Water wheel technology was developed to a high level during the Roman period, a fact attested both by
Vitruvius (in
De architectura) and by
Pliny the Elder (in
Naturalis Historia). The largest complex of
water wheels existed at
Barbegal near
Arles, where the site was fed by a channel from the main aqueduct feeding the town. It is estimated that the site comprised sixteen separate
overshot water wheels arranged in two parallel lines down the hillside. The outflow from one wheel became the input to the next one down in the sequence. Twelve kilometers north of Arles, at Barbegal, near
Fontvieille, where the aqueduct arrived at a steep hill, the aqueduct fed a series of parallel
water wheels to power a
flourmill. There are two aqueducts which join just north of the mill complex, and a sluice which enabled the operators to control the water supply to the complex. There are substantial masonry remains of the water channels and foundations of the individual mills, together with a staircase rising up the hill upon which the mills are built. The mills apparently operated from the end of the 1st century until about the end of the 3rd century. The capacity of the mills has been estimated at 4.5 tons of
flour per day, sufficient to supply enough bread for the 12,500 inhabitants occupying the town of Arelate at that time. at
Hierapolis,
Asia Minor. The
Hierapolis sawmill was a
Roman water-powered stone saw mill at
Hierapolis,
Asia Minor (modern-day
Turkey). Dating to the second half of the 3rd century AD, the
sawmill is the earliest known machine to combine a
crank with a
connecting rod. The
watermill is shown on a raised
relief on the
sarcophagus of Marcus Aurelius Ammianos, a local
miller. A
waterwheel fed by a
mill race is shown powering two
frame saws via a
gear train cutting rectangular blocks. Further crank and connecting rod mechanisms, without gear train, are archaeologically attested for the 6th-century AD water-powered stone sawmills at
Gerasa,
Jordan, and
Ephesus, Turkey. Literary references to water-powered
marble saws in
Trier, now
Germany, can be found in
Ausonius's late 4th-century AD poem
Mosella. They attest a diversified use of water-power in many parts of the
Roman Empire. A complex of mills also existed on the
Janiculum in
Rome fed by the
Aqua Traiana. The
Aurelian Walls were carried up the hill apparently to include the
water mills used to grind grain towards providing
bread flour for the city. The mill was thus probably built at the same time as or before the walls were built by the emperor
Aurelian (reigned 270–275 AD). The mills were supplied from an aqueduct, where it plunged down a steep hill. The site thus resembles
Barbegal, although excavations in the late 1990s suggest that they may have been undershot rather than overshot in design. The mills were in use in 537 AD when the
Goths besieging the city cut off their water supply. However they were subsequently restored and may have remained in operation until at least the time of
Pope Gregory IV (827–44). Many other sites are reported from across the
Roman Empire, although many remain unexcavated. ==See also==