 1911 br List of Roman roads coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Praenestina Italy road stub bg ca Via Praenestina es V a Prenestina fr Voie Pr nestine it Via Prenestina la Via Praenestina pl Via Praenestina ru uk ... more details
File La via del Banzi.jpg thumb right Panoramic view in Riomaggiore La via dell Amore or The Way of Love Via de l Am u in the Ligurian Romance language Ligurian language is a pedestrian street overlooking the sea, with a run of just over one kilometer, linking the villages of Riomaggiore and Manarola , Cinque Terre , in Liguria Italy . The street is one of the most important tourist attractions in the area and is an integral part of the Cinque Terre National Park , a World Heritage Site . Gallery gallery File Got to love you.jpg File Natale ar cess.jpg File La via del Banzi.jpg File Un dos tres carbosa.jpg File I love scamuzzo.jpg File Via dell Amore Manarola DSCF9115.JPG gallery External Links http www.itinerariitaliani.com luogviaamore.htm Itinerariitaliani.com http www.cinqueterre.com ita information hiking 2 1.php Page on Cinqueterre.com http www.baranin.com via dell amore Page on Baranin.com Category World Heritage Sites in Italy Category Panoramic walks it Via dell Amore lmo Via de l Am r nl Via dell Amore ru uk ... more details
File Postumia.jpg thumb 250px A stretch of the Via Postumia reconstructed under the Arco dei Gavi in Verona , Italy . The Via Postumia was an ancient Roman road of northern Italy constructed in 148 BC by the consul Spurius Postumius Albinus Magnus . It ran from the coast at Genoa Genua through the mountains to Dertona , Piacenza Placentia the termination of the Via Aemilia Lepidi and Cremona , just east of the point where it crossed the Po River . From Cremona the road ran eastward to Bedriacum , where it forked, one branch running to the left to Verona , the other to the right to Mantua , Gemona and Aquileia . The military occupation of Liguria depended upon this road, and several of the more important towns owed their origin largely to it. Cremona was its central point, the distance being reckoned from it both eastwards and westwards. The Via Julia Augusta is the name given to the Roman road by Augustus Caesar s efforts starting in 13 BC to merge the Via Aemilia Scauri with the Via Postumia, running from Placentia modern Piacenza to a triumphal arch in La Turbie . It is later extended to Arelates modern Arles joining the Via Domitia, through Derthona Tortona , Vada Sabatia Vado Ligure , Albingaunum Albenga and Album Intimilium Ventimiglia . The ancient Arco dei Gavi still marks the Via Postumia s branch leading to Verona. References 1911 br List of Roman roads coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Postumia Italy road stub bg ca Via Post mia de Via Postumia el fr Via Postumia it Via Postumia la Via Postumia hu Via Postumia ja pl Via Postumia ru sh Via Postumia fi Via Postumia uk ... more details
italictitle File Map of Roman roads in Italy.png thumb Route of Via Cassia in green . The Via Cassia was an important Roman road striking out of the Via Flaminia near the Milvian Bridge in the immediate vicinity of Rome and, passing not far from Veii traversed Etruria . The Via Cassia passed through Baccanae , Sutri Sutrium , Bolsena Vulsinii , Clusium , Arezzo Arretium , Florence Florentia , Pistoia Pistoria , and Lucca Luca , joining the Via Aurelia at Luni Luna . Via Amerina The Via Amerina was a road that broke off from the Via Cassia near Baccanae, and held north through Citta Castellana Falerii , Todi Tuder , and Perugia Perusia , rejoining the Via Cassia at Clusium . When the incursions of Faroald , the Lombard Duke of Spoleto , cut the Via Flaminia , the lifeline between Rome and Ravenna, the Via Amerina was improved and fortified at intervals, works that represented some of the last road building carried out in Italy in Late Antiquity . As the new military and strategic route, the Via Amerina became the communications core of Imperial Italy and the chief support to the claim that imperial Italy was still extant. ref Jan T. Hallenbeck, Pavia and Rome The Lombard Monarchy and the Papacy in the Eighth Century Transactions of the American Philosophical Society New Series 72 .4 1982 pp. 1 186 p 8. ref Bridges For an overview of the location of Roman bridges, see List of Roman bridges . There are the remains of several Roman bridge s along the road, including the Ponte San Lorenzo and Ponte San Nicolao . Sport The road was used as part of the Cycling at the 1960 Summer Olympics ... Cassia, Via Category Transport in Lazio Category Transport in Tuscany Category Olympic cycling venues bg ca Via C ssia cs Via