The Ten Books on Architecture, 8.6.4

Vitruvius  translated by Joseph Gwilt

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4If the water is to be brought in leaden pipes, a reservoir is first made near the spring, from whence to the reservoir in the city, pipes are laid proportioned to the quantity of water. The pipes must be made in lengths of not less than ten feet: hence if they be one hundred inches wide (centenariæ), each length will weigh twelve hundred pounds; if eighty inches (octogenariæ), nine hundred and sixty pounds; if fifty inches (quinquagenariæ), six hundred pounds; if forty inches (quadragenariæ), four hundred and eighty pounds; if thirty inches (tricenariæ), three hundred and sixty pounds; if twenty inches (vicenariæ), two hundred and forty pounds; if fifteen inches (quinumdenum), one hundred and eighty pounds; if ten inches (denum), one hundred and twenty pounds; if eight inches (octonum), ninety-six pounds; if five inches (quinariæ), sixty pounds. It is to be observed that the pipes take the names of their sizes from the quantity of inches in width of the sheets, before they are bent round: thus, if the sheet be fifty inches wide, before bending into a pipe, it is called a fifty-inch pipe; and so of the rest.

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