INDEX.
A.
Academia, [21], [246]
Ædes Publican, Flavian, [22], [24]
Æsculapius, temple of, [116]
Agger of Servius, [157]
Agon Capitolinus, [181]
Agrippina, pedestal of, [146], [178]
Alba Longa, [207]
Alban Hills, [192], [194];
Emissarium or tunnel of, [204]
—— Lake, [203]
—— Mount, [206]
Albanum Cæsarum, [202]
Albula, [189]
Albulæ Aquæ, [236]
Alexamenus, [18]
Allia, [257]
Altar of Sextius, [16]
Amphitheatrum Castrense, [173]
Ancient stone work, [163]
Anio, falls of, [249]
Antoninus Pius, pedestal of column, [178]
Appian Road, [194]
Aqua Virgo, [135]
Arches, [9]
Arch of Constantine, [59]
—— Dolabella, [174]
—— Drusus, [171]
—— Gallienus, [77]
—— M. Aurelius, [177]
—— Severus, [52]
—— Silversmiths, [104]
—— Tiberius, [46]
—— Titus, [31]
Architectural styles, [5], [11]
Arco dei Pantani, [92]
Area Flacciana, [15]
Arena of Coliseum, [67]
Arricia, causeway at, [208]
Arval College, [231]
Atta, tomb of, [219]
Atticus, tomb of, [198]
Atrium, Palatine, [23]
Auguratorium, on Palatine, [30]
Augustan buildings, [21]
Aurelius, M., bas-reliefs from arch, [177]
Aventine and Cælian Hills, [161].
B.
Bandusiæ Fons, [256]
Basilica, Constantine, [34], [35], [183]
—— Julia, [44]
——, Palatine, [24]
——, Ulpia, [83]
Bas-reliefs in Forum, [42], [43]
Baths of Agrippa, [134]
—— Caracalla, [166], [183]
—— Constantine, [100], [183]
—— Diocletian, [153]
—— Titus, [75]
Bibliotheca, [21]
Bibulus, tomb of, [97]
Brickwork, [12]
Bronze cone, [149], [178];
peacocks, [150], [178]
Bovillæ, [200]
C.
Cæcilia Metella, tomb of, [197]
Cælian, houses on, [176]
Caffarelli Palace, [98]
Caligula, Palace of, [31]
Calydonian boar hunt, [181]
Campagna, hills of, [191];
population, [192]
Capitoline map, [120], [181]
Capitolium, [98]
Casale Rotondo, [200]
Cestius, tomb of, [165]
Cicero’s Villa, [218]
Circus Flaminius, [123];
—— Maximus, Carceres of, [112]
Claudian Aqueduct, [20], [81], [174]
Climate, [189]
Clivus Victoriæ, [14]
Cloaca Maxima, [46], [105]
Clodius, Villa of, [201]
Cluilia Fossa, [197]
Coliseum, [61];
architecture of, [72];
characteristic of builder, [70]
Colonnacce, [94]
Colossus of Nero, [63]
Columbaria, [73], [170]
Columns, [10]
Column of Marcus Aurelius, [138]
—— Phocas, [41]
—— Trajan, [84];
cast of, [89]
Columna Centenaria, [142]
Commodus, Palace of, [176]
Constantine, Baths of, [100]
Cornelia Gracchorum, [121]
Cosmedin, S. Maria in, [111]
Cremera, [259]
Cryptoporticus, [25]
Curtius, bas-relief, [179]
D.
Dacian campaigns, Trajan’s, [87]
Decebalus, [88]
Demosthenes, statue of, [182]
Digentia, [254]
Dii Consentes, area of, [48]
Dogana, in Piazza di Pietra, [136]
Domitius Calvinus, pedestal, [26], [28]
Domus Aurea of Nero, [73]
Doria Palace, [127]
Duilian column, inscription on, [179]
E.
Egeria, grotto of, [195]
Egyptian antiquities, [129], [177]
Einsiedlen MS., [51], [76], [100], [125], [138], [148]
Eurysaces, tomb of, [81]
F.
Fasti Consulares, [179]
—— Prænestini, [229]
Faustina, the younger, [178]
Fidenæ, [257]
Fiumicino, [231]
Flaminia, Via, [257]
Forum Augusti, [92]
—— Julium, [91]
——, Nerva’s, [94]
—— Romanum, [38]
——, Trajan’s, [83]
Fratres Arvales, [231];
buildings of, [232]
Freshwater strata, [187]
Frontispicium Neronis, [100]
G.
