answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

the carvings of god carrying his cross and crucified him:)

User Avatar

Felipe Marvin

Lvl 10
2y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

This question is a subjective one, however, many historians believe that the engineering required to build the aqueducts and the excellent road system, stand out as great feats of engineering.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

The Romans were first to fully appreciate the advantages of the arch, the vault and the dome. The arch has a strong lad bearing capacity and provides stability. The Etruscans invented the simple barrel arch and Pergamon invented the vault (adjacent arches which are assembled side by side) which has an even greater load bearing capacity and whose structure is also suited to support large roofs. The arches and the vaults came to be used extensively for the first time. They became essential for the construction of large scale buildings, to support large roofs and to build basements. The Romans also used the arch to build gates, aqueducts, bridges which were much longer than before and could cross much wider rivers and valleys. They even managed to build a bridge across the lower Danube, which is a very wide river. If a deep valley had to be crossed, two or three piers of arches were built on top of each other to reach the desired height.

The Romans invented segmental arch (a flatter type of arch)( as they realised that an arch did not have to be a semicircle.

The Romans developed a new and much stronger type of concrete which was as resistant as modern concrete and also set underwater (this enabled them to build much bigger docks for ports). However, it was not as fluid as modern concrete and had to be layered by hand. The arch, the vault and concrete were what made the construction of such a massive structure as the Colosseum possible. Concrete was also used to build domes, public buildings, military facilities (forts and fortifications) warehouses, amphitheatres, circuses (racing tracks) temples and baths. Often the Romans used a mixture of stone, brick and concrete (for the Colosseum stone and concrete were used).

The Romans perfected the dome. The Pantheon (a temple which has been turned into a church) in Rome is still the largest unreinforced concrete dome in the world.

The Romans built great aqueducts. Most were underground conduits. When above ground the conduits were on bridges when the aqueducts had to cross a valley or when they were needed to keep a gradient to make the water moving. The Pont du Gard, mentioned above, was a bridge for an aqueduct which supplied Nines, in southern France. When the valleys were too steep, a system of siphons was used. The siphons took the water to tanks lower down which fed other conduits.

The Romans invented the stone-paves roads. The network of these roads reached 80,500 kilometres (50,313 miles) which was 20% of the network of 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) of roads in the Roman Empire.

The Romans invented the amphitheatre, which was an arena for the gladiatorial games. They took the Greek idea of theatres with semi-circular seating and they extended it to a full circle or, more usually an elliptic shape. The Colosseum and the arena of Verona are the two most famous amphitheatre.

The Romans adopted the cranes of the Greeks and massively improved on them. The simplest one was the trispastos, which had of a single-beam, a winch, a rope, and a block with three pulleys. It had had a mechanical advantage of 3:1, and single man operating the winch could raise 150 kg. The pentaspastos had five pulleys and the polyspastos had a set of three by five pulleys with two, three or four masts. The latter was worked by four men at both sides of the winch and could lift 3,000 kg. When the winch was replaced by a treadwheel, the load could be doubled to 6,000 kg with only half the crew, because the treadwheel had a larger diameter and thus a much bigger mechanical advantage.

The Romans improved on the ballista was a weapon which launched a large projectile at a distant target using two levers with torsion springs. The springs consisted of several loops of twisted ropes. The Manuballista was a handheld version of the traditional Ballista. The Carroballista was a cart-mounted version. The ancient sources said that the Romans developed the polybolos, a repeating' ballista' which shot 11 shots a minute. This was at least four times the rate of an ordinary ballista. However, none has been found by archaeologists.

The Romans invented the hypocaust, which was an underfloor heating system for heating houses and the baths using hot air. The floor was raised above the ground by pillars which left a space inside that was filled with hot air from a furnace. The heat from the underfloor heated the air in the room. Passages boxed by ceramic tiles were put inside the walls to move the air to flues on the roof and to heat the walls.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

The Pantheon may be the greatest achivement of roman engineering. Even today it is the largest single span dome in the world measuring 43 meters in diameter and 43 meters from the floor to the dome. If such a large dome id build today with modern concrete it would hardly stand its own weight, yet the Pantheon has stood for centuries.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Aqueducts, sewers, bridges, embankments, paved roads, arches, cranes, mining machines, war machines, massive buildings which created engeneering challenges, the use of concrete and many others

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

Controlling a vast empire which was the 15th largest empire in history a great achievement. Besides this there were other great achievements.

The Romans built a network of of 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) of roads throughout the empire. About 20% (80,500 kilometres, 50,313 miles) of this network were the famous stone-paved roads. The paved Roads were a Roman invention.

The Romans were first to fully appreciate the advantages of the arch, the vault and the dome. The arch has a strong load-bearing capacity and provides stability. The Etruscans invented the simple barrel arch and Pergamon invented the vault (adjacent arches which are assembled side by side) which has an even greater load bearing capacity and whose structure is also suited to support large roofs. The arches and the vaults came to be used extensively for the first time. They became essential for the construction of large scale buildings, to support large roofs and to build basements. The Romans also used the arch to build gates, aqueducts, and bridges which were much longer than before and could cross much wider rivers and valleys. They even managed to build a bridge across the lower Danube, which is a very wide river. If a deep valley had to be crossed, two or three piers of arches were built on top of each other to reach the desired height.

