Technology
Ancient Rome's 'Google Maps' now online: Omnesviae
Key Points
A digital tool lets users explore the Roman Empire’s road network and, using historical data, work out how long it took to travel between cities 2,000 years ago. A Dutch engineer has reconstructed, using academic sources and historic cartography, the road map that connected the Roman Empire. The result, accessible from any browser, including on a mobile phone, makes it possible to plot routes between cities of Antiquity and find out how many days the journey would have taken on foot or on...
A digital tool lets users explore the Roman Empire’s road network and, using historical data, work out how long it took to travel between cities 2,000 years ago.
A Dutch engineer has reconstructed, using academic sources and historic cartography, the road map that connected the Roman Empire. The result, accessible from any browser, including on a mobile phone, makes it possible to plot routes between cities of Antiquity and find out how many days the journey would have taken on foot or on horseback.
The tool is called OmnesViae (Omnesviae.org (source in Spanish)) and is based mainly on the Tabula Peutingeriana, a medieval copy of a Roman map that depicted the cursus publicus, the empire’s official road network.
As the western part of that document has been lost, the data for that area come from the Antonine Itinerary, another record from the Roman period. Behind the project is René Voorburg (source in Spanish), who drew on the work of historian Richard Talbert on the Tabula (source in Spanish) and on location data from the Pleiades Project. The code and database are open-access and can be consulted on Codeberg.
How it works and what it shows
The site is designed to be used on a computer, but it also works well in a phone browser. You just have to enter a starting point and a destination for the system to calculate the fastest route according to the distances recorded in ancient sources, and highlight it in yellow on a modern map.
It also provides detailed information on intermediate stops, which is particularly useful because many Roman roads followed river courses or passed near settlements that still exist today, albeit under different names.
When you enter Madrid and Milan as the endpoints, the site identifies them as Miaccum and Mediolanvm, and sets Complutum, today’s Alcalá de Henares, as the first significant stop. Among the final stages are Avgvsta Tavrinorvm (Turin) and Placentia (Piacenza).
According to the planner’s estimate, the journey would have taken 43 days to cover 1,500 Roman miles. To put the gap with the present day into perspective: the same route by road can now be done in around 14 days (340h) on foot, or 16 hours by car (source in Spanish).
A project that keeps growing
OmnesViae is not the only initiative seeking to reconstruct the communications map of the Roman world. In recent years, other projects with similar approaches have emerged, some focusing on calculating travel costs and times depending on the time of year, and others on documenting the physical course of the roads more precisely using digital mapping techniques.
Voorburg keeps his tool up to date and has completely rewritten the original version, which was active between 2011 and 2024, now incorporating artificial intelligence support for the site’s translations and illustrations.
Ancient Rome's ' (ORG)
Omnesviae (ORG)
the Roman Empire’s (LOCATION)
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the Tabula Peutingeriana (PERSON)
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the Pleiades Project (ORG)
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