Why did Romans build aqueducts?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Transport water to cities
Show off engineering skills — Wrong. While aqueducts showcased Roman engineering, their purpose was practical: transporting fresh water from distant sources to cities for drinking, bathing (public baths), fountains, and sanitation. Rome's population required massive water supply infrastructure.
Transport water to cities ✓ — Correct! Roman cities needed huge amounts of fresh water for drinking, public baths, fountains, toilets, and industry. Local sources were insufficient, so aqueducts transported water from springs and rivers miles away using gravity flow. Some aqueducts were underground, but famous arched structures crossed valleys. Rome had 11 aqueducts supplying 300+ gallons per person daily.
Create jobs for workers — Wrong. While construction employed workers, aqueducts solved a critical need: providing fresh water to growing cities. Rome's population exceeded one million—local wells couldn't supply enough water for drinking, bathing, and sanitation.
More History & Culture questions
- Why was the 1873 blue-jeans patent not simply a patent for denim fabric?
- Why could one vague Backrooms photo grow more lore than a finished monster story?
- Why did camera-like Backrooms clips make an impossible maze easier to believe?
- Why did European walls evolve triangular star-shaped bastions?
- Why did city walls have protruding towers every 50 meters?
- Why didn't ancient Rome have city walls at the empire's peak?
