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Valens Aqueduct: Difference between revisions

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|appearance  = ''[[Assassin's Creed Revelations]]''}}
|appearance  = ''[[Assassin's Creed Revelations]]''}}


The '''Valens Aqueduct ''' was a [[Rome|Roman]] [[Aqueducts|aqueduct]] in [[Constantinople]] and a major source of fresh water for the city in the 16th century.
The '''Valens Aqueduct''' was a [[Rome|Roman]] [[Aqueducts|aqueduct]] in [[Constantinople]] and a major source of fresh water for the city during the 16th century.


==Database Entry==
==History==
Likely the most successful architectural project in the history of Constantinople, Valens Aqueduct served fresh water to the city almost continuously for nearly 1,600 years.
Completed by Roman Emperor Valens in the late 4th century CE, it was restored by several [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] Sultans, principally by [[Bayezid II]] and was, by the early 16th Century, one of the most prominent landmarks in the city.
 
Built in 375 by Emperor Valens, it was used and repaired by the [[Byzantines|Byzantine]], Latin and [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] dynasties until well after Sultan Mustafa's final mayor restoration in 1679.
 
The aquaduct continued to bring small amounts of fresh water into the city until the late 19th century, when it was ultimately - and perhaps mercifully - replaced by a more modern water delivery system pipes. Today this aqueduct is about 600 meters in lenght - about half its original size.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 21:53, 18 July 2012


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The Valens Aqueduct was a Roman aqueduct in Constantinople and a major source of fresh water for the city during the 16th century.

History

Completed by Roman Emperor Valens in the late 4th century CE, it was restored by several Ottoman Sultans, principally by Bayezid II and was, by the early 16th Century, one of the most prominent landmarks in the city.

Gallery

References