[384] Virgil, Æneid i. 281.
[385] “Hildebert was translated to Tours, A.D. 1125, upon the death of Gislebert, who died at Rome about the middle of December, 1124, in the same week with pope Calixtus. (Ord. Vit. lib. xii. p. 882.)”—Hardy.
[386] For a very interesting account of the walls and gates of Rome, see Andrew Lumisden’s “Remarks on the Antiquities of Rome and its Environs, London, 4to. 1797.”
[387] Now called Porta del Popolo.
[388] Porta Pinciana.
[389] The Two Hundred and Sixty are said to have been shot with arrows in the amphitheatre, by order of Claudius. The Thirty suffered under Diocletian.
[390] Porta Salaria.
[391] Porta Pia.
[392] Porta di San Lorenzo.
[393] Porta Maggiore.