With the centres of the
ancient European civilisations being around the Mediterranean, it is
no wonder that the major means of transport used by the ancient
Greeks was shipping. However, land transport could not be neglected;
goods moving between areas unconnected by navigate rivers still
depended on land, and there was no other option when the rivers
froze over during winter.
Land transport depended on
roads; and in ancient times, roads sprang up early in favourable
areas. The pioneers in this field were the Babylonians who had
highways as long ago as 3000 BCE. Persians too developed their own
roads; hence, the Greeks, and later the Romans, who conquered Persia
took over their roads as well.
Greek road technology was
minimalist; they were content with unpaved surfaces even for major
highways. On the other hand, the Romans put in more effort at
improving the existing road network. Paved roads appeared in the
Roman Empire around 170 BCE.
The Romans used their roads to much greater potential; they
needed good roads mainly for the movement of armies but also for
swift dispension of official messages from Rome to all the other
parts of their vast empire and, significantly, to favour the
collection of taxes. The phrase, "all roads lead to Rome",
was in no way an understatement. By the second century CE, the
Romans had built around 78,000 kilometres of roads.1
Roman road-building technique
After a straight course was laid out, the ground was dug until
solid bedrock was reached and a solid foundation of rocks and clay
was laid. Over this a surface of flat polygonal rocks was laid as
the paving. The paving was of durable rock such as basalt, granite
or porphyry. The rocks were laid out like a jigsaw puzzle for an
overall smooth surface. For less important roads, gravel was
sometimes used as the finishing surface. This system of a
multilayered construction of road surfaces was adopted continually
through history, and today's tar MacAdam (tarmac for short) roads
are similarly built with a solid foundation and successive layers of
different grades of gravel, though asphalt is now used to bind the
material together.
Roman roads also had adequate drainage (continuous ditches dug along
the roads) and well-placed milestones (one Roman mile is 87 metres
shorter than the modern mile; i.e. around 1.522 km.). The Via Appia,
which stretched over 580 km from Rome to Brundusium, was about 3.05
metres wide and paved throughout.
The machines of transport
included the two-wheeled cart and the four-wheeled wagon. The
animals used to draw the carts were mainly oxen, which were strong
but slow. For faster movement, horses and mules were used. Lack of
proper lubrication - the only available materials were olive extract
and animal fat - warranted a rough journey and heavy wear and tear
of vehicles.
Sea
Considering the slow speed
and limited capacity of land transport, sea transport was the
preferred mode whenever navigable water bodies were present.
Ships of the Mediterranean were of two kinds – the galley and the
sailboat. While the sailboat was greatly at the mercy of the winds,
the galley used banks of rowers, often at multiple levels, for
propulsion. Almost all Greek and Roman warships were galleys.
Oared merchant craft relied mainly on the wind but could fall back
on manpower during unfavourable conditions.
Ship-building
Greeks and Romans used similar techniques of ship-building.
Unlike earlier civilisations which first built a frame and formed a
skin of planks over it, the Mediterranean civilisations worked the
opposite. First, the hull was made by joining planks end-to-end with
mortise-and-tenon joints which were reinforced with dowels.
Then a frame was built into this shell for rigidity. The resulting
structure was surprisingly strong and waterproof with minimal
caulking. Roman shipbuilders added a sheath of lead on the
underwater surfaces to protect the wood from a pest called the
borer; a practice which was revived only in the 18th
century.
By the 4th century BCE, Greek ships had a capacity of
100 tons, a number which rose to 400 tons by the 1st
century BCE. Roman ships reached an astounding capacity of 1200 tons
(these ships were used, among other things, to transport the great
Egyptian obelisks to Europe, such as the one standing in front of
St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.)
A major invention of the Greeks which was to influence seafaring a
great deal was the lighthouse. In 270 BCE, the world’s first known
lighthouse, the Pharos at Alexandria, was built by architect
Sostratus to guide ships to the port. The 350 foot high structure
had a fire kept near its top which could be seen up to thirty miles
(48 km) out to sea.2
Later, the Romans began to build a network of lighthouses, around
thirty in number, many with metal mirrors to further reflect the
light from their fire. Lighthouses have evolved today to be a major
safety requirement for shipping, thus the impact of the Greeks and
Romans on navigation is deep even when the ships themselves are not
considered.
1,2.
Peter
James and Nick Thorpe, “Ancient Inventions”, (Ballantine Books,
1994), p. 99.;p. 52.