LAVACRUM AGRIPPINAE
probably baths, constructed by or named after
one of the Agrippinae, but known only from a fifteenth-century copy of
an inscription on a lead pipe (
CIL xv. 7247; cf. vi. 29765, 36605). Ruins
of what may have been this lavacrum were found about 1510 on the
Viminal, near S. Lorenzo in Panisperna (HJ 375;
LS i. 230-231;
BC 1914, 368-369). It is not impossible that we should read lavacrum
Agrippinae for Agrippae in Hist. Aug. Hadr. 19; this would explain why
it is so far from the Pantheon in the list of buildings in Rome restored by
Hadrian.