Cassia de Via Cassia es V a Cassia fr Via Cassia it Via Cassia la Via Cassia hu Via Cassia nl Via Cassia ja pl Via Cassia pt Via C ssia ru sk Via Cassia sv Via Cassia ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Via Portuensis was an ancient Rome ancient Roman road, leading to the Portus constructed by Claudius on the right bank of the Tiber , at its mouth. It started from the Pons Aemilius , and the first part of its course is identical with that of the Via Campana . The Porta Portuensis of the Aurelian Walls had a double arch, probably owing to the amount of traffic it had to carry, but the divergence occurred a good deal further on, probably a mile from the gate. The Via Portuensis went to the right into hilly country, while the Via Campana kept to the valley of the Tiber. The roads rejoined at the modern Ponte Galeria . With the growth of importance of the Via Portuensis from the time of Constantine I emperor Constantine onwards, that of the Via Ostiensis correspondingly decreased. It is to be noted that Procopius , who tells us how barges were dragged up the river by teams of oxen moving along it, must be describing the towpath, and not either the Via Portuensis or even the Via Campana, which is in many places at quite a considerable distance from the winding course of the river. Due to its large amounts of traffic, the road was eventually reconstructed with two parallel roads one for traffic going one direction, and the other for traffic going the other. This was considered to be the world s first dual carriageway . Today Rome s Via Portuense follows a similar path. The road starts today from the Porta Portese and, after Ponte Galeria, ends in the comune of Fiumicino . List of Roman roads Category Roman roads in Italy Portuensis Category Roman roads in Italy Popilia AncientRome stub Italy road stub ca Via Portuense de Via Popilia es V a Popilia fr Via Popilia it Via Capua Rhegium it Via Portuense la Via Popilia pt Via Portuense ... more details
no footnotes date November 2010 The Via Ostiensis lang it via Ostiense was an important road in ancient Rome . It ran west 30  km from the city of Rome to its important sea port of Ostia Antica archaeological site Ostia Antica , from which it took its name. The road began near the Forum Boarium , ran between the Aventine and the Tiber River along its left eastern bank, and left the city s Servian Walls through the Porta Trigemina . When the later Aurelian Walls were built, the road left the city through the Porta San Paolo . In the late Roman Empire , trade suffered under an economic crisis, and Ostia declined as an important port. With the accompanying growth of importance of the Via Portuensis from the time of Constantine I emperor Constantine onwards, that of the Via Ostiensis correspondingly decreased. Modern Via Ostiense, following a similar path, is the main connection of Rome to Ostia one of the quarters of Rome at present together with the Via del Mare. On its way to Ostia, the road passes by the important basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls . Roman bridges For an overview of the location of Roman bridges, see List of Roman bridges . There are the remains of at least one Roman bridge along the road, which is the Ponte presso Tor di Valle. See also Roman road Roman bridge Roman engineering Ostiense External links http penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer E Gazetteer Places Europe Italy Lazio Roma Rome Texts PLATOP Via Ostiensis.html Lacus Curtis Via Ostiensis List of Roman roads Category Roman roads in Italy Ostiensis, Via Ancient Rome stub Italy road stub ca Via Ostiense de Via Ostiensis es V a Ostiensis fr Via Ostiense it Via Ostiense la Via Ostiensis nl Via Ostiensis ja pt Via Ostiense ru uk ... more details
image Via Appia map.jpg 300px thumb Via Traiana For Arabian road, see Via Traiana Nova The Via Traiana was an ancient Roman road. It was built by the emperor Trajan as an extension of the Via Appia from Benevento Beneventum , reaching Brundisium Brindisi by a shorter route i.e. via Canusium , Bitonto Butuntum and Bari um rather than via Taranto Tarentum . This was commemorated by an arch at Arches of Trajan Beneventum . http tjbuggey.ancients.info viatraj.html Background Via Traiana was constructed in 109 AD by Emperor Trajan at his own expense. It was built following the conclusion of conquest of Italy during a period of relative freedom from military campaigns. ref Via Traiana . The Oxford Classical Dictionary . 