hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Document | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
View all matching documents... |
Browsing named entities in Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. You can also browse the collection for 1100 AD - 1199 AD or search for 1100 AD - 1199 AD in all documents.
Your search returned 17 results in 17 document sections:
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
MAUSOLEUM AUGUSTI
(search)
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
OBELISCUS CONSTANTII
(search)
PORTA APPIA
the modern Porta S. Sebastiano (Ill. 39), a gate in the
Aurelian wall through which the VIA APPIA (q.v.) passed (DMH). All the
gates in this wall were named from the roads which passed through
them with the possible exception of the PORTA METROVIA (q.v.). Its
name is still given correctly in the twelfth century by Magister Gregorius
(JRS 919, 21, 46).
It is mentioned frequently during the Middle Ages under several
variant names, corruptions of Appia (T ix. 32.35). The existing structure
dates for the most part from the rebuilding of Honorius, with various
later additions (Jord. i. I. 366; LS ii. 59 ; Reber 538). The lowest part
consists of an arch, flanked by square towers, faced with marble blocks
that were evidently taken from other buildings, perhaps in part from
the neighbouring temple of MARS (q.v.). Both the porta Appia and the
porta Flaminia originally had double arches of blocks of travertine,
divided by a central pier (as in the porta Portuensis), traces o
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
PORTA SEPTIMIANA
(search)
PORTA SEPTIMIANA
the modern gate of the same name, just south of the
Palazzo Corsini, on the right bank of the river. The first mention of this
gate by name is in the twelfth century (Mirab. 4), where a fanciful
etymology is given-septem Naiades iunctae Iano-which later gave rise
to still more fanciful ideas (Jord. i. I. 373; ii. 378; Pr. Reg. 216-217;
Urlichs 92, 115, 127, 143 (Septinea), 151 ; BC 1914, 83. It was rebuilt
in 1498 by Alexander VI a fundamentis (LS i. 161), and given its present
form in 1798. It is stated that there was an inscription of Septimius
(Severus) on the arch before its reconstruction, and it is probable, there-
fore, that this was the gate referred to by Severus' biographer (Hist. Aug.
Sever. 19): balneae in Transtiberina regione ad portam nominis sui, that
is, a gate opening into the area occupied by the buildings of Severus
(cf. Septimianum, HJ 656) in this region, and afterwards incorporated
in the wall of Aurelian. That it is not mentioned in DMH,
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
PORTICUS ABSIDATA
(search)
PORTICUS ABSIDATA
mentioned only in the Notitia (Reg. IV) and in the
Ordo Benedicti of the twelfth century Lib. Cens. Fabre-Duchesne, ii. 148. Benedict is simply borrowing the name from the
Curiosum (Mitt. 1907, 429-430).
(Urlichs 81; Jord. ii. 664). The
name indicates that it was built around the inner curve of an apse or
exedra, perhaps that adjacent to the eastern end of the forum of Augustus,
part of which is still in existence. If so, it formed a sort of pendant
to the forum Transitorium (Jord. ii. 99-100, 319, 474; HJ 328; Mel.
1889, 350; Mon. L. i. 528-530; for a similar use of the name in Dacia,
see CL iii. 7729).