Almone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryItaly
coordinates
41°51′58″N 12°28′35″E / 41.8662°N 12.4765°E / 41.8662; 12.4765
ProgressionTiberTyrrhenian Sea
Almone
The Almone where it flows through the Park of the Caffarella
Location
CountryItaly
Physical characteristics
MouthTiber
  coordinates
41°51′58″N 12°28′35″E / 41.8662°N 12.4765°E / 41.8662; 12.4765
Basin features
ProgressionTiberTyrrhenian Sea

The Almone (Latin: Almo) is a small river of the Ager Romanus, a few miles south of the city of Rome. Today the river is polluted and is channelled to a sewage treatment plant and no longer reaches its natural confluence with the Tiber.

The Latin name of the Almone, Almo (also the name of its corresponding deity), is derived from the Latin word almus, meaning "fertile" or "nourishing," which may derive from its connection to Cybele, also known as Magna Mater ("Great Mother").[1][2]

Since medieval times[3] the stream has been called Marrana della Caffarella. Marrana (or marana in Roman dialect) is a term that derives from the name of the ancient ager maranus, the fields that surround the Via Appia, and refers to the drainage channels that flow through the countryside near Rome.[4] "Caffarella" refers to the valley, now a park, that the river runs through. The river has also been known as Acquataccio, a name with two possible derivations. It either refers to the nearby Appian Way, a corruption of Acqua d'Appia (which became d'Accia), or the suffix -accio is to be taken in its pejorative sense, and it refers to the marshy waters of the Caffarella valley.[4]

Origin, course, and diversion

In antiquity

Notes and references

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