News

(CNN) — A British man has died after falling from a viewing platform at a famed Roman aqueduct in the Spanish city of Segovia. Emergency services were called after the 63-year-old man suffered a ...
Still in use to this day, the aqueduct carries water from the Frío River to the city of Segovia. The central section has two layers of arches that stand 28.5 metres (93.5 feet) above the ground.
Segovia’s Roman aqueduct is one of the best-preserved Roman engineering marvels in the world. Built without mortar, the aqueduct’s massive granite blocks still stand tall as they cut through ...
Still in use to this day, the aqueduct carries water from the Frío River to the city of Segovia. The central section has two layers of arches that stand 28.5 metres (93.5 feet) above the ground.
Still in use to this day, the aqueduct carries water from the Frío River to the city of Segovia. The central section has two layers of arches that stand 28.5 metres (93.5 feet) above the ground.
Segovia’s Roman aqueduct is one of the best-preserved Roman engineering marvels in the world. Built without mortar, the aqueduct’s massive granite blocks still stand tall as they cut through ...
In Segovia, the Romans built an aqueduct that stands as arguably their greatest architectural legacy from six centuries in Spain. After drawing water from the Frio River, the aqueduct runs ...
Built in the first century, the aqueduct of Segovia – now a UNESCO World Heritage Site alongside Segovia's historic centre – delivered mountain water to the city for almost 2,000 years.