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A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) 4 4 Browse Search
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome 2 2 Browse Search
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Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, CURIA IULIA (search)
, n. 4, where it is referred to the temple of Julius; while Richmond (JRS 1914, 218) wrongly refers it to a little shrine just outside the Atrium of Augustus on the Palatine). The statue of Victory standing on a globe which came from Tarentum is shown in the apex of the pediment, and is represented on other coins of the same date (BM Aug. 622-3; Cohen, Aug. 13; BM. Rep. ii. 14, 15. 4356-7, where it is wrongly stated to have been placed in the basilica Iulia). Domitian restored the curia in 94 A.D. (Hieron. 161 Ed. Schoene; so also Tiro, Epit. Chron. in Chron. Min. i. 417 ; according to Fotheringham (p. 273) the date would be 89-90. ), and it was no doubt he who took the opportunity of dedicating the Chalcidicum to his patron goddess Minerva, whence it acquired the name of Atrium Minervae (Notit. Reg. VIII). This curia is represented in the famous Anaglypha Traiani (see ROSTRA). It is perhaps also represented in one of the reliefs of the arch of Benevento (Mitt. 1892, 257; SScR 194).
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, Chronological Index to Dateable Monuments (search)
Caelian (?), 10; dedicates Arch of Titus, 45: establishes four Ludi, 320; erects Obelisk now in Piazza Navona, 369; begins Trajan's Forum (?), 237; Circus Maximus injured by fire, 117; Horti Domitiae formed, 267. 82Capitoline Temple dedicated, 300. 88Tunnel for Aqua Claudia under Mons Aeflanus (near Tibur), 22. 89The' Trofei di Mario,' 363. 91The Equus Domitiani in the Forum, 201. 92The palaces on the Palatine completed, 159. 93Temple of Fortuna Redux, 218. 94The Curia restored, 144. 94-95The Mica Aurea, 341. 96The Meta Sudans, 340. 96-98Reign of Nerva: he dedicates the Forum Nervae or Transitorium, 227; builds Horrea, 262; additions to the Amphitheatrum Flavium (Colosseum), 6. 98-117Reign of Trajan: Temple of Fortuna, 214; Ara of Pudicitia, 433; Naumachia, 358; rostra and plutei, 453-4; restores Circus Maximus, 117; builds Theatre in Campus Martius, 518; Amphitheatrum Castrense, 5; addit
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
Latera'nus, L. Se'xtius Sexti'nus was the friend and supporter of the celebrated C. Licinius Calvus Stolo in his attempts to throw open the consulship to the plebeians. He was the colleague of Licinius in the tribunate of the plebs from B. C. 376 to 367; and upon the passing of the Licinian laws in the latter of these years, he was elected to the consulship for the year B. C. 366, being the first plebeian who had obtained that dignity. (Liv. 6.35-42, 7.1.) For an account of the Licinian laws, see Vol. I. p. 586b., and the authorities there referred to. The name of Sextius Lateranus does not occur again under the republic, but re-appears in the times of the empire. Thus we find in the Fasti a T. Sextius Magius Lateranus consul in A. D. 94, and a T. Sextius Lateranus consul in A. D. 154.
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
me. The " Liber de Spectaculis" and the first nine books of the regular series involve a great number of historical allusions, extending from the games of Titus (A. D. 80) down to the return of Domitian from the Sarmatian expedition, in January, A. D. 94. The second book could not have been written until after the commencement of the Dacian war (2.2), that is, not before A. D. 86, nor the sixth until after the triumph over the Dacians and Germans (A. D. 91); the seventh was written while the Sarmatian war, which began in A. D. 93, was still in progress, and reaches to the end of that year. The eighth book opens in January, A. D. 94, the ninth also refers to the same epoch, but may, as Clinton supposes, have been written in A. D. 95. The whole of these were composed at Rome, except the third, which was written during a tour in Gallia Togata. The tenth book was published twice: the first edition was given hastily to the world; the second, that which we now read (10.2), celebrates the arr
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
Paulus, Se'rgius 2. L SERGIUS PAULUS, one of the consuls suffcti in A. D. 94 (Fasti).