198 DOMUS: VIRIUS LUPUS—DUOS AMANTES
