Roman Cisterns - Amelia
The Roman cistern of Amelia is located under the present-day Piazza Matteotti, which corresponds to the forum, the public square of the Roman period, at the northern end of the town between the hill of St Stephen and that of the Cathedral.
The imposing hydraulic construction was built between the beginning and the first half of the first century B.C., when Amelia was elevated to a municipality and provided with public infrastructures such as the theatre, baths and roads: the cistern was conceived to meet the city’s water needs.
It still shows an exceptional state of preservation: in fact, all the fundamental components for the functioning of the entire complex are present in situ, such as the water adduction system, the internal device for regulating the maximum water level, and the system for emptying the cistern.
It consists of a large rectangular room carved into the limestone, with internal dimensions of 57.50 x 19.60 metres and an average height of 5.70 metres, which serves as a substructure for the Roman forum square.