Note
THE method of quotation from periodicals is that followed by Professor
Platner himself in his earlier work, but many other abbreviations have been
introduced; and, in order to effect a further saving in space, the names of
the authors of articles have as a rule been omitted.
1 Further, it has not
been thought necessary to refer to the accounts of the same discovery in
both the Notizie degli Scavi and the Bullettino Comunale, except when (as
sometimes happens) one account tacitly corrects or supplements the other,
so that scholars cannot safely refrain from consulting both.
2While I am
on this subject, I may remark that those writers who introduce new and
more accurate modes of subdivision or quotation often display singularly
little consideration for the convenience of students. Thus Schreiber, in
his republication of Vacca's Memorie,
3 quite correctly divides No. 60 into
two parts: but instead of calling the second half No. 60a, he starts a new
numbering for the later Memorie, without adding a comparative numbering
in the margin, which causes the greatest inconvenience to those students
who are not fortunate enough to possess a copy of his article. In the
text I have given Fea's numbering (Miscellanea, i. 52 sqq.) and Schreiber's
in brackets where it differs.
4
It should be remembered that, even if the methods used in the older
books are erroneous and require gradual supersession, the student may lose
a good deal of valuable time if they are not at first retained as well as the
new ones.
It is, for instance, a great pity that both Jordan and Urlichs should in
the same year have published the text of the Mirabilia, with a slightly
different numbering of the chapters. I have in this case followed the
former.
Nor does it often happen that authors who publish second editions of
their works are considerate enough to give the paging of the first in the
margin. Wissowa's Religion und Kultus der Romer is one of the works
which has given me most trouble in the preparation of the present
book.
5
And there are other aids to students which are urgently needed. I myself feel that it might have been useful to add to the present work a list of the false denominations of the buildings of Rome-of those names which have been current from Renaissance times or even earlier,
6 and which, though now demonstrably incorrect, will yet be found in many of the books, especially those of a century or two back, which may fall into the hands of the advanced scholar. Certainly the need is even greater in regard to works of art: for, if modern criticism has discovered that a statue which, for example, has been known from the sixteenth century up to the last few years as an Antinous, is in reality an Apollo, one may search in vain for it under its old and commonly current denomination in the index to any museum catalogue. Of course, on the other hand, I have no desire to encourage the uncritical acceptance of these rejected appellations. For example, the existence of a temple of Juno Martialis near the Forum is maintained by Pichler (Numism.
Zeitschr. v. (1873) 92-101), who is followed by Bernhart (Handbuch zur Munzkunde, 126): but the assertion that it was in Rome is made by no better an authority than the so-called Sextus Rufus (Richter 9). It is a pity that a presumably up-to-date numismatic work (though Roman topography is not the author's strong point) should insert a statement which acts on so insecure an authority.
As a contrast, Von Domaszewski's criticism of the topographical
allusions in the Scriptores Historiae Augustae errs, perhaps, on the side of
undue severity. I have generally quoted him in the several articles: but
it may be worth while to refer to his discussion once more in a general way.
7
Whether he is right in considering all the biographies to be the work of a
single author, who was the curator of a library known as the Bibliotheca
Ulpia, situated in the thermae Traianae at Nemausus (Nimes), and posterior
in date to the Gaulish poets of the sixth century A.D., may well be questioned.
And he is certainly going too far in suggesting that all the topographical
information which is not directly copied from other authors was taken from
a commentator who had before him a plan of Rome
8 drawn under Antoninus
Pius, on which the Aurelian Wall had later been added. But even Hohl,
who sharply criticizes Von Domaszewski's views in regard to the date and
composition of this work, is ready to allow ' that the articles on the topo-
graphy of Rome, etc., contain many remarks on points of detail which
deserve consideration.'
9
An inevitable consequence of the adoption of the system of a dictionary
has been the omission of such discoveries as cannot be associated with any
building the ancient name of which is known to us. The most striking
example is the house found near the Villa Farnesina, not far from the
tomb of C. Sulpicius Platorinus, which has yielded to the Museo delle Terme
the beautiful stuccoes and wall-paintings of the Augustan period which are
among its chief treasures.
10 These of course would have found their place
in a complete topographical manual, which might also have on occasion
gone beyond the Aurelian Wall, which has been taken as the general limit.
On the other hand, I have made considerable additions to the list of domus,
after going carefully through the inscriptions on lead pipes published in
CIL xv. and have admitted far more names than Hulsen had included in the
Nomenclator attached to KH.
I would add in explanation that when a pipe is found on the top of an
isolated hill like the Capitol or Aventine, there is some considerable presumption that the building to which it led was not far off: while in regard
to other pipes I have thought it worth while to add a number of names
that had previously been omitted, even though they did not allow of the
exact fixing of the site of the house. I should probably not have done this
had CIL xv. been indexed. It may freely be admitted that a good many
of the names entered under domus might as well have been placed under
horti, especially those on pipes found on the right bank of the Tiber.
In the text, a star immediately after the name means that the Addenda
et Corrigenda should be consulted.