In the eighth century B.C. Ancient Rome groom from a small Town around Italy's Tiber River into an empire that was very important in the history of human civilization. The Tiber River has played a significant role for the people for the people on the Italian peninsula. This 252 mile river is the third longest in Italy. The sower part of the Tiber Rivers located in the Apennine Mountains, specifically from two springs that are separated by 30 feet where Mount Fumaiolo lies. This mountain south of Amelia Romagna serves as the natural border between it and Tuscany. The Tiber River passes through Amelia Romagna, Umbria, and Lazio before emptying into the Tyrrhenian Sea. This historic river of Europe twists and in a general direction …show more content…
Most of the early settlements populated the city’s hilly areas rather them the marshes near the Tiber River. Rome’s hills provided a healthy environment for forming around the Tiber River. The river had very fertile soil. The Tiber is favorable for navigation upstream to inland crops and downstream to the sea. The Tiber Island is in itself a significant piece of the city's topography. Just below where the island breaks the current, there was an early ford as well as the sight of Rome's first bridge. This was an easy crossing and directed a good deal of traffic to the side of Rome before the city of Rome arose. This also was a place to off-load good for surface transportation. The bridge in Rome over the Tiber River were of four types. Some private and some public and private. The Pons Agrippae, built across the Tiber which was private and public. The Pons Frabricius, Pons Cestius, Pons Neronianus, Pons Aelius, Pons Aurd…, and Pons Probi were all public. Some were used as highways only and some were used as aqueducts …show more content…
Small ships could sail up the Tiber to the Mediterranean. The importance of the lower Tibet was first recognized when it became a commercial center for the import of Mediterranean wheat, oil, and wine. This river was an essential element to the developing strength and ultimate dominance of the Roman Empire. Compared to transport by the road, it provided an inexpensive and efficient way of moving goods shipped to the city from around the Mediterranean. The Tiber River had a positive and negative impact on the development of Rome. Before an embankment was built in modern times the river frequently flooded the many low-lying areas of the city. It is a turbulent river and has been a source of danger to the city. The waters of the Tiber were not potable. So, the Romans got them drunken water from wells and eventually from the great aqueducts with pure sources in the hills and mountains far from Rome. In Ancient Rome, the Tiber provided a source of water for farming and drinking. Besides being a crucial route for trade and commerce, it was also the major supply source of water for the