projects were not required; but the Mulvian bridge
(Ponte Molle), by which the Flaminian road crossed
the Tiber not far from Rome, was in 645 reconstructed
of stone. Lastly in Northern Italy, which hitherto
had possessed no other artificial road than the Flaminio-Aemilian
terminating at Placentia, the great Postumian road
was constructed in 606, which led from Genua by way
of Dertona, where probably a colony was founded at
the same time, and onward by way of Placentia, where
it joined the Flaminio-Aemilian road, and of Cremona
and Verona to Aquileia, and thus connected the Tyrrhenian
and Adriatic seas; to which was added the communication
established in 645 by Marcus Aemilius Scaurus between
Luna and Genua, which connected the Postumian road
directly with Rome. Gaius Gracchus exerted himself
in another way for the improvement of the Italian
roads. He secured the due repair of the great
rural roads by assigning, on occasion of his distribution
of lands, pieces of ground alongside of the roads,
to which was attached the obligation of keeping them
in repair as an heritable burden. To him, moreover,
or at any rate to the allotment-commission, the custom
of erecting milestones appears to be traceable, as
well as that of marking the limits of fields by regular
boundary-stones. Lastly he provided for good
-viae vicinales-, with the view of thereby promoting
agriculture. But of still greater moment was
the construction of the imperial highways in the provinces,
which beyond doubt began in this epoch. The
Domitian highway after long preparations(16) furnished
a secure land-route from Italy to Spain, and was closely
connected with the founding of Aquae Sextiae and Narbo;(17)
the Gabinian(18) and the Egnatian (19) led from the
principal places on the east coast of the Adriatic
sea—the former from Salona, the latter
from Apollonia and Dyrrhachium—into the
interior; the network of roads laid out by Manius Aquillius
immediately after the erection of the Asiatic province
in 625 led from the capital Ephesus in different directions
towards the frontier. Of the origin of these
works no mention is to be found in the fragmentary
tradition of this epoch, but they were nevertheless
undoubtedly connected with the consolidation of the
Roman rule in Gaul, Dalmatia, Macedonia, and Asia Minor,
and came to be of the greatest importance for the centralization
of the state and the civilizing of the subjugated
barbarian districts.
In Italy at least great works of drainage were prosecuted as well as the formation of roads. In 594 the drying of the Pomptine marshes—a vital matter for Central Italy—was set about with great energy and at least temporary success; in 645 the draining of the low-lying lands between Parma and Placentia was effected in connection with the construction of the north Italian highway. Moreover, the government did much for the Roman aqueducts, as indispensable for the health and comfort of the capital as they were costly. Not only were the two that