The Pont du Gard, a bridge for an aqueduct which supplied Nimes, in southern France is the greatest example of a multi- pier bridge. It has three tiers of recessed arches with the main piers in line one above the other. The first two tiers have very high and wide arches and a third tier has low and narrow arches. It was built to carry an aqueduct to Nimes in southern France. It reaches a height of 48.8 metres (160 feet). The lower tier is 142 metres (466 feet) long and has six aches with a height of 22metres (72 ft.). The second tier is 242 metres (794 ft.) long and has eleven arches 20 metres (66 ft.) high. The upper tier is 275 metre (902 ft.) long. It originally had 47 arches (only 35 have survived) 7 metres (23 ft.) high. The width of the first pier is 6 metres (20th.), that of the second pier is 4 metres (13 ft.) and that of the third pier is 3 metres (23 ft).

The Romans built great aqueducts. Most were underground conduits. When above ground the conduits were on bridges when the aqueducts had to cross a valley or when they were needed to keep a gradient to make the water moving. Water was also brought down valleys with a system of siphons was used. The siphons took the water to tanks lower down which fed other conduits.

The Romans developed a new and much stronger type of concrete which was as resistant as modern concrete and also set underwater (this enabled them to build much bigger docks for ports). However, it was not as fluid as modern concrete and had to be layered by hand. The arch, the vault and concrete were what made the construction of such a massive structure as the Colosseum possible. Concrete was also used to build domes, public buildings, military facilities (forts and fortifications) warehouses, amphitheatres, circuses (racing tracks) temples, baths and bridges. Often the Romans used a mixture of stone, brick and concrete (for the Colosseum stone and concrete were used).

The Romans invented the amphitheatre, which was an arena for the gladiatorial games. They took the Greek idea of theatres with semi-circular seating and they extended it to a full circle or, more usually an elliptic shape. The Colosseum and the arena of Verona are the two most famous amphitheatre.

The Romans perfected the dome. The Pantheon (a temple which has been turned into a church) in Rome is still the largest unreinforced concrete dome in the world.

The Romans invented the hypocaust, which was an underfloor heating system for heating houses and the baths using hot air. The floor was raised above the ground by pillars which left a space inside that was filled with hot air from a furnace. The heat from the underfloor heated the air in the room. Passages boxed by ceramic tiles were put inside the walls to move the air to flues on the roof and to heat the walls.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

It is a matter of opinion. Great achievements of Roman engineering were the stone-paved roads, bridges which were based on sequences of arches and could cross much wider rivers and valleys than before, the aqueducts, the hypocaust (an underfloor heating system for houses) and fortification systems. With regard to weapons, the Romans greatly improved on the ballisata, a crossbow-like catapult which they originally adopted from the Greeks. The Roman also had good drainage and irrigation systems for agriculture.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: The greatest engineering achievement of the Roman empire?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about General History

What engineering achievement allowed traders to travel easily throughout the roman empire?

Paved roads.


Who brought the Roman Empire to its greatest size?

The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent under Trajan in 116 AD.


What roman achievement helped unify the empire?

Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.


The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent under which ruler?

The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent in 116 AD under the emperor Trajan.


Who was the emperor at the height of the roman empire?

Trajan was the emperor at the height of the roman empire.

Related questions

What engineering achievement allowed traders to travel easily throughout the roman empire?

Paved roads.


What were some architectural and engineering achievement's of the ancient Romans?

The use of the arch has to rank as one of the great achievements of Roman architecture and engineering, as they used the arch in their aqueducts and bridges in addition to other buildings. Their greatest achievement, in both these disciplines is the pantheon with its dome and oculus.


Who brought the Roman Empire to its greatest size?

The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent under Trajan in 116 AD.


Architecture engineering law and language are legacies of which empire?

The Roman Empire.


What roman achievement helped unify the empire?

Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.Of all the Roman engineering accomplishments, the roads and bridges were the most helpful in unifying the empire.


What do you think the roman's greatest achievements are?

I definitely think that them conquering Britain was quite a big achievement but just the idea of their Roman Empire is an achievement in its self. Britain would not be as it is today without the Romans coming over. They created roads and buildings and were great fighters. I hope this has helped!


The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent under which ruler?

The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent in 116 AD under the emperor Trajan.


In whose reign did the roman empire reach its greatest extent territorially?

The Roman empire reached its greatest extent under the reign of Trajan.


Who was the emperor at the height of the roman empire?

Trajan was the emperor at the height of the roman empire.


Who ruled Rome when the empire was at its greatest size?

The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent in 116 under Trajan.


When was the empire at its height?

The Roman Empire was at its greatest expanse under the rule of Trajan.


The Empire reached its greatest height as the Roman Empire was collapsing.?

gupta