France and Italy
The origin of aqueducts (water conduits) was the need for water supplies. Ancient aqueducts have been found India, Persia, Oman, Jordan, Greece, South America, and Central America. The Romans perfected aqueduct construction engineering and built a great many aqueducts around the Roman Empire.
In Roman mythology , Venus was the mother of the Roman people through her son, Aeneas. His father was Anchises.
Mostly in western part of Europe. Countries like Portugal, Spain and Italy are very Roman Catholic.
The highest concentrations of Catholics are found throughout Latin America, and in France, Spain and Italy.
The city state of ancient Rome. (In Italy, where modern Rome is also found).
When you build a city, you need to get enough water into the city to provide the crowded population with what they need. Many Roman cities did not have enough water on site and a way had to be found to get water in. To solve this problem the Romans used aqueducts. In our modern age we use pipes and pumping stations.
You could have aquired a coin an Excessively Rare Roman Imperial Orichalcum Sestertius of Plotina, Wife of Trajan (98-117 C.E.), the Finest Example and in the original condition as it was found described in 1906 Magnifique and FDC.
It is not known. The Romans did not write much about Britain. Traces of Roman aqueducts have been found Traces of aqueducts were found in St. Albans, Chester, Dorchester, Leicester, Bath, Cirencester, Chichester, Colchester, York, Exeter, Ormstead (on Hadrian's Wall) etc. Massive water pipes were unearthed at Lincoln.
Italy has not been "found". It has always been there.
It is a city that is found in Italy. Italy is a country.
Aqueduct is not an example of a word formed from a root word and a suffix. It is formed from two root words: aqua, meaning "water", and also found as a root in aqueous, aquatic, aquifer and aquamarine, and ductis, meaning "to draw out or pull" and also found as a root word in ductile, conduct, induction and so on.