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AQUA TOFANA

Volume 2 · 2,392 words · 1823 Edition

poison much used in Italy in the seventeenth century. See SUPPLEMENT.

Aqua Vitæ, is commonly understood of what is otherwise called brandy, or spirit of wine either simple, or prepared with aromatics. Some, however, distinguish... AQUAE Augustae (Ptolemy); AQUAE Tarbellica (Antonine); Aquensis Civitas, in the Notitia. Now Acqs, or Dax, a town in Gascony, on the river Adour, famous for its baths. W. Long. 1. 40. N. Lat. 43. 56.

AQUAE Bilbilitanæ, (Antonine): baths 24 miles to the west of Bilbilis. Now Banos de Athama, in Aragon.

AQUÆ Calidae, (Ptolemy); AQUÆ Solis, (Antonine); a place of the Belgæ in Britain, famous for its hot waters. Now Bath in Somersetshire. W. Long. 1. 5. Lat. 51. 20.

AQUÆ Calidae, (Ptolemy); Aquicaldensis, (Pliny); formerly in great repute, and a public bath; whose ruins still remain, testimonies of the Roman grandeur. Now Orense, in Galicia, still famous for its baths; on the river Minho, 54 miles south-east of Compostella. W. Long. 8. 30. N. Lat. 42. 30. Also a place in the bay of Carthage, (Strabo). Other Aquicaldenses, to the north of Gerunda in Catalonia, (Ptolemy).

AQUÆ Calidae, a colony between the rivers Serbetes and Savus, in Mauritania Cæsariensis, (Ptolemy).

AQUÆ Celeinae, (Ptolemy); or Cilinae, (Antonine). Now Caldus, a hamlet on the Minho, in Galicia.

AQUÆ Convenarum, a hamlet of Gaul, in Aquitaine, (Antonine), and on the borders of the Convenæ, or le Cominge, at the foot of the Pyrenees, near the source of the Garonne. Now Bagnères. W. Long. 3. 39. N. Lat. 42. 20.

AQUÆ Cutilier, a lake of the Sabines, in the territory of Reat (Pliny); Locus Cutiliensis, (Varro); with a moveable island in it, (Seneca, Pliny); supposed to be the centre of Italy, (Varro). The waters were medicinal, and extremely cold, good for a weak stomach and in weak nerves; they seemed to act by a kind of suction, which approached to a bite, (Pliny). Vespasian used them every summer; and there he died, (Sueton. Xiphilin from Dio). Now Lago di Contigliano.

AQUÆ Flaviae, a town on the confines of Galicia and Portugal, so called from Vespasian and Titus. The inhabitants are called Aquiflavienenses on coins. Now called Chiaves, a mean hamlet; but the ruins of its bridge testify its former grandeur. W. Long. 6. 6. N. Lat. 41. 40.

AQUÆ Helvetica, described by Tacitus as a municipal town, and much frequented for its excellent water; and though he does not mention its name, Cluverius supposes it to be Baden, in Switzerland, on the rivulet Limat, which soon after falls into the Aar. It is called the Upper, to distinguish it from another called the Lower Baden, in Alsace. E. Long. 8. 49. N. Lat. 47. 55.

AQUÆ Merom (Joshua), famous for the defeat of Jabin: supposed to be the lake called Samachonites, or Semechonites, by Josephus; into which the river Jordan falls, before it comes to the sea of Genesereth, or Galilee.

AQUÆ Pannonia, famous baths of Austria, now called Baden, 28 miles to the south of Vienna.

AQUÆ Patavinae, are baths in the territory of Venice near Padua, (Pliny); called Fontes Apenni (Livy, Martial). Now Bagni d'Abano. E. Long. 13. 48. N. Lat. 45. 15.

AQUÆ Quintianæ, put by Ptolemy in room of the AQUÆ Cilinae of Antonine. Now supposed to be Sarria, a town of Galicia, on a rivulet of the same name, three leagues to the south of Lugo.

AQUÆ Sextiae, a colony to the north of Marseilles, so called both from the founder Sextius Clavinus, and from its quantity of water, and number of cold and hot springs; built after the defeat of the Salyes, or Salviï, whose territory in the south of Provence, reached from the Rhone on the borders of Italy, (Livy, Velesius, Strabo, Ptolemy). By an inscription the colony appears to have been either increased or renewed by Augustus. In the Notitia it is called Civitas Aquensis. Now Aix. Here the Teutones and Cimbri were defeated with great slaughter by Marius. E. Long. 6. 4. N. Lat. 48. 4.

