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Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, VICUS CURVUS: (search)
VICUS CURVUS: probably a street on the Esquiline, the name of which is contained in vicocurvenses [sic] of a fourth century inscription (CIL vi. 31893. d. 8; BC 1891, 357).
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, VICUS SULPICIUS (search)
ICIUS a street on which the baths of Caracalla were said to be situated (Hist. Aug. Elag. 17: opera eius praeter... et lavacrum in vico Sulpicio quod Antoninus Severi filius coeperat nulla extant; cf. the republican inscription on a round altar, CIL i'. 1002=vi. 2221:magistri de duobus pageis et vicei Sulpicei; cf. 32452). It must therefore have extended along one side of the baths. On the Capitoline Base (CIL vi. 975) in Region I are mentioned a vicus Sulpicius ulterior and a vicus Sulpicius citerior, which would seem to indicate that by the fourth century at least the street was divided. As the baths were in Region XII, the most probable location of the vicus Sulpicius is on their southern side, for the most part inside Region I. The vicus may have formed part of the boundary between I and XII. If the vicus crossed the via Appia, ulterior and citerior may have indicated its two sections (HJ 196, 207-209; KH ii.; for another location of this vicus, cf. LA 268). See also VIA NOVA.
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, VICUS VENERIS ALMAE (search)
VICUS VENERIS ALMAE a street in Region XII (CIL vi. 975), the inhabitants of which are probably the Venerenses of a fourth century inscription (CIL vi. 31901; BC 1891, 357). This cult of Venus may possibly be connected with that in the circus Maximus valley (cf. AD MURCIAE).
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, XENODOCHIUM BELISARII (search)
XENODOCHIUM BELISARII a hospital built by Belisarius in the sixth century in the via Lata (LP lxi (Vigilius) 2: fecit autem Belisarius xenodochium in via Lata et aliud in via Flaminia). Its site is that of the church of S. Maria in Sinodochio or in Trivio, near the fountain of Trevi (Arm. 277-286; HCh 365-366; LPD i. 300, n. 7, ii. 46, n. 108; Kehr i. 156). This lies within the limits of the CAMPUS AGRIPPAE (q.v.), but the fourth-century walls found there cannot have been those con- structed for the xenodochium (HJ 459; BC 1892, 278).
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