Gabii, [221]
Gabinius, Villa of, [218]
Galuzze, [79]
Gelotiana, Domus, [17]
Geology of Campagna, [185]
Germalus, [17], [29]
Germanicus, House of, [26]
Geta, erased, [104], [119]
Gladiator or Gaul, dying, [181]
Gnomon Obelisk, [137]
Gordiana, Villa, [219]
Gradus Concordiæ, [51]
Graffiti, [18], [70]
H.
Hadrian, colossal head of, [178]
Hadrian’s Villa, [237];
antiquities from, [181], [183]
Heliogabalus, Lavacrum, [36], [58]
Horace, Sabine farm, [254]
House of Laterani, [173]
I.
Imperial monuments, [3]
J.
Janus Quadrifrons, [103]
Julius Cæsar, Heroon of, [39]
Jupiter Pluvius, [141]
—— Propugnator, [28]
—— Redux, [176]
—— Stator, [25]
—— Victor, [28]
L.
Labicum, [223]
Laconicum, [134], [155], [168]
Laocoon, [182]
Lararium, Palatine, [24]
Latifundia, [192]
Latin road, tombs on, [211]
Latium, towns of, [191], [192]
Lautumiæ, [56]
Legio fulminata, [141]
Lucretilis, [256]
M.
Mæcenas, Auditorium of, [80];
Tower of, [102]
Mamertine Prison, [55]
Mandela, [254]
Marcus Aurelius, statue of, [183]
Marine strata, [185]
Masonry, Roman, [4]
Mausoleum of Augustus, [143]
—— Hadrian, [148]
Maxentius, Circus of, [196]
Meta Sudans, [58]
Milestones on Appian Road, [183]
Miliarium Aureum, [54]
Minerva Medica, [78]
Mons Sacer, [257]
Monte Cavallo, [183]
—— Testaccio, [164]
Monumental History, [2]
Monumentum Ancyranum, [145]
Muro Torto, [147]
Museum, Kircherian, antiquities in, [183]
N.
Navicella, [174]
Nemi, Lake of, [208];
Cæsar’s Villa at, [210]
Nomentana, Via, [257]
Nymphæum, Palatine, [23]
O.
Obelisks, [12], [129], [145]
Oligarchical monuments, [2]
Ostia, [229];
antiquities from, [182]
P.
Palatine, Belvedere on, [20];
entrance, [14];
paintings on peristylium, [23], [27];
walls, [16], [17]
Pantheon, [130];
plundered, [135]
Pedestals, in Forum, [41], [42]
Phaon, Villa of, [257]
Piazza Navona, [143]
Pillar of Antoninus Pius, [138]
Plautian Tomb, [236]
Pompey, Villa and Tomb of, [201]
Pons Ælius, [148]
Ponte Lucano, [236]
—— Molle, or Milvian bridge, [257]
—— di Nono, [221]
—— Rotto, [115]
—— S. Sisto, [126]
Porphyry basin, [182]
Porta Capena, [163]
—— Chiusa, [159]
—— Collina, [257]
—— Maggiore, [81]
—— Mugionia, [24]
—— Ratumena, [97]
—— Romanula, [15]
—— S. Lorenzo, [81]
—— Viminalis, [153]
Porticus Catuli, [15]
—— Metelli, [120]
—— Octaviæ, [119]
Portland Vase, [181]
Porto, [233]
Præneste, [223]
Prætorian Camp, [158]
Prima Porta, statue of Augustus from, [260];
Villa of Livia, [259]
Puteal, in Forum, [39]
Q.
Quintiliana, Villa of Commodus, [198], [212];
sculpture from, [200]
Quirinal Hill, [101]
Quirinale, or Monte Cavallo, Piazza, [101], [183]
R.
Rediculus, Divus, [195]
Regal Monuments, [2]
Republican Monuments, [2]
Rienzi, [147]
Roma Vecchia, [197], [212]
Rostra of Empire, [54]
Rutilius, [248]
S.