AQUÆ Statilliae, or Statiellorum, (Pliny), a town in Liguria, on the river Bormia. Now Acqui, a town of Montferrat. E. Long. 8. 40. N. Lat. 44. 45.

AQUÆ Tauri, hot waters or baths in Tuscany, at the distance of three miles from the sea, said to be discovered by a bull, hence the appellation. There are still to be seen the ruins of these baths. Now Aquapendente, in Orvieto. E. Long. 12. 40. N. Lat. 42. 20.

AQUÆDUCT, in Hydraulics and Architecture, a structure formed for conveying water from one place to another, over grounds that are unequal. The word is compounded of the Latin substantive aqua, water, and ductus, a channel by which that water may be conducted.

Architects distinguish two kinds of aqueducts; the visible, and the subterraneous.—The visible are constructed in valleys or marshes, and protracted in longitude or latitude as the situation requires. They are composed of adminicula for supporting the arches and confining the stream, and of arcades.—The subterraneous are formed, by piercing the mountains, and conducting them below the surface of the earth. They are built of stone hewn or rough; and covered above with vaults, or with flat stones, which may be termed flags; these flags shelter the waters from the heat of the sun.

They divide them still into double and triple aqueducts; that is to say, such as are supported either by two or by three ranges of arcades. Such was the aqueduct which Procopius records to have been built by Cosroes king of the Persians, for the city of Petra in Mingrelia: it had three conduits upon the same line, each elevated above the other.

Frequently aqueducts are paved. Sometimes the waters flow through a natural channel of clay. Frequently they are conveyed by pipes of lead into reservoirs of the same metal, or into troughs of hewn stone. The channels are cut with an imperceptible descent, that the current may be accelerated by its own weight. Parallel to its course, on each side, is cut a narrow footpath, where people may walk when necessary. By conduits, or grooves, the waters are conveyed into large cisterns, but not forced above their original level. To make them rise and issue from their apertures. Aqueducts, apertures with force, they must be confined in tubes of a small diameter, and abruptly fall from a considerable declivity.

Aqueducts of every kind were long ago the wonders of Rome; the vast quantities of them which they had; the prodigious expense employed in conducting waters over arcades from one place to another, at the distance of 30, 40, 60, and even 100 miles, which were either continued or supplied by other labours, as by cutting mountains and piercing rocks; all this ought to surprise us: nothing like this is undertaken in our times: we dare not even think of purchasing public convenience at so dear a rate. Appius the censor advised and constructed the first aqueduct. His example gave the public luxury a hint to cultivate these objects; and the force of prodigious and indefatigable labour diverted the course of rivers and floods to Rome. Grigippa, in that year when he was adile, put the last hand to the magnificence of these works. It is chiefly in this respect that the modern so much resembles the ancient city of Rome. For this advantage, she is peculiarly indebted to Sextus V. and to Paul V., who for grandeur and magnificence emulated the masters of the universe*. There are still to be seen, in different places contiguous to Rome, striking remains of these aqueducts; arches continued through a long space, over which were extended the canals which carried the water to the city. The arches are sometimes low, sometimes raised to a vast height, to humour the tumulities or depressions of the ground. There are some which have two arcades; one constructed above the other; and this precaution was observed, lest the height of a single arcade, if extended as far as the situation required, might render the structure less firm and permanent. They are commonly of bricks: which by their cement cohere so strongly, that the parts are not separated without the utmost difficulty.—When the elevations of the ground were enormous, it became necessary to form subterraneous aqueducts. These carried the waters to such aqueducts as were raised above ground, in the declivity or at the foot of mountains. If the artificial channel of the water was not susceptible of a downward bias but by passing through a rock, through this they cut a passage at the same height with the superior aqueduct: such a one may be seen above the city of Tivoli, and at the place called Vivacaro. The canal which formed the course of the aqueduct is hewn out of the rock to the extent of more than a mile, about five feet in height and four in breadth.

