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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Search the whole document.

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in Numidia, and they probably remained in the family until the time of Tiberius (supra, p. 216, n. i ; CIL vi. 9005), when they became imperial property (Tac. Ann. xiii. 47; CIL vi. 5863, 8670-8672; xv. 7249-7250; Dig. xxx. 39. 8), but they seem to have been open to some, if not to the general public (Ps. Sen. ad Paul. I). They were a favourite resort of Vespasian (Cass. Dio lxv. 10. 4) and Aurelian (Hist. Aug. Aurel. 49). Nerva died here (Chron. 146), and they were still a resort in the fourth century (Incert. auct. Panegyr. in Const. 14 (ed. Teubn. 300, 26)). In 410 they were sacked by the Goths under Alaric (Procop. B. Vand. i. 2). In these gardens was a conditorium, or sepulchral vault (Plin. NH vii. 75), and aporticus Miliarensis (Hist. Aug. Aurel. 49), built by Aurelian, in which he exercised himself and his horses. Miliarensis should mean a thousand paces long, and a porticus of that length must have run about the gardens in various directions. v. Domaszewski (SHA 1916, 7. A, 13