All roads lead to Rome, they say. - And finally you too can find out if that's true! 😉

With "The Digital Atlas of Ancient Roads", #Itiner-e, a high-resolution dataset and detailed map created in a collaborative ongoing project:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2503325-digital-map-lets-you-explore-the-roman-empires-vast-road-network via @NewScientist

Digital map lets you explore the Roman Empire's vast road network

Archaeologists have compiled the most detailed map yet of roads throughout the Roman Empire in AD 150, totalling almost 300,000 kilometres in length

New Scientist
Start exploring Ancient Rome's roads right away at: https://itiner-e.org
itiner-e

Further reading:

P. de Soto et al., Itiner-e: A high-resolution dataset of roads of the Roman Empire, Sci Data 12, 1731 (2025). 🔓

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-025-06140-zSci

@jens2go looks like a paste-o in the URL, got an extra "Sci" at the end, should be https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-025-06140-z
Itiner-e: A high-resolution dataset of roads of the Roman Empire - Scientific Data

The Roman Empire’s road system was critical for structuring the movement of people, goods and ideas, and sustaining imperial control. Yet, it remains incompletely mapped and poorly integrated across sources despite centuries of research. We present Itiner-e, the most detailed and comprehensive open digital dataset of roads in the entire Roman Empire. It was created by identifying roads from archaeological and historical sources, locating them using modern and historical topographic maps and remote sensing, and digitising them with road segment-level metadata and certainty categories. The dataset nearly doubles the known length of Roman roads through increased coverage and spatial precision, and reveals that the location of only 2.737% are known with certainty. This resource is transformative for understanding how mobility shaped connectivity, administration, and even disease transmission in the ancient world, and for studies of the millennia-long development of terrestrial mobility in the region.

Nature