The Romans built several bridges across the Thames, with the most notable being the original London Bridge, constructed around AD 50. This bridge facilitated trade and military movement, significantly contributing to the growth of Londinium (modern London). While the exact number of bridges they built across the Thames is unclear, the London Bridge remains the most famous and historically significant. Other smaller bridges may have existed, but their specifics are less well-documented.
arch bridges
bridges...
from what i remember from 6th grade they didn't.
It is thought that the Romans were the first to build a bridge over the river Thames hover the first bridge that is on record is the London bridge which was first started in 1176 and was not finished until years later.
It is not known. The Romans must have built thousands of bridges because the empire was massive, it covered many mountain areas and it was crossed by many rivers. The bridges were built by the Romans, not the Roman Empire.
The Romans used the arch to build large buildings and bridges.
it's all so you can get across to a different bridge
yes
Cement was used by the Romans to build the colosseum. The Romans invented cement and the material they invented was also water proof which allowed for bridges and fountains to be built.
The Romans made extensive use of the arch to build large buildings, bridges, and water aqueducts.
The ancient Romans used their engineering skills to build aqueducts, bridges, roads, domed structures, the hypocaust heating system and any other building projects they undertook.
So they could get from place to place