Via Appia, praecipua via Romana, anno 312 a.C.n.
Capuam primum duxit ; praecipuae stationes fuerunt Aricia, Forum Appi, Tarracina, Fundi, Formiae, Minturnae, Sinuessa, Pons Campanus, Capua. Postea usque ad Brundisium extenta est. A Foro Romano extra urbem Romam praeter viam Appiam sunt erecta magnorum virorum sepulcra, quae etiam hodie partim exstant. Via Appia prima est pars viae Egnatiae, quae ab urbe Roma per Brundisium et Byzantium usque in Persidem ferebat.
Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Viam Appiam spectant. |
Aemilia · Anicia · Appia · Aquillia · Ardeatina · Augusta · Aurelia · Caecilia · Cassia · Claudia Augusta · Clodia · Decia · Domitia · Domitiana · Egnatia · Flaminia · Iulia Augusta · Labicana · Latina · Laurentina · Nomentana · Ostiensis · Popilia · Portuensis · Postumia · Praenestina · Salaria · Severiana · Sublacensis · Tiburtina · Traiana · Traiana nova · Valeria · Valeria Sicula | |
Akeman Street · Batham Gate · Chaussée Brunehaut · Dere Street · Devil's Highway · Ermin Way · Ermine Street · Fosse Way · Sarn Helen · The Long Lane · Peddars Way · Ryknild Street · Stane Street · Stanegate · Stone Street · The Street · Via Aemilia Scauri · Via Agrippa · Via Annia · Via Aquitania · Via Ausonia · Via Confluentana · Via Delapidata · Via Devana · Via Fenollentis · Via Flaminia minor · Via Gallica · Via Lusitanorum · Via mala · Via Maris · Via Militaris · Via Pontica · Via Reatina · Via Regina · Via Vallespiri · Watling Street | |
This article uses material from the Wikipedia Latina article Via Appia, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Textus sub CC BY-SA 4.0 praebetur nisi aliter indicatus. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki Latina (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.