Inscriptions found in the cella [[p. 66]]: C. I. L. X. 796-797.

The Capitolium and the temple of Zeus Milichius [[p. 66]]: Mau, Röm. Mitth., vol. 11 (1896), pp. 141-149.

Temples of Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva in Etruscan and Roman cities [[p. 66]]: Serv. Com. in Verg. ad Aen. I. 422; Vitr. I. VII. 1.

Capitals of the Ionic columns of the cella, and of the Corinthian columns of the portico [[pp. 63]-[67]]: Mazois, Les ruines de Pompéi, vol. 3, pl. 35. The shape of the acanthus leaves is not that characteristic of the pre-Roman period. It is therefore most probable that the temple was built, or at any rate was completed, in the early years of the colony.

The vaults in the podium [[p. 67]]: Not. d. scavi, 1900, pp. 341-344.

CHAPTER IX. THE BASILICA

Excavation (1813-1816): Fiorelli, Pomp. ant. hist., vol. 1, pt. 2, p. 86, pt. 3, pp. 111-179 passim; vol. 2, p. 13.

Inscriptions: C. I. L. X. 805-807, IV. pp. 113-125.

Decoration: Mau, Geschichte der dec. Wandmalerei, pp. 11-17.

Reconstruction: Mau, Röm. Mitth., vol. 3 (1888), pp. 14-46, vol. 6 (1891), pp. 67-71, vol. 8 (1893), pp. 166-171; cf. also Wolters, Das Chalcidicum der Pompejanischen Basilica, Röm. Mitth., vol. 3 (1888), pp. 47-60. Equal height of main room and corridor was first assumed by Mazois (Les ruines de Pompéi, vol. 3, pls. 17, 18), afterward by Mau (Pomp. Beiträge, pp. 156-199). A clerestory was added by Canina (Architettura Antica, vol. 3, pl. 93), and by Lange (Haus und Halle, Leipzig, 1885, pp. 351-372). Schoene (Nissen, Pomp. Studien, pp. 198-201) assumes an equal height for the large columns and the half-columns, with a gallery above the corridor.