Waters of Rome. Katherine Wentworth Rinne

Waters of Rome. Katherine Wentworth Rinne

Aquae Urbis Romae: The Waters of the City of Rome © 1998-2016 by Katherine Wentworth Rinne.

Wentworth Renne, K. (2010). The Waters of the City of Rome: Acqueducts, Fountains, and the Birth of the Baroque City. Yale University Press. [Available here]

The Tiber and Its Tributaries, Smith, S. (1877), extracted from Wentworth Renne, K. (2010). The Waters of the City of Rome: Acqueducts, Fountains, and the Birth of the Baroque City. Yale University Press.

"Aquae Urbis Romae is an interactive cartographic history of the relationships between hydrological and hydraulic systems and their impact on the urban development of Rome, Italy. Our study begins in 753 BC and will ultimately extend to the present day. We examine the intersections between natural systems--springs, rain, streams, marshes, and the Tiber River--and constructed systems including aqueducts, fountains, sewers, bridges, conduits, etc., that together create the water infrastructure of Rome." Aquae Urbis Romae

Rome from Caracalla to Gallienus 211-268 AD. © Katherine Wentworth Rinne, 2002.