FORUM IULIUM
the first of the so-called imperial fora, begun by Julius
Caesar and designed, not for a market, but to provide a centre for business
of other kinds (App.
BC ii. 102). The plan of this forum had been conceived as early as 54 B.C., for in that year Cicero and Oppius were engaged
in purchasing land for Caesar from private owners, and had already
paid sixty million sesterces (Cic. ad
Att. iv. 16. 8). More land was
acquired afterwards, and the final cost is said to have been one hundred
million sesterces, about 1,000,000 pounds (
Plin. xxxvi. 103; Suet. Caes. 26), a
sum perhaps exaggerated.
Work was probably begun in 51, during Caesar's absence in Gaul
(Suet. loc. cit.). At the battle of Pharsalus Caesar vowed a temple to
Venus Genetrix, the mythical ancestress of the Julian gens, and proceeded to build it in the centre of his forum (App.
BC ii. 68-69, 102;
iii. 28;
Cass.
Dio xliii. 22. 2), which thus became in effect a porticus surrounding
the temple, a type followed in all the later fora. Temple and forum
were dedicated on the last day of Caesar's great triumph, 26th September,
46 B.C. (Cass. Dio, loc. cit.; Fast. Arv. Pine. Vail. ad vi Kal. Oct., CIL i².
p. 215,219, 240, 322-323, 330; Fast. Praen. in
BC 1915, 170, 346), although
the forum was not finished by Caesar (cf. Nic. Damasc. Caes. 22; Plin.
NH xxxv. 156), but by Octavianus after the dictator's death (Mon.
Anc.
iv. 2 ; Cass.
Dio xlv. 6. 4). In the forum Caesar allowed the erection
of a statue of himself wearing a cuirass (
Plin. xxxiv. 18), and he himself
dedicated a statue of his horse with '
humanis similes pedes priores' (
Plin.
viii. 155; Suet. Caes. 61 ; Stat. Silv. i. I. 84-85), on which the dictator
was mounted (Ber. d. k. sachs.
Gesells. 1891, 99-112). In front of the
temple stood a fountain surrounded by nymphs, called
APPIADES
(q.v.). The forum was burned in 283 A.D. and restored by Diocletian
(Chron. 148). While the official designation was forum Iulium (Mon. Anc.)
it appears regularly in our sources as forum Caesaris (locc. citt.; Not.
Reg. VIII;
Plin. xvi. 236; CILvi. 10097 (?)=33960;
BC 1915, 170-171;
possibly Phlegon refers to this forum as
ἡ ῾Ρωμαίων ἀγορά (Mir. 13).
The temple of Venus (aedes, Livy, Pliny, Suet., Vitr., tempium, Ovid,
Pliny, Tacitus, vew Appian, Cass. Dio,
᾿Αφροδίσιον Cass. Dio) was
pycnostyle (
Vitr. iii. 3. 2) and built of solid marble (Ov.
A.A. i. 81).
The statue of Venus Genetrix by Arcesilas, which Caesar set up, in foro
Caesaris (
Plin. xxxv. 156; cf. Cass.
Dio xlvii. 18. 4), was probably in the
cella of the temple.
1 (For another type of Venus Genetrix (seated) on a
coin, see BM.
Rep. i. 583. 4277.) Caesar also placed in the temple two
paintings by Timomachus, Ajax and Medea (
Plin. vii. 126;
xxxv. 26,
136); a gilded statue of Cleopatra (Cass.
Dio li. 22. 3; App. BC ii. o12);
six dactyliothecae or collections of engraved gems (Plin. xxxvii. II);
and a thorax adorned with British pearls (Plin. ix. I 6). Later, Augustus
is stated to have set up in the temple a statue of the deified Julius with
a star above his head (Cass.
Dio xlv. 7. I;
xlvii. 18. 4;
Plin. ii. 93),
although some scholars believe that this is a mistake for the temple of
divus Iulius in the forum (see Jord.
Hermes 1875, 342-343;
Gilb.
iii. 226).
A colossal statue was erected near the temple in honour of Tiberius
by fourteen cities of Asia Minor which had been relieved by him after
the earthquakes of 17 and 23 A.D., with personifications of them on its
base: and a copy of this in relief was found at Puteoli (
Tac. ii. 47;
iv. 13; Atti Ace.
Nap. 1903, 119 sqq.: Rueseh, Guida Mus. Nap. 22-24;
CIL x. 1624).
A statue of Drusilla was erected in the temple after her death
(Cass. Dio, lix. II. 2-3).
The forum Iulium was rectangular, about 115 metres long and 30
wide, surrounded by a colonnade and wall. Its main axis ran north-west
to south-east, corresponding with that of the curia Iulia which adjoined
it at the south corner. On this axis the temple was built, facing south-
east. All that remains of the forum is part of the enclosure wall of
peperino on the south-west side (Via delle Marmorelle 29), 12 metres
high and 3.70 thick, and some small vaulted chambers or tabernae
opening into the corridor of the forum through a row of peperino arches
with Anio tufa piers and travertine imposts (TF 46). Of the temple
of Venus, excavations in the sixteenth century brought to light portions
of the foundations of peperino and travertine, and fragments of columns
and frieze (cf. Strena Helbigiana 139-142 and DAP 2. xv. 366). At this
time Palladio (Quattro Libri dell' Architettura 1570, iv. ch. 3, 128 sqq.) and
Labacco (Libro appartenente all' Architettura, 1552, 25-28; 1559, 33-36)
drew a plan and reconstruction from what was then visible, representing
a peripteral octostyle structure with very narrow intercolumniations.
A piece of the architrave still exists in the Villa Medici. (For forum
and temple, see also
Jord. i. 2. 436-441; Thed. 178-180, 371-372;
Gilb. iii. 224-227; LR 302-304; ZA 34-36; Mem. L. 5. xvii. 153;
ASA 54.)