Forum Appii


The Forum Appii is an ancient post station on the Via Appia, 43 miles southeast of Rome, founded, no doubt, by the original constructor of the road. Horace mentions it as the usual halt at the end of the first day's journey from Rome, and describes it as full of boatmen and cheating innkeepers. Boatmen were found there because it was the starting-point of a canal which ran parallel to the road through the Pontine Marshes, and was used instead of it at the time of Strabo and Horace. The Appii Forum and the "Three Taverns" are mentioned also as a halting place in the account of Paul's journey to Rome. Under Nerva and Trajan the road was repaired; one inscription records expressly the paving with silex of the section from Tripontium, 4 miles northwest, to Forum Appii; the bridge near Tripontium was similarly repaired, and that at Forum Appii, though it bears no inscription, is of the same style. Only scanty relics of antiquity have been found here; a post station was placed here by Pope Pius VI when the Via Appia Nuova was reconstructed in the late 18th century.