There is one thing, however, which deserves to be remarked. It is, that these aqueducts, which might have been directed in a straight line to the city, did not arrive at it but by frequent and winding mazes. Some have said that this oblique track was pursued to avoid the expense which must attend the building of arcades to an extraordinary height: others, that it was their intention to diminish the impetuosity of the current; which, rolling in a straight line through an immense space, must always have increased its velocity, must have worn the canals by perpetual and forcible attrition, and of consequence afforded an impure and unwholesome draught to the inhabitants. But since there was so great a descent between the cascade of Tivoli and Rome, it is demanded why they should go to draw water from the same river at the distance of more than 20 miles higher; nay, of more than 30 miles, if we reckon the curvatures of its direction through that mountainous country? It is replied, the motive of obtaining the water more salubrious and more limpid, was sufficient to make the Romans think their labour necessary, and their expense properly bestowed; and to those who reflect that the waters of this river were impregnated with mineral particles, and by no means wholesome, the answer will appear satisfactory.

If any one will cast his eyes upon Plate 128th of the Antiquities of Father Montfaucon, he will see with how much care these immense works were constructed. From distance to distance spiraments were left, that, if the water should happen to be stopped by any accident, it might gradually disemboque, till they could clear its ordinary passage. There were likewise, even in the very canals which conveyed the water, cavities considerably deeper than its internal surface, into which the stream was precipitated, and where it remained stagnant till it was refined from mud and feculence; and ponds, where it might expand itself till it was purified.

The aqueduct of the Aqua Marcia had an arch of Vol. iv. 16 feet in diameter. The whole was composed of three different kinds of stone; one of them reddish, another brown, and a third of an earth colour. Above, there appeared two canals; of which the highest was fed by the new waters of the Tiverone, and the lower by what they called the Claudian river. The entire edifice is 70 Roman feet high. Near this aqueduct, we have in Father Montfaucon the plan of another with three canals; the highest supplied by the water called Julia, that in the middle from Tepula, and the lowest from the Aqua Marcia.

The arch of the aqueduct of the Aqua Claudia is of hewn stone, very beautiful: that of the aqueduct of the Aqua Neronia is of bricks: they are each of them 72 Roman feet in height.

The canal of the aqueduct which was called the Aqua Appia, deserves to be mentioned for a singularity which is observed in it; for it is not, like the others, plain, nor gradual in its descent; but much narrower at the lower than the higher end.

The consul Frontinus, who superintended the aqueducts under the emperor Nerva, mentions nine of them which had each 13,594 pipes of an inch in diameter. Vigerus observes, that, in the space of 24 hours, Rome received 500,000 hogsheads of water.

We might likewise have mentioned the aqueduct of Drusus, and that of Riminius: but we shall satisfy ourselves with observing here, that Augustus caused all the aqueducts to be repaired; and afterwards pass to other monuments of the same kind, and still more important, which give the most striking ideas of Roman magnificence.

One of these monuments is the aqueduct of Metz, of which a great number of arcades still remain. These arcades crossed the Moselle, a river which is broad and vast at that place. The copious sources of Gorze furnished water for the representation of a sea fight. This water was collected in a reservoir; from thence it was conducted by subterraneous canals formed of hewn stone, and so spacious that a man could walk erect in them: it traversed the Moselle upon its superb and lofty arcades, which may still be seen at the distance of two Aqueduct two leagues from Metz; so nicely wrought and so firmly cemented, that, except those parts in the middle which have been carried away by the ice, they have resisted, and will still resist, the severest shocks of the most violent seasons. From these arcades, other aqueducts conveyed the waters to the baths, and to the place where the naval engagement was mimicked.

If we may trust Colenarius, the aqueduct of Segovia may be compared with the most admired labours of antiquity. There still remain 159 arcades, wholly consisting of stones enormously large, and joined without mortar. These arcades, with what remains of the edifice, are 102 feet high; there are two ranges of arcades, one above another. The aqueduct flows through the city, and runs beneath the greatest number of houses which are at the lower end.

After these exorbitant structures, we may be in some degree believed when we speak of the aqueduct which Louis XIV. caused to be built near Maintenon, for carrying water from the river Bucq to Versailles: it is perhaps the greatest aqueduct which now subsists in the world: it is 700 fathoms in length, and contains 242 arcades.