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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.
Found 2 total hits in 2 results.
203 BC (search for this): entry clivus-publicius
CLIVUS PUBLICIUS
a street constructed and paved by Lucius and Marcus
Publicius Malleolus, who were curule aediles about 238 B.C. (Fest. 238;
Varro, LL v. 158; Ov. Fast. v. 293-4). It began in the forum Boarium,
near the west end of the circus Maximus and the porta Trigemina
(Frontin. 5; Liv. xxvii. 37), and must have extended across the Aventine
in a southerly direction (Liv. xxvi. 10), past the temple of Diana to the
VICUS PISCINAE PUBLICAE (q.v.). It was said to have been burned
to the ground in 203 B.C. (Liv. xxx. 26), which must mean that it was
thickly built up.
238 BC (search for this): entry clivus-publicius
CLIVUS PUBLICIUS
a street constructed and paved by Lucius and Marcus
Publicius Malleolus, who were curule aediles about 238 B.C. (Fest. 238;
Varro, LL v. 158; Ov. Fast. v. 293-4). It began in the forum Boarium,
near the west end of the circus Maximus and the porta Trigemina
(Frontin. 5; Liv. xxvii. 37), and must have extended across the Aventine
in a southerly direction (Liv. xxvi. 10), past the temple of Diana to the
VICUS PISCINAE PUBLICAE (q.v.). It was said to have been burned
to the ground in 203 B.C. (Liv. xxx. 26), which must mean that it was
thickly built up.