Salaria Via, [257]
Salita del Grillo, ruin in, [83]
Sallustia, statue of, [172]
S. Andrea della Valle, [123]
S. Angelo, bridge of, [148]
S. Constanza, Chapel of, [257]
SS. Cosma and Damiano, [36]
S. Maria degli Angeli, [153], [155]
S. Maria in Via Lata, [127]
S. Nicola in Carcere, ruins in, [117]
S. Urbano, [195]
Sarcophagi and cippus, [182]
Saxa Rubra, [259]
Scala Cœli, [29]
Schola Xanthi, [49]
Scipio, Sarcophagus, [182]
Scipios, Tomb of, [170]
Sculpture, ancient specimens of, [184]
Seneca, Villa of, [197]
Septa, [127]
Septizonium, [20], [151]
Servian Walls, [161]
Sessorium, [172]
Sette Basse, [212]
—— Sale, [75]
Site of Rome, [1]
Sortes Prænestinæ, [225], [228]
Stadium Palatinum, [18]
Suovetaurilia, [42], [60], [88]
T.
Tabularium, [56]
Tarpeian Rock, [99]
Tarquin Dynasty, [106], [157], [161]
Teatro Correa, [143]
Temple of Albunea at Tivoli, [252]
—— Antoninus and Faustina, [40]
—— Artemis at Nemi, [210]
—— Bacchus or Honos, [195]
—— Castor, [38]
—— Ceres, [110]
—— Concord, [50]
—— Cybele, [29]
—— Fortuna Prænestina, [225]
—— Fortuna Virilis, [107]
—— Hadrian, [137]
—— Isis, [128]
—— Jupiter Capitolinus, [98]
—— Jupiter Feretrius, [29]
—— Jupiter Latiaris, [207]
—— Lares Præstites, [29]
—— Marcus Aurelius, [139]
—— Mars Ultor, [92]
—— Minerva, [96]
—— Penates, [36]
—— Romulus, [196]
—— Saturn, [46]
—— Serapis, [128]
—— Sibyl, or Vesta, at Tivoli, [251]
—— Sun, Aurelian’s, [100]
—— Venus and Cupid, [172]
—— Venus and Rome, [32]
—— Vespasian, [49]
—— Vesta, [39]
—— Vesta or Hercules, [108]
Temples, on Palatine, [28]
Theatre of Balbus, [122], [183]
—— Marcellus, [112]
—— Pompey, [123]
Theseus and Amazons, [181]
Tiber, Island of, [115];
bridges, [116];
water of, [188]
Tiberius, House of, [26], [30]
Tivoli, or Tibur, [235];
Villas at, [252]
Torre Fiscale, [212]
—— Paterno, ruins at, [234]
—— Pignatara, [221]
Torso Belvedere, [182]
Totilas, [152], [236], [247]
Transitoria, Domus, [34]
Transtiberine Walls, [4]
Travertine, quarries, [236]
Triclinium, Palatine, [22]
Trophies, of Marius, [76], [183]
Tufaceous stone, [186]
Tunnels, subterranean, [206]
Tusculum, [214];
gate and walls, [216];
history of city, [217];
theatre at, [215]
U.
Ustica, [256]
Ustrina Cæsarum, [144], [146]
V.
Vacuna, Chapel of, [256]
Varia, [254]
Vatican Hill, enclosed, [4]
V. D. N., [18]
Veii, [260]
Veii and Campagna, antiquities from, [182]
Velabrum, [103]
Velia, [31]
Vettius Prætextatus, [49]
Vicus Tuscus, [39]
Vigna Guidi, [169]
Villa Mills, [21]
Villas, ancient, [190], [193]
Vitiges, [149], [152], [193]
Volcanic strata, [186]
Vota, [60]
W.
Wolf, bronze figure, [17], [180]
LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET
AND CHARING CROSS.
Footnotes:
[1] See Corp. Inscr. Lat. vol. vi. 1, No. 1158.
[2] Cic. de Har. Resp. xv., 33. Vettius, in Cic. ad Att. ii. 24, calls Cicero “vicinus consulis,” i.e. near the Regia.
[3] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ ch. viii. p. 160.
[4] Festus, p. 262, “infimo clivo Victoriæ.”
[5] A descent to the right to the Forum has been observed by a French architect. See ‘Le Forum Romain,’ par Dutert; Lévy, Paris, 1876, p. 14. ‘Guida del Palatino,’ p. 71. Valerius Maximus, vi. 3, 1. Cic. pro Dom. 38. 102.
[6] Cic. de Div. i. 45; ii. 32. Liv. v. 32.
