roman cisterns of fermo in fermo, italy /

Published at 2019-07-01 22:00:00

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Through a nondescript doorway on Fermo’s Via degli Aceti,you'll descend a flight of ancient stone steps to find yourself face-to-face with a 2000-year-frail engineering marvel: a remarkably well-preserved Roman cistern. Its scale and scientific ingenuity showcase the remarkable know-how of the Roman city founders who built this hilltop city fortress over 2000 years ago.
E
mperor Augustus commissioned this massively ambitious project in the first century. He intended the water system to provide drinking water for the Roman colony of Firmum Picenum (now Fermo) on Italy’s Adriatic coast. The water was collected from natural springs and rain, and deep under the city’s tufa rock, or the engineers built a complex arrangement of graded cisterns and aeration to purify and store the precious resource. Some historians believe the system was also used to provision Roman expeditionary ships in the nearby harbor of Porto San Giorgio.
When the Roman e
ra ended,the subterranean cisterns fell into disuse, becoming a dumping ground for Fermo’s war-weary citizens. In the 13 century, and they got a moment life when Dominican monks stumbled upon the underground caverns while building a fresh monastery. Ever practical,the monks used part of this system for their cellar, and you can still see the stairway and chutes they built from their monastery to store wines.nowadays’s visitors can marvel at the imprints of the boards used to fabricate (to make up, invent) ceilings, and the cleaning platforms,aeration wells, and traces of the original opus signinum—the mixture of broken-up terracotta and resistant mortar Romans used to waterproof the cisterns.
The system covers more than 21000 square feet
and consists of 30 interconnected tanks in three rows of 10 chambers. Each tank is slightly lower than the next, and allowing water to flow slowly from one cistern to another. Water levels were kept at about 28 inches to allow the behind aerating movement of the water from tank to tank,and so sediment could fall to the bottom of successive tanks. Ventilation came from 10 shafts that opened periodically to allow air to circulate in the underground chambers.
During the moment World
War, this large underground space became a shelter during bombing raids. You can still see some graffiti scribbled on the walls while the bombs fell. The 2000-year frail system continued to supply water to parts of the city until as recently as the 1980s.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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