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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Search the whole document.
Found 8 total hits in 6 results.
168 BC (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae
LACUS IUTURNAE
the spring of Juturna in the south corner of the forum,
at the foot of the Palatine, where Castor and Pollux were seen to water
their horses after the battle of Lake Regillus in 496 B.C. (Ov. Fasti i. 706;
Dionys. vi. 13 ; LA 225, 226; Neue Jahrb. 1902, 370-388). Because of
this appearance the temple of CASTOR AND POLLUX (q.v.) was built on the
west side of the spring. The same divinities were also said to have
appeared on the same spot after the victory of Pydna in 168 B.C. (Flor.
i. 28. 15 ; Val. Max. i. 8. I). The spring, in the shape of a puteal, with
Castor and Pollux, is represented on coins of the gens Postumia, of about
90 B.C. (Babelon ii. 379, Nos. 5-6; BM. Rep. ii. 310, 718-723). The water
nymph Juturna belonged properly to the river Numicius, but was brought
to Rome, and became the tutelary deity of those ' qui artificium aqua
exercent' (Serv. Aen. xii. 139), and her name was derived from 'iuvare
quia laborantes iuvare consuevit' (ib.; Varro, LL v. 71; N
496 BC (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae
LACUS IUTURNAE
the spring of Juturna in the south corner of the forum,
at the foot of the Palatine, where Castor and Pollux were seen to water
their horses after the battle of Lake Regillus in 496 B.C. (Ov. Fasti i. 706;
Dionys. vi. 13 ; LA 225, 226; Neue Jahrb. 1902, 370-388). Because of
this appearance the temple of CASTOR AND POLLUX (q.v.) was built on the
west side of the spring. The same divinities were also said to have
appeared on the same spot after the victory of Pydna in 168 B.C. (Flor.
i. 28. 15 ; Val. Max. i. 8. I). The spring, in the shape of a puteal, with
Castor and Pollux, is represented on coins of the gens Postumia, of about
90 B.C. (Babelon ii. 379, Nos. 5-6; BM. Rep. ii. 310, 718-723). The water
nymph Juturna belonged properly to the river Numicius, but was brought
to Rome, and became the tutelary deity of those ' qui artificium aqua
exercent' (Serv. Aen. xii. 139), and her name was derived from 'iuvare
quia laborantes iuvare consuevit' (ib.; Varro, LL v. 71; N
90 BC (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae
499 BC - 400 BC (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae
300 AD - 399 AD (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae
700 AD - 799 AD (search for this): entry lacus-iuturnae