[7] Corp. Inscr. i. 632. Wordsworth, Frag. of early Latin, p. 167, 410.
[8] Cic. de Orat. ii. 249.
[9] Cic. ad Att. iv. 3, 3. Liv. xxxiii. 26.
[10] Vacca Memorie 3, Urlichs, in Rheinisches Museum, 1846.
[11] See Henzen, in Bull. dell. Inst., 1867. The name of Domus Gelotiana has been given to this ruin by Visconti. See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 181.
[12] The marks on the bricks found here bear the names of Clonius and Ermetes, freedmen of the Gens Domitia, but the walls which stand near the meta are constructed of materials which show that they are of later date, and belong to the Restoration of Theodoric, A.D. 500.
[13] Hist. Aug. Severus, 19, 24. See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 180.
[14] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ pp. 174, 200.
[15] Plin. Ep. I. 13.
[16] See ‘The Journal of Philology,’ Cambridge 1869, vol. ii. p. 89.
[17] Stat. Silv., iv. 2, 26.
[18] The name Basilica Jovis, placed here by Rosa, probably refers to a temple and not to this tribunal.
Plin. Panegyr., 47.
[19] ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 34.
[20] Josephus, Ant. Jud. xix. 1, 15.
[21] Gell, N. A. xx. 1, 2.
[22] Suet. Tib. 5.
[23] Orelli, Inscr. 6057, 6058.
[24] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 178.
[25] Solinus, i. 18.
[26] Orelli, 2286.
[27] Tac. Hist. i. 27.
[28] Hist. Aug. Ant. Pius, 10; Ant. Phil. 6; Gell. xiii. 20.
[29] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 160, Note 1.
[30] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 162.
[31] Josephus, Bell. Jud. vii. 5, 7.
[32] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 170.
[33] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 171.
[34] Parker’s ‘Archæology of Rome,’ vol. ii. p. 98. Jordan, ‘Forma urbis Romæ’; Berlin, 1874, p. 37.
[35] ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 169.
[36] Aur. Vict. Cæs. xl. 26. See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 166.
[37] Vitruv. v. 1.
[38] ‘Archæology of Rome,’ vol. ii. p. 75.
[39] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 163.
[40] Lampridius, Hist. Aug. Ant. Hel. 8, 17, in ædibus aulicis. Parker, ‘Archæology of Rome,’ vol. ii. p. 92.
[41] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 100.
[42] Ibid. p. 103.
[43] Eckhel, vii. 37. On the mistaken appropriation of the temple to M. Aurelius, see ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 114.
[44] See Reber’s ‘Ruinen Roms,’ p. 132.
[45] Corp. Inscr. Lat. vol. vi. pt. 1, No. 1200. “Indictionis undecimo Post Consulatum pietatis ejus anno quinto” are the last words of the inscription. “In the eleventh year of his appointment and the fifth year of his reverence the emperor.” See Nibby, ‘Roma antica,’ p. 152; Zell. Epigr. 1226. A D = A Deo.
[46] See Clinton, Fast. Rom. A.D. 608.
[47] Stat. Silv. i. 1. Mr. Parker thinks that this was the pedestal of a statue of Constantine. Archæol. vol. ii. pl. xix.
[48] Nichols, ‘The Roman Forum,’ p. 78.
[49] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ Appendix, p. 452.
[50] Gardhausen, ‘Hermes,’ viii. 129. Nichols, ‘Roman Forum,’ p. 67. Ann. dell. Inst. 1872. Mr. Nichols’s explanation does not account for the position of the fig-tree and Marsyas satisfactorily.
[51] Jordan, ‘Forma urbis Romæ,’ pp. 4, 25. The proportion of the length to the breadth is nearly that given by Vitruvius as proper for a basilica.
[52] Juv. Sat. v. 104.
[53] Tac. Ann. ii. 41.
[54] Jordan, ‘Forma urbis Romæ,’ p. 26.
[55] Cic. Phil. ii. 7.
[56] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 58.
[57] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 91.
[58] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. xxix.
[59] Cic. Phil. vii. ch. 8. The third Catilinarian oration was delivered here.
[60] Dion. Cass. lxxvii. 12.
[61] Herodian iii. 9, 10, 11. Hist. Aug. Vit. Sev. 9, 16, 17.
[62] See Parker’s Archæol. vol. ii. pl. xi.
[63] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 354, Appendix.
[64] See Jordan, Top. Rom. p. 13, Note 20.
