Yes we are on time but this is yesterdays train
if you goto this site you can find most the faulse emails out befor you keep sending the trash around
http://www.truthorfiction.com/index-humor.htm
Life's hard, even harder if your stupid John Wayne
http://rtssite.shutterfly.com/
Without knowing anything about rail history one can spot this as bogus because the Romans did not use war chariots. By the time of Alexander the Great (4th Century BCE) chariots had become ineffectual on the battlefield.
In fact, by the time Julius Caesar invaded Britain (unsuccessfully) in the 1st century BCE, war chariots had been out of use for so long that the British war chariots took the Legions by surprise. At first the British had some success with them because the Romans had no tactics to deal with them. But, very quickly, the Romans figured out how to counter the chariots and went back to beating the Brits like a drum.
The Romans used chariots only for sport (chariot racing in the Circus Maximus) and religio-ceremonial occasions. A general celebrating a Triumph rode in a chariot in the midst of his Triumphal parade. The October Horse race (which ended the campaigning season) was a chariot race around the city, after which the lead horse of the winning team was sacrificed.
The Romans did not use chariots for war or for transportation. Their cavalry rode horses and they used carts and wagons for transport on the roads. Roman roads were sized to accommadate a squad of soldiers (8 men) marching abreast while carrying their gear.
Jack
wjstix wrote:I wonder then, where did the 4'-8 1/2" standard gauge come from?? You'd think a round number like 5' (or Brunel's 8') would make more sense. I wouldn't be surprised if there wasn't some horsy connection, given railcars were pulled by horses for centuries before locomotives. Maybe that is around the right width to allow a horse to walk between the rails pulling a car??
Standard gauge was established with the bill to build the first transcontinental railroad. It was supposedly an average of the gauges in use in the US at the time.
For more than you ever wanted to know about railroad track gauges, try this link:
http://www.turksib.com/gauges/index-e.html
Apparently fictional horses butts come in a myriad of dimensions!
Chuck