3rd ed. 2003. ref Thus the Via Appia , from which Via Traiana was constructed as an extension, lost its original importance as a military highroad that connected Venosa Venusia ..., the military colony of 291 BC, and Rome, was no longer needed except in times of civil war, and the Via ... to Beneventum from Brundisium through Via Traiana was a good day shorter than the old Republican road, Via Appia. ref Strabo. Geography Books 6 7. Trans. Horace Leonard Jones. Cambridge Harvard University Press, 1995. ref Although the actual measurement shows Via Appia to be 203 miles and Via ... of severe hills and difficult terrain along Via Appia until it reaches Venusia which is about 66 miles away from Beneventum. In contrast, although Via Traiana does encounter equally demanding ... to Brundisium. ref The Via Traiana. Papers of the British School at Rome, Vol. VIII, No.5 pages 104 .... See also Roman bridge Roman engineering References Reflist Sources Via Traiana. The Oxford Classical ... University Press, 1995. The Via Traiana. Papers of the British School at Rome, Vol. VIII, No.5 pages 104 171. London Macmillan & Co., Limited, 1916. Category Roman roads in Italy Traiana, Via Category Trajan br List of Roman roads bg es V a Trajana it Via Traiana hu Via Traiana nl Via ... more details
The Via Sublacensis was a Roman road constructed to connect Nero s palace the Villa Sublacensis in present day Subiaco, Italy Subiaco to Rome, splitting off from the Via Valeria near Varia modern Vicovaro , about 10  km northeast of Tivoli, Italy Tivoli . It is most commonly referred to as the origin of the Anio Novus , a major aqueduct whose head was originally at the 28th milestone of the Via Sublacensis. 1911 List of Roman roads coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Sublacensis, Via Italy road stub ... more details
Via Caecilia , an ancient highroad of Italy , which diverged from the Via Salaria at the 35th mile 56  km from Rome , and ran by Amiternum to the Adriatic coast, passing probably by Hadria Atri, Italy Atri . A branch ran to Interamna Praetuttiorum Teramo and thence probably to the sea at Castrum Novum Giulianova , a distance of about 151 miles 243  km from Rome . It was probably constructed by Lucius Caecilius Metellus Diadematus consul in 117 BC, Censor ancient Rome censor 115 . References C. Hulsen, in Notizie degli Scavi 1896 , 87 seq. N. Persichetti in Romische Mitteilungen 1898 , 193 seq. 1902 , 277 seq. References 1911 coord missing Italy Category Roman roads in Italy Caecilia, Via Italy road stub bg es V a Caecilia fr Via Caecilia it Via Cecilia la Via Caecilia pl Via Cecilia sv Via Cecilia ... more details
Image Alcestis Catacomb.jpg thumb 270px Wall painting in the Christian Catacomb of the Via Latina, 4th century. The Via Latina Latin language Latin Latin Road was a Roman road of Italy , running southeast from Rome for about 200 kilometers. It led from the Porta Latina in the Aurelian walls of Ancient rome Rome to the pass of Mons Algidus it was important in the early military history of Rome. It must have preceded the Via Appia as a route to Campania , in as much as the Latin colony at Cales was founded in 334 BC and must have been accessible from Rome by road, whereas the Via Appia was made only twenty two years later. It follows, too, a far more natural line of communication, without the engineering difficulties that the arrow straight Via Appia had to overcome. As a through route, it preceded the Via Labicana , though the latter may have been preferred in later times. After their junction, too obscure to edit the Via Latina continued to follow the valley of the Trerus Sacco , following a line taken by the modern railway to Naples , and passing below the Hernici Hernican hill towns , Anagni where it joined with the Via Praenestina , Ferentino , Frosinone , and others. At Fregellae ... to Isernia and Telese . After the disorders of the civil wars, the via Latina was repaired by a group ... and the via Latina The American Journal of Philology 53 .4 1932 , pp. 344 352. ref In later times ... and the junction with the Via Appia. The distance from Rome to Casilinum was 129 Roman miles by the Via Appia, 135 Roman miles by the old Via Latina through Venafrum, 126 Roman miles by the short cut ... course it is in the main identical with the modern highroad. Notes reflist See also Tombs of Via ... roads Category Roman roads in Italy Latina, Via Category Samnium bg ca Via Llatina cs Via Latina cy Via Latina de Via Latina es V a Latina fr Voie Latine it Via Latina la Via Latina nl Via Latina ja pl Via Latina ru sv Via Latina uk ... more details