[65] Liv. xxxvii. 3. Seneca, Contr. ix. 4, 21.
[66] Corp. Inscr. Lat. i. 591, 592. Mommsen, Ann. Inst. 1858, p. 211. Canina, Rom. Ant. p. 290. Virgil’s use of the plural tabularia is not, therefore, merely poetical: Georg. ii. 502.
[67] Seneca’s letter was written from Baiæ, which seems to place the building he speaks of there and not at Rome. The word “meta” was used by the Latin classical writers in speaking of haystacks or cream-cheeses made in a conical shape. Columella, ii. 19; Mart. i. 44.
[68] See Casaubon’s note on Spartian, Hist. Aug. p. 40; B.C. Tac. Ann. vi. 17; xvi. 22.
[69] The great amphitheatre at El Djemm in Tunis is 480 feet by 420 and 102 feet in height, that at Pola in Istria 437 by 346 feet and 97 feet in height. Shaw’s ‘Travels,’ i. p. 220. Ann. dell’ Inst. 1852. Allason’s Pola.
[70] The tomb of Scipio Barbatus in the Vatican is another curious instance of this mixture of Doric and Ionic decorative forms.
[71] This portico is shown in the medals of Titus and Alexander Severus. The remains of a similar portico exist in the amphitheatre at Thysdrus (El Djemm) in Tunis. See Canina in the Ann. dell’ Inst. 1852, tav. d’Agg. U.
[72] Suet. Vesp. viii. 13.
[73] Gibbon, ‘Decline and Fall,’ ch. lxxi.
[74] Suet. Jul. ii. Propert. iv. ii. 46.
[75] Gibbon, ‘Decline and Fall,’ ch. x.
[76] See Dion Cassius, lxviii. 9-13.
[77] Dion Cass. lvi. 27.
[78] The frieze is described and representations of it are given in the Annali and Monumenti dell’ Inst. 1877.
[79] See ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. xlii.
[80] See the Annali and Monumenti of the Inst. di Corr. arch. 1876.
[81] Dionys. iv. 27.
[82] Tac. Ann. ii. 49. Dionys. vi. 7, 94. Vitruv. iii. 3, 5. Plin. N. H. xxxv. 4, 24. 10, 99. 12. 154.
[83] Auson. Sept. Sap. prol. 22. Mon. Ancyr. tab. iv. Hist. Aug. Alex. Sev. 44.
[84] See Reber, Ruinen Roms, p. 316. Eckhel, Num. Vet. tom. v. p. 210.
[85] Ann. dell’ Inst. 1850, p. 347. Monum. v. xxiv.
[86] Festus, p. 178, ed. Müller. Velleius, i. 1, 3; ii. 1, 2.
[87] Vitruv. v. 9.
[88] Tac. Ann. xiv. 20.
[89] Hier. Chron. ed. Ronealli, i. 475; ii. 247.
[90] Grut. Inser. cxi. 6. Amm. Marc. xvi. 10.
[91] Juv. Sat. vi. 529. Joseph. B. J. vii. 5, 4.
[92] Fea, Misc. lxvi. 26; cxxv. 17; ccliv. 112.
[93] Amm. Marc. xvi. 10. Seneca de Ben. iii. 32.
[94] Dion. Cass. liii. 27.
[95] In the Curiosum the temple and column are placed together in the ninth region.
[96] Plin. N. H. xxxvi. 9, 71, 72.
[97] Annali dell’ Inst. 1852, p. 338.
[98] Dion. Cass. lv. 23. Orelli, Inscr. 517, 5447.
[99] Gruter, Inscr. 466.
[100] Strabo, v. 3, 8.
[101] Dion. Cass. liii. 32, liv. 26.
[102] Dion. Cass. lxix. 23.
[103] Reumont, Gesch. Roms, vol. ii. p. 917, A.D. 1354; Gibbon, ch. lxx.
[104] Procop. Bell. Goth. 22.
[105] Bunsen’s Memoirs, vol. i. p. 208. Hirt. Gesch. der Bauk, ii. p. 373.
[106] Hist. Aug. Sept. Sev. 19, 24. Herodian iv. 1, 4.
[107] Gibbon, ch. xlix.
[108] Donati ‘Roma vetus ac recens,’ 1665, p. 476.
[109] Dionys. ix. 68. Brocchi, Suolo di Roma, p. 144.
