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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 5 total hits in 5 results.
203 AD (search for this): entry porticus-octaviae
33 BC (search for this): entry porticus-octaviae
PORTICUS OCTAVIAE
* built ostensibly by Octavia, the sister of Augustus
(Fest. 178; Ov. AA i. 69), but really by Augustus and dedicated in the
name of Octavia (Suet. Aug. 29; Cass. Dio xlix. 43; Liv. Ep. 138) at
some time after 27 B.C. (cf. Vitr. iii 2. 5), in place of the PORTICUS METELLI
(q.v.; Veil. i. I ) around the temples of Jupiter Stator and Juno (Plin.
NH xxxvi. 42). The statement of Cassius Dio that it was built after 33 B.C.
from the spoils of the war in Dalmatia, is due to confusion with the
porticus Octavia. It was burned in 80 A.D. (Cass. Dio lxvi. 24) and
restored, probably by Domitian, and again after a second fire in 203 by
Severus and Caracalla (CIL vi. 1034). It was adorned with foreign
marble (Ov. AA i. 70), and contained many famous works of art (Plin. NH
xxxiv. 31; xxxv. 114, 139; xxxvi. 15, 22, 24, 28, 34, 35; cf. Neapolis
ii. 234 n.). Besides the TEMPLES (q.v.) there were within the enclosure
a BIBLIOTHECA (q.v.) erected by Octavia in memory of the youthful
442 AD (search for this): entry porticus-octaviae
27 BC (search for this): entry porticus-octaviae
PORTICUS OCTAVIAE
* built ostensibly by Octavia, the sister of Augustus
(Fest. 178; Ov. AA i. 69), but really by Augustus and dedicated in the
name of Octavia (Suet. Aug. 29; Cass. Dio xlix. 43; Liv. Ep. 138) at
some time after 27 B.C. (cf. Vitr. iii 2. 5), in place of the PORTICUS METELLI
(q.v.; Veil. i. I ) around the temples of Jupiter Stator and Juno (Plin.
NH xxxvi. 42). The statement of Cassius Dio that it was built after 33 B.C.
from the spoils of the war in Dalmatia, is due to confusion with the
porticus Octavia. It was burned in 80 A.D. (Cass. Dio lxvi. 24) and
restored, probably by Domitian, and again after a second fire in 203 by
Severus and Caracalla (CIL vi. 1034). It was adorned with foreign
marble (Ov. AA i. 70), and contained many famous works of art (Plin. NH
xxxiv. 31; xxxv. 114, 139; xxxvi. 15, 22, 24, 28, 34, 35; cf. Neapolis
ii. 234 n.). Besides the TEMPLES (q.v.) there were within the enclosure
a BIBLIOTHECA (q.v.) erected by Octavia in memory of the youthful
80 AD (search for this): entry porticus-octaviae