Arch Of Claudius (British Victory)
Inscription
The portions of surviving inscription survive in the Capitoline Museums and can be reconstructed with the aid of identical inscriptions on commemorative arches at Boulogne-sur-Mer and Cyzicus. It reads:
The Roman Senate and People to Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus, son of Drusus, Pontifex Maximus, Tribunician power eleven times, Consul five times, Imperator 22 times, Censor, Father of the Fatherland, because he received the surrender of eleven kings of the Britons defeated without any loss, and first brought barbarian peoples across the Ocean into the dominion of the Roman people.
Destruction and Remains
The condition of the arch appears to have deteriorated as early as the eighth century and is no longer extant. However, portions of the structure were discovered in 1562, 1641 and 1869 and include part of the principal inscription, inscriptions dedicated to other members of the imperial family, some of the foundations, and fragments of sculpture.
Primary sources
- Textual sources
- Numismatic sources
- The Monuments of Ancient Rome as Coin Types (1989) by Philip V. Hill
- Freeman & Sear Catalog No.12 (2005), item 536.
- BM Claud. 29, 32‑35, 49‑50
- Cohen, Claudius 16‑24
- HJ 468‑9; LS III.125‑6
- PBSR III.220‑223
- Epigraph sources
- Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL) VI.920‑923 = 31203‑4
- Archaeological sources
- For reliefs discovered in the 1920s which may belong to it, see Notizie degli Scavi 1925, 230‑233; Bocconi, Musei Capitolini, 292.9; 294.14; YW 1925‑6, 112.
See also
References
- ^ M. K. Thornton; R. L. Thornton (1989). Julio-Claudian Building Programs: A Quantitative Study in Political Management. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. pp. 138–. ISBN 978-0-86516-202-0.
- ^ CIL VI 40416 = CIL VI 920 = CIL VI 31203 = AE 1948, 80 = AE 2004, 38
External links
- Arch of Claudius at Encyclopædia Romana project (University of Chicago)
This article contains text from Platner and Ashby's A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, a text now in the public domain.
41°53′58″N 12°28′52″E / 41.89932°N 12.48110°E