About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia or other free sources online. Pages: 41. Chapters: Acqua Antoniniana, Acqua Marcia, Acqua Vergene, Acquedotto Claudia, Antico District, Aqueducts, Arco di Costantino, Arco di Settimio Severo, Arco di Tito, Aventino, Basilica Emilia, Basilica Giulia, Basilica di Massenzio, Basilica di San Pietro, Brothels, Campagna District, Cappella Sistina, Caserma di Alviano, Castel Sant'Angelo, Castra Praetoria, Catacombe di Roma, Centro District, Circo Massimo, Cloaca Maxima, Colle Palatino, Colle Viminale, Colosseo, Colosseum Vault, Esquilino, Il Campidoglio, La Volpe Addormentata, Lairs of Romulus, Liberation of Rome, Mausoleo di Augusto, Mercati di Traiano, Nero's Golden Palace, Palazzo Laterano, Palazzo Senatorio, Pantheon, Passetto di Borgo, Piazza Navona, Piazza di Spagna, Piramide Cestia, Ponte Cestio, Ponte Fabricio, Ponte Sant'Angelo, Ponte Sisto, Porta Aurelia, Porta Flaminia, Porta Pinciana, Porta Settimiana, Porta Turrionis, Porta Viridaria, Rome Assassins Guild, Rosa in Fiore, San Andrea della Valle, San Giovanni dei Fiorentini, Sant'Antonio dei Portoghesi, Santa Maria in Aracoeli, Santa Maria in Vallicella, Tempio di Saturno, Temple of Pythagoras, Terme di Caracalla, Terme di Traiano, Tiber, Tiber Island, Tiber Island headquarters, Vatican Vault, Vaticano District. Excerpt: The Acqua Antoniniana was an aqueduct located in the Italian city of Rome. The Acqua Antoniniana was located in the Campagna district. It was in the south east side of Campagna where the district borders with the Antico district. Combined with Acqua Marcia there were three sections of broken aqueducts that could be renovated. Built by Caracalla in 212, the Antoniniana was a secondary channel of the Marcia designed exclusively to supply water to Caracalla's private baths. Thanks to several repairs by various Popes the Antoniniana remained functional for longer than it's counterparts and well into the 10th century, at which point it was supplied for se...