FLORA, TEMPLUM
a temple of Flora on the slope of the Quirinal (Varro,
LL v. 158;
Mart. v. 22. 4;
vi. 27;
Vitr. vii. 9. 4), undoubtedly on the
site previously occupied by an altar that was said to have been erected
by Titus Titius to the Sabine Flora (Varro,
LL v. 74). Nothing is known
of the date of erection of this temple, or of its history, except that it was
standing in the fourth century (Not. Reg. VI). The site is not certain, but
we are told that a clivus led up to the CAPITOLIUM VETUS (q.v.) from it,
and that it was not far from the temple of Quirinus. It is claimed that
two sites conform to the statement, one outside the Servian wall at the
foot of the Quirinal, near the Piazza Barberini, and the other just below
the Capitolium vetus, between it and the street ad Malum Punicum, the
modern Via delle Quattro Fontane (HJ 412;
RE vi. 2747).