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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.
1564 AD (search for this): entry porta--nomentana
PORTA NOMENTANA
a gate in the Aurelian wall from which the VIA
NOMENTANA (q.v.) issued (DMH), 75 metres to the south-east of the
modern Porta Pia, which was erected by Pius IV in 1564. It retained its
ancient name until the thirteenth century (T in loc.); it occurs under the
form of Numantia in Magister Gregorius (JRS 1919, 19, 46). It had two
semi-circular towers, the left-hand one of which, in brickwork attributable
to Aurelian, stands on a square brick tomb, while the right-hand one,
removed in 1827, stood upon the tomb of one Q. Haterius (CIL vi. 1426;
see SEPULCRUM Q. HATERII). The analogy of the porta Salaria suggests
that the curtain had three large windows over a single arch; and it is the
only example of one of Aurelian's original gates which has not been
re-faced. Immediately to the south-east there is a small postern (LF 3 ;
Jord. i. I. 355; T iii. 8; PBS iii. 38; x. 20; Discovery vi. (1925),
293-295; BC 1927, 55, 56).
1200 AD - 1299 AD (search for this): entry porta--nomentana
PORTA NOMENTANA
a gate in the Aurelian wall from which the VIA
NOMENTANA (q.v.) issued (DMH), 75 metres to the south-east of the
modern Porta Pia, which was erected by Pius IV in 1564. It retained its
ancient name until the thirteenth century (T in loc.); it occurs under the
form of Numantia in Magister Gregorius (JRS 1919, 19, 46). It had two
semi-circular towers, the left-hand one of which, in brickwork attributable
to Aurelian, stands on a square brick tomb, while the right-hand one,
removed in 1827, stood upon the tomb of one Q. Haterius (CIL vi. 1426;
see SEPULCRUM Q. HATERII). The analogy of the porta Salaria suggests
that the curtain had three large windows over a single arch; and it is the
only example of one of Aurelian's original gates which has not been
re-faced. Immediately to the south-east there is a small postern (LF 3 ;
Jord. i. I. 355; T iii. 8; PBS iii. 38; x. 20; Discovery vi. (1925),
293-295; BC 1927, 55, 56).