And Censorinus, darling of the people,

And nobly named so, being censor twice,

Was his great ancestor.”

There is a slight anachronism here. Coriolanus lived in B.C. 489, and the Marcian aqueduct was constructed in B.C. 145, more than three hundred years after his death. Marcius Censorinus also, who was twice Censor (the only Roman who filled that office twice), lived B.C. 294.

In the thirteenth century, the church of S. Bibiana is incidentally mentioned as being near the arcade of the Marcian aqueduct[83]. In some excavations made in the year 1871, a portion of the Marcian arcade, built of the usual large squared stones, was shewn, passing under some high ground to the north of the Porta Maggiore, within the wall of Aurelian, in a direction to join the bank on which that wall is built, and passing between the Minerva Medica and the wall in that part. This is very near the church of S. Bibiana.

IV. Tepula.

The sources of the Tepula and the Julia are in the valleys on either side of the promontory on which the modern town of Marino stands, the ancient Castrimœnium (under the village of Rocca di Papa). That of the Julia is on the south side, and almost close under the crater now the Alban Lake. The Tepula rises near the bottom of the valley which comes down from the hills in the neighbourhood of Grottaferrata, and along which the Via Latina passes. This lies somewhat nearer to Rome than the source of the Julia; but the Julia joined it before it had advanced far, and thus the expression of Frontinus, “Marcus Agrippa intercepted the Tepula[84],” is explained. The waters, therefore, flow into the same series of reservoirs and cisterns which received the Marcian after they enter Rome.

Under the account of the Julia, the Aqua Crabra is mentioned. This is the little stream into which the water of the Julia and Tepula falls; which is united at the foot of the hill on which the town of Marino stands, to another stream called the Marrana, and the united water is now generally called by the latter name only[85]. Frontinus mentions several reasons why it was not made use of for supplying the city with water; but it was brought into Rome in the twelfth century as a small mill-stream.

Frontinus also says that the Tepula had its source at ten miles from Rome on the Via Latina, with two more miles to the right on a cross-road[86]. Ten miles on the Via Latina brings us near to Tusculum, at the tenth mile is the Casino de Ciampino, from which starts a cross-road to the right; and at two miles from that point we arrive at the springs called Fontanaccio, before reaching Grotta Ferrata, but close under that village. It follows that the source of the Tepula was at this place, now called Fontanaccio. The spring comes out under a cliff of the rock of lava near the road, and has a modern washing-cistern in front of it; but behind this the ancient work can be seen, with openings into a reservoir in the cliff. This is probably contemporaneous with the time that the conduit of the Tepula was made. The supply of water is small, but of good quality.

As the Aqua Tepula supplied only the Regiones in the northern part of the city, it seems to have passed into the castellum, the remains of which may still be seen in the city wall near the Porta S. Lorenzo, evidently built upon an old agger before the Aurelian wall was erected[87]. It, however, has been a house as well, the lower part only being used as the reservoir for the water, and the upper part, which is large and important, for chambers. The front of this house, or castellum aquæ, still forms part of the city wall. It has been much disfigured, and the old drains walled up during the restorations (!) of 1869.