answersLogoWhite

0

Did the Romans have paved roads?

User Avatar

Anonymous

15y ago
Updated: 8/18/2019

yes

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Who invented the highways?

The Romans. They were the first to have paved roads.


What civilization built stone roads?

The Romans built stone-paved roads.


Why did the Romans pave their roads?

What the Romans are famous for is the building of paved roads. What you mean by the Romans being civilised about roads is difficult to understand.


How many miles of paved roads did the Romans built?

53,000


What gave the idea to the ancient Romans to build roads?

Roads already existed before the Romans and the Romans had roads before the later and famous Roman roads. What came to make the Roman roads different was that at one point they were paved. The first paved road was the Appian way, buit in 312 BC. It was built to speed up the movement of Roman troops to the front of the Second Samnite War. Paved roads had a military purpose.


What ancient civilization built stone roads?

The Romans built stone paved roads, but this improvement in transport was probably used before, soon after wheeled transport became common. The Inca of South America were another peoples who used stone paved roads. And also extensive stone paved footpaths over long distances and undulating terrain.


When were paved roads invented?

The Romans perfected the paved road. Many of them are still in use almost 2000 years after their construction.


What did paved roads have to do with Rome society?

Paved roads were a Roman innovation. They had a military purpose. The first paved road (the famous Appian Way) was built in 312 BC to speed up the movement of troops to the front of the Second Samnite War, which the Romans were fighting near Naples. Paved roads also made the transport of supplies to the troops at the front of in garrisons. Over the centuries the Romans built 80,500 kilometres of paved roads around the Roman Empire; 29 great military paved roads radiated from the city of Rome. The paved roads also saw civilian use and made trade and travel easier.


Was there roads in the Persian Empire?

The question is "WERE there roads in the Persian empire". The simple answer is no, the Persians only had dirt paths they travelled on but not "roads" by definition being a paved path. The Romans invented roads.


Why were the roads a major lifeline for the Roman Empire?

The Romans introduced paved roads.The paved roads had a military purpose. The first paved road (the famous Appian Way) was built in 312 BC to speed up the movement of troops to the front of the Second Samnite War, which the Romans were fighting near Naples. Paved roads also made the transport of supplies to the troops at the front of in garrisons. Over the centuries the Romans built 80,500 kilometres of paved roads around the Roman Empire; 29 great military paved roads radiated from the city of Rome. The paved roads also saw civilian use and made trade and travel easier.


How many miles of paved roads are there in the US?

There are roughly 4.1 million miles of paved roads in the United States.


Was roads developed by roamans?

Unpaved roads existed long before the Romans and also during Roman times. Rome's innovation was the paved roads. The first paved road was the famous Appian way which was built in 312 BC. The paved roads were built for military purposes. They speeded up the movement of troops and made the transport of supplies to the troops at the front or in stationed in garrisons quicker and easier.