A
FIRM AND PROFITABLE RESEARCH
Titus
Livius in the XXXIX book of his work The history of
Rome tells that in 187 B.C. the consul C. Flaminis,
after defeating the Liguri settled on the Appenines between
Tuscuny and Emilia, made his legions build a road from Bologna
to Arezzo.
This road, fallen into disuse already in the imperial age,
was lost for human carelessness and knavery, for the distructions
caused by natural events and, where it was conserved, for
the millenary sedimentation that had covered it.
Until the last decades of the XX century no traces of it
were found.
Then, Cesare Agostini and Franco Santi, from Castel dellAlpi,
giving credit to the tells of their ancestors and convinced
from the favorable orography, in 1977 started the researches
of this road on the watershed ridge between the streams
Setta and Savena, in the woody and still wild area of the
Appenninic crossing, north of the Futa Pass.
In 1979 they found the first stretch of paved road and for
twenty years they have dug by themselves, or with the help
of friends, bringing to light many stretches of roman pavements
that were covered by 50-80 cm of ground, locating a total
length of about 11 Km.
Authors:
Avv. Cesare Agostini and Franco Santi.
Taken from the informative depliant about the book:The
road Bologna-Fiesole of the II Century B.C..Casa Editrice
CLUEB