“…In the fourth and fifth centuries, Roman engineers already had half a millennium of experience in the construction of water supply systems, but the Constantinople system was still a challenge due to its scale and the lack of nearby springs of sufficient discharge (Bono et al, 2001). Due to the hilly terrain, the actual length of the combined channels was at least 426 km, and maybe up to 565 km if a double channel ran all the way to the city (Çeçen, 1996; Crow, 2012; Crow et al, 2008; Ruggeri, 2018, p. 98). This implies that the combined aqueduct system is the longest and most complex water supply system for a city in the ancient world, both in Roman and Byzantine times (Çeçen, 1996).…”