Topic: Roman roads and travel
Language: Latin
Level: Latin 1, first semester
Roman roads—their location, numbers and quality, are one of the features setting the Roman apart from other ancient civilizations.
The essential question is this: Why were roads so important to the Romans? What did their engineering efforts gain them? We will look at the roads built by the Romans, why and where, by whom and when they were built; how long they lasted, who traveled on them, what were the amenities available to different classes of travelers, and where those roads can be found today. Considering the length of the roads and dealing with money will allow us to make some practical use of the Roman numeral system, and to consider how much more flexible is our system, thanks to the concept of zero. I will be using authentic texts from milestones and tombs to introduce or develop grammar understanding. Length of time for unit: 1 semester. Our text, Latin for Americans, makes “Roman Roads and travel” the focus of the first unit, and " Why did the the Romans say, “Aut viam inveniam aut faciam” (I'll either find a way or make one")? Why “Omnes viae Romam ducunt”? At the conclusion of this task, students will be able to: read and comprehend an authentic text on the subject of roads name several types of roads used by the Romans identify at least 5 of the most famous Roman roads explain -why people say “all roads lead to -what the roads did for -how people traveled in the compare the importance and use of roads in Roman and modern American society present in English a planned trip from a given starting point to Rome write and present in Latin a short “travelogue” based on an imaginary trip along a particular Roman road.
Map of roads in Italian peninsula (see Ecce Romani vol. I, p. 99)
Reproduction Roman coins (brass dupondii, silver denarii, gold aurei) available at very modest price (35 - 45 p) from Roman Corinium (Cirencester, Glos. UK), Roman Verulamium (St. Albans, Herts, UK), and Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, UK). Least expensive at Corinium. I purchased enough to make a "money bag" for travelers.
Various inscriptions from roadside mile-markers, cippi, tombs (found in Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum [CIL]), in the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, I collected a great many inscriptions, relating to roads and travelers, which are illustrative of grammar points taught in first semester Latin I. I am hoping to use these when I introduce new grammar, so that “authentic” text is found not only in the IPA, but in class at least weekly. I have made a Roman road “floorcloth” ( a roll of brown paper, irregular paving stones of construction paper in various stone-y sorts of colors, laminated). Many extra “stones” of identical shapes, bearing questions on content, grammar, vocabulary can be laid over the paving stones. They are fastened by Velcro, so should be walkable-upon. This floorcloth will provide a topical opportunity for learning and review. I envision the game moving along by students throwing a small sandal onto a paver, answering the question found there (or more likely, throwing the sandal for someone else). Students make their own tunics at beginning of each year, so to be appropriately dressed whenever doing a project. I arrange with the sewing teacher to use the FCS sewing lab after school; students sign up for a sewing party.
Authentic text for students: St. Isidore of Seville, LIb.XV, "de aedificiis et agris" 8-13 [passage on types of roads] found in www.thelatinlibrary.com. Since this is late Latin, it is rather simpler for students. Isidore's sentences, if stripped to the skeleton, are all of the x = y variety, a beginning Latin student's favorite format.
Copies of texts in translation:
Horace, Satire V (concerning a very long road trip in company of Maecenas and Vergil)
Statius, Silvae IV, #3 "Via Domitiana" (a poem in praise of the building of that road, the benefits it gave to travelers and letter-senders)
Vitruvius (de Architectura) Lib VIII, VI, l. 1-9
This is a handful of sites which I think useful, found through Nettrekker DI