Gran Via may refer to Estaci n de Gran V a , metro station in Madrid Gran Via Barcelona , second major business district of Barcelona Gran V a Madrid , street in Madrid Gran V a Zaragoza , street in Zaragoza Gran V a de Don Diego L pez de Haro , street in Bilbao Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes , street in Barcelona Gran V a Escultor Francisco Salzillo , street in Murcia disambiguation road es Gran V a desambiguaci n eu Gran Via fr Gran Via it Gran Via nl Gran V a ... more details
iter ROMA Adpactas Omnes Viae Via Labicana on the Peutinger map List of Roman roads Category Roman roads in Italy Labicana, Via ca Via Labicana de Via Labicana el es Via Labicana fr Via Labicana it Via Labicana la Via Labicana ja pl Via Labicana pt Via Labicana ru ... more details
Image Map of Roman roads in Italy.png thumb right 350px Route of Via Salaria in gray . The Via Salaria was an ancient Roman road in Italy . It eventually ran from Rome from Porta Salaria of the Aurelian Walls to Castrum Truentinum Porto d Ascoli on the Adriatic coast a distance of 242  km. The road also passed through Reate Rieti and Asculum Ascoli Piceno . The Via Salaria owes its name to the Latin word for salt , since it was the route by which the Sabines came to fetch salt from the marshes at the mouth of the Tiber Citation needed reason not for bringing salt to Rome from the Adriatic...? date October 2009 , one of many ancient salt road s in Europe. Some historians consider the Salaria and the trade in salt to have been the origin of the settlement of Rome. Some remains still exist of the mountain sections of the road. A modern road by this name, part of the SS4 highway, runs 51  km from Rome to Osteria Nuova . Roman bridges For an overview of the location of Roman bridges, see List of Roman bridges . There are the remains of several Roman bridges along the road, including the Ponte del Gran Caso , Ponte della Scutella, Ponte d Arli, Ponte di Quintodecimo , Ponte Romano Acquasanta , Ponte Salario and Ponte Sambuco. See also Roman bridge Roman engineering Catacomb of Priscilla External links http penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer E Gazetteer Places Europe Italy Lazio Roma Rome Texts PLATOP Via Salaria.html Via Salaria Platner and Ashby s A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome , London Oxford University Press, 1929 List of Roman roads Coord 41.900 N 12.483 E region IT source enwiki uniquenames display title Category Roman roads in Italy Salaria, Via Category Transport ... ca Via Sal ria cs Via Salaria cy Via Salaria de Via Salaria el es Via Salaria fr Via Salaria it Via Salaria la Via Salaria hu Via Salaria nl Via Salaria ja pl Via Salaria pt Via Sal ria ro Via Salaria ru sq Via Salaria sk Via Salaria sv Via Salaria uk ... more details
leadtoolong date April 2012 advertisement date April 2012 Infobox CPU name VIA Nano image VIA Nano Chip ... VIA Technologies designfirm Centaur Technology manuf1 Fujitsu manuf2 TSMC core1 Isaiah CN pack1 Ball grid array soldered arch x86 64 microarch VIA Isaiah numcores 1, 2 The VIA Nano formerly Code name Commercial code names in the computer industry code named VIA Isaiah is a 64 bit CPU for personal computer s. The VIA Nano was released by VIA Technologies in 2008 after five years of development ref cite web title VIA to launch new processor architecture in 1Q08 publisher DigiTimes url http www.digitimes.com ..., unveiled on 24 January 2008, ref cite web title Isaiah revealed VIA s new low power architecture publisher Ars Technica url http arstechnica.com articles paedia cpu via cpu isaiah.ars accessdate 24 January 2008 first Jon last Stokes date 23 January 2008 ref ref cite web title VIA s New Centaur Designed ... Bennett date 24 January 2008 ref ref cite web title Via launches 64 bit architecture publisher LinuxDevices.com ... January 2008 ref ref cite web title A look at VIA s next gen Isaiah x86 CPU architecture publisher ... brand name. ref cite press release title VIA Launches VIA Nano Processor Family publisher VIA Technologies VIA url http www.via.com.tw en resources pressroom pressrelease.jsp?press release no 2369 accessdate 29 May 2008 date 29 May 2008 ref The processor supports a number of VIA specific x86 extensions ... title VIA preps SSE4 enabled, dual core Nano chips publisher Electronista date 31 December 2008 ref ref cite web url http www.itexaminer.com via readies dual nano for vegas launch.aspx title Via readies dual Nano for Vegas launch date 19 September 2008 publisher IT Examiner ref Via Technologies showed ... in Taiwan. ref cite web url http www.computerworld.com s article 9177538 Via shows dual core Nano processor title Via shows dual core Nano processor date 01 June 2010 ref Unlike Intel and AMD , VIA ... was used in the United States by Centaur Technology. Biblical names are used as codes by VIA in Taiwan ... more details