[110] Ann. dell’ Inst. xxxiv. 133. Festus, p. 261. Varro, L. L. v. § 49.
[111] Herodian, ii. 6.
[112] Bunsen, Beschreibung Roms, iii. 2, 359.
[113] Bull. dell’ Inst. 1855, p. 87.
[114] Abeken. ‘Mittelitalien,’ p. 143.
[115] Bull. dell’ Inst. xxv. 85, 116; xxxvii. 235.
[116] Hist. Aug. Car. 9. Hel. 17. Al. Sev. 25.
[117] Olymp. ap. Phot. Bibl. 80, p. 63. Bekker.
[118] Cor. Insc. Lat. vol. i. p. 12.
[119] Marini, Frat. Arv. p. 674.
[120] Eckhel, Num. Vet. ii. 6. 176.
[121] Frontin. 76.
[122] See Woodcut on p. 179.
[123] Ibid. p. 180.
[124] Plin. Ep. ii. 17. The depopulation of the Campagna began even in the time of the later Republic. See Appian, B.C., i. 7. In the Antonine era and the following reigns, pestilence and famine swept off millions of inhabitants. Zumpt, ‘Stand der Bevölkerung,’ p. 84, quoted by Merivale, vol. vii. p. 610.
[125] Cic. de Or. ii. 6. Val. Max. viii. 8. See Mommsen, R. H. i. 13, p. 200.
[126] Suet. Galb. i. Plin. N. H. xv. 40, 136, 137.
[127] Plin. N. H. xxxiv. § 20. Rutilius de Red. 224. Strabo, v. 3.
[128] Cic. pro Planc. 9. De Leg. Agr. ii. 35.
[129] Festus, p. 232.
[130] Visconti, op. Milan 1829, vol. ii. p. 387.
[131] Hobler, Roman coins, p. 821. No. 2035. Eckhel, Num. Vet. viii. p. 59.
[132] Hist. Aug. Flor. 16. Dion Cass. lxxii. 5, 13.
[133] Herodian, i. 12.
[134] Ann. dell’ Inst. 1853, 1854.
[135] Cic. pro Planc. 9; Propert. v. 1, 33.
[136] Cic. pro Mil. 10, 19, 20, 31.
[137] The mock council held over the gigantic turbot described in the Fourth Satire of Juvenal was at the Albanum.
[138] Ann. and Mon. dell’ Inst. 1854, p. 101.
[139] Cic. de Div. i. 44; ii. 32.
[140] Hirt, Gesch. der Bau, ii. p. 106.
[141] Fea, Miscellanea, pp. cccxvii. cclxxiv.
[142] Nibby, Analisi, ii. 305.
[143] Annali and Monumenti dell’ Inst. 1856.
[144] Nibby, Anal. iii. p. 736.
[145] Schol. ad Hor. Ep. i. 29.
[146] Canina, Mon. dell’ Arch. ant. tav. 183.
[147] Nibby, Anal. vol. ii. p. 87.
[148] Nibby, Anal. ii. 496.
[149] Cecconi, ‘Storia di Palestrina,’ p. 162.
[150] See ‘Tempio di Fortuna Prænestina,’ Thon and Nibby, Roma 1825.
[151] Mon. dell’ Inst. VI. tav. xi. Ann. dell’ Inst. 1857 p. 281.
[152] Nibby, Anal. II. 468.
[153] Lanciani, ‘Scavi nel Bosco Sacro,’ Roma 1868.
[154] Plin. Ep. viii. 17.
[155] Herodian i. 12, 2.
[156] Nibby, Anal. ii. p. 205.
[157] Hist. Aug. Hadrian 26. Aur. Vict. Epit. xiv. Tertull. Apol. 5.
[158] Strabo, xvii. 17.
[159] Nibby, Anal. iii. 655.
[160] Dennis in Milman’s Horace, p. 101; pratum apricum, Ep. i. 14, 30; aprica rura, Od. iii. 18, 2. See also, Od. iii. 16, 30; Ep. i. 14, 35, 39. ‘Rome and the Campagna,’ p. 430.
[161] Nibby, Anal. iii. 31. Bull. dell’ Inst. 1863, pp. 72, 81.
[162] See Dennis, ‘Etruria,’ ch. i.
Transcriber’s Note:
Footnote [16] appears on [page 21] of the text, but there is no corresponding marker on the page.