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OverviewPont du Gard, Roman aqueduct, ancient engineering, Roman Empire history-this is the story of how water shaped power, and how stone still carries its memory. Discover the Pont du Gard as both masterpiece of Roman engineering and enduring symbol of infrastructure, empire, and human ambition. Rising above the Gardon River in southern France, the Pont du Gard stands as one of the most extraordinary achievements of the ancient world-a Roman aqueduct bridge built in the first century CE to carry water across distance with unbroken precision. Yet this is not merely a story of construction. It is a cultural history of systems: of how Rome imposed order on landscape, how water became a tool of empire, and how a structure designed for function became something far more enduring. This book traces the full life of the Pont du Gard, from its origins within the vast Roman water supply network that fed the city of Nemausus, through its abandonment as imperial systems collapsed, and into its unexpected afterlives as medieval crossing, Enlightenment object of study, national monument, and global heritage site. Each phase reveals a different relationship between people, technology, and place. The aqueduct once carried water with mathematical precision across miles of uneven terrain; today it carries meaning across centuries. Drawing on the history of Roman engineering, archaeology, and conservation, this narrative moves through the structure itself-its limestone blocks, its arches, its silent channel-showing how its form encodes a logic that still challenges modern understanding. It explores the realities behind ancient infrastructure: labor, measurement, maintenance, and the fragile systems that sustain continuity over time. It also examines what happens when those systems disappear, leaving behind structures that must be reinterpreted, reused, and ultimately preserved. The Pont du Gard emerges here not simply as a ruin or relic, but as a living problem. How does something built for a single purpose survive when that purpose vanishes? How does a structure become a symbol, and what is required to sustain that transformation? And what does it mean to inherit a past that cannot be restored, only held in place? Set against the shifting landscapes of southern France and the evolving frameworks of cultural memory, this book offers a deeply atmospheric account of one of the world's greatest ancient monuments. It is a story of stone and water, of empire and collapse, of use and reinterpretation, and of the quiet, ongoing labor required to preserve what remains. Stand beneath the arches, follow the line of the vanished water, and consider what endures-and what must be carried forward-when the systems that built the world no longer exist. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bill JohnsPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.381kg ISBN: 9798254143543Pages: 284 Publication Date: 29 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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