Browsing named entities in Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. You can also browse the collection for 29 AD or search for 29 AD in all documents.

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Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, MAUSOLEUM AUGUSTI (search)
ermanicus (Tac. Ann. iii. 4: reliquiae tumulo Augusto inferebantur; two fragments of an elogium of him carved on blocks, HJ 616, n. 39, calls them blocks of marble, and the testimony of Peruzzi supports him (CIL vi. p. 840); but they cannot have belonged to the base, if Peruzzi is right in saying that it was of travertine (BC 1882, 154). belonging to the facing of the base, are given in CIL vi. 894=31 94). For his children, see USTRINUM DOMUS AUGUSTAE. Livia's ashes were placed here in 29 A.D. (Cass. Dio lviii. 2. 3) and eight years later those of Tiberius (our classical authorities do not expressly mention it, but they would undoubtedly have emphasised his exclusion; and CIL vi. 885, the inscription on his funeral urn, which was still preserved in the sixteenth century, agrees absolutely in content with the rest of those from the mausoleum). His successor Caligula, whose mother Agrippina and brothers Nero and Drusus had died-the first two in exile, the last in the cellars of the
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, SEP. L. NONII ASPRENATIS (search)
SEP. L. NONII ASPRENATIS the tomb of L. Nonius Asprenas, either the consul of 6 A.D., or, more probably, his son who was consul in 29 A.D. (Pros. ii. 409-411). A few fragments probably of the marble frieze, with an inscription, were found when the east bastion on the outer side of the PORTA FLAMINIA (q.v.) was demolished in 1876-1877 (NS. 1877, 270; BC 1877, 247, ps. xx., xxxi.; 1881, 176; 1911, 190; CIL vi. 31689; HJ 463; Town Planning Review xi. (1924), 78).