VELIA
the ridge or spur that stretched out from the middle of the north
side of the Palatine towards the Oppius (
Dionys. v. 19), more commonly
called
SUMMA SACRA VIA (q.v.) in later times, and marked by the arch of
Titus (for a theory that the Velia was the eastern half of the Palatine,
see
Gilb. i. 104-109). It was reckoned as one of the seven hills on which the
Septimontium was celebrated (Fest. 341). The name appears more
frequently in the singular (Varro,
LL v. 54;
Liv. ii. 7;
xlv. 16; hemerol.
Amit. ad viii Kal. Iun.), but also in the plural (Varro, loc. cit.; Non. 531 ;
Fest. 154; Asc. in Pison. 52;
Dionys. i. 68 Οὐελίαι).
1 The hill is
described by Dionys. (v. 19)as
ὑψηαλ̀ν ἐπιεικῶς καὶ περίτομον; and a
primitive grave found in 1908 near the arch of Titus lay at about 28 metres
above sea-level, whereas virgin soil was found in the lowest part of the
forum valley at 3.60 metres, and in connection with the excavation of
the Sepulcretum, at 10.63 metres (
AJA 1923, 390 sqq.). The original
height of the ridge may have been somewhat diminished by the construction of the
DOMUS AUREA of Nero (q.v.). The meaning and derivation of the Velia is as uncertain now as it was in antiquity (Varro,
LL.
v. 54:
Veliae unde essent plures accepi causas in quis quod ibi pastores
Palatini ex ovibus ante tonsuram inventam vellere lanam sint soliti,
a quo Vellera dicuntur). The Velia is regularly mentioned in extant
literature in connection with the aedes deum Penatium and the domus
Valeriorum, under which rubrics the references will be found (Jord. i.
I. 196; 2. 416-419; HJ I;
Gilb. i. 38-39, 101-109).