Sometimes the
umbilicus agri was located in a city or a
castrum. This central point was generally referred to as
groma, from the name of the instrument used by the
gromatici (surveyors). In such cases, the grid was traced by extending the urban
cardo maximus and the
decumanus maximus through the gates of the city into the surrounding agricultural land. Parallel secondary roads (
limites quintarii) were then traced on both sides of the initial axes at intervals of 100
actus (about 3.5 km). The territory was thus divided into square areas. The road network density was then increased with other roads parallel to those already traced at a distance from each other of 20
actus (710.40 m). Each of the square areas – 20 × 20
actus – resulting from this further division was called a
centuria or
century. This 200
jugera area of the
centuria became prevalent in the period when the large areas of the Po Valley were delimited, while smaller centuries of 10 × 10
actus, as the name
centuria suggests, had formerly been used. Contemporary Roman sources as well as modern archeological results suggest that centuria varied in size from 50 to 400 jugera, with some subdivisions using non-square plots. The land was divided after the completion of the roads. Each century was divided into 10 strips, lying parallel to the
cardo and the
decumanus, with a distance between them of 2
actus (71.04 m), thus forming 100 squares (
heredia) of about 0.5 hectares each: 100
heredia = 1
centuria. Each
heredium was divided in half along the north–south axis thus creating two
jugera: one
jugerum, from
jugum (yoke), measured 2523 square metres, which was the amount of land that could be ploughed in one day by a pair of oxen. ==Regions where centuriation was used==