Appian Way

E194622

The Appian Way is one of ancient Rome’s earliest and most strategically important roads, historically linking the city to southern Italy and famed as the “Queen of Roads.”

All labels observed (4)

Label Occurrences
Appian Way canonical 4
Strada Statale 7 Via Appia 1
Via Appia (Appian Way) 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf ancient Roman road
cultural heritage site
builtDuring Roman Republic
connects Beneventum
surface form: Benevento

Brindisi
Capua
Rome
Taranto
constructedBy Appius Claudius Caecus
country Italy
endPoint Brindisi
Capua
follows route from Rome to southern Italy
hasPart Roman bridges
basalt paving stones
milestones
tombs and mausoleums
heritageStatus part of the Appian Way Regional Park
sections included in UNESCO World Heritage Site "Via Appia"
historicalPeriod antiquity
inception 312 BC
knownAs Queen of Roads
regina viarum
surface form: Regina Viarum
locatedIn Italy
Rome
maintainedBy ancient Roman state
materialUsed stone paving
namedAfter Appius Claudius Caecus
notableEvent site of crucifixion of Spartacus’ followers
used during the Second Samnite War
partOf Roman roads
surface form: Roman road network
presentDayUse archaeological site
pedestrian and cycling route
tourist attraction
routeType long-distance road
significance facilitated Roman expansion in Italy
linked Rome with southern Italy
one of the earliest Roman paved roads
strategically important for Roman military campaigns
startPoint Rome
traverses Apulia
Basilicata
Campania
Lazio
use communication route
military transport
trade route

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (7)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Via Appia alsoKnownAs Appian Way
Via Appia hasPart Appian Way
this entity surface form: Via Appia Antica
regina viarum refersTo Appian Way
subject surface form: Regina viarum
Mesagne roadConnection Appian Way
this entity surface form: Strada Statale 7 Via Appia
Maleventum locatedOn Appian Way
Baths of Caracalla, Rome near Appian Way
subject surface form: Baths of Caracalla
Emissario del Lago Albano locatedNear Appian Way
this entity surface form: Via Appia (Appian Way)