The
Porticus Octavia (
Latin for the "Octavian Portico"), also known as the
Portico of Octavius, was a
portico in
ancient Rome built by
Gnaeus Octavius in 168 BC to commemorate his capture of
Perseus of
Macedonia during the
Third Macedonian War. It stood between the
Theatre of Pompey and the
Circus Flaminius beside the
Porticus Metelli.
Pliny describes it as a double portico with bronze
Corinthian capitals, for which it was also called the
Corinthian Portico (
Porticus Corinthia). It may have been the earliest use of this
architectural order in Rome and is possibly to be identified with remains on the Via S. Nicola ai Cesarini, represented in the
Severan Marble Plan (frg. 140).
Velleius Paterculus called it "by far the loveliest" (
multo amoenissima) of the porticoes of his time.
The portico surrounded the Temple of Hercules Musarum ("Hercules of the Muses") which the consul and censor Marcus Fulvius Nobilior erected c. 187 BC. It may have replaced or refurbished the portico that he supposedly erected around his temple at the time of its construction.
In 33 BC, Octavian (the future Augustus) recovered the military standards lost by Gabinius to the Illyrians and displayed them at the Porticus Octavia. Octavian and his stepbrother L. Marcius Philippus then entirely rebuilt it and the temple within to commemorate the conquest of Dalmatia. Cassius Dio (XLIX.43) confounded this Porticus Philippi ("Portico of Philippus") and the adjacent Porticus Octaviae, which Octavian established around the same time over the former Portico of Metellus. The Porticos of Octavius and Philippus have both left few traces.
See also
References
- ^ Festus 178; Velleius Paterculus II.1
- ^ Pliny, Natural History XXXIV.13
- ^ BC 1918, 151‑155.
- ^ Velleius II.1.
- ^ Appian Illyrian Wars 28.
- ^ See Lawrence Richardson, A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 317.
- ^ HJ 488‑489; AR 1909, 77
External links
41°53′38″N 12°28′33″E / 41.8939°N 12.4757°E / 41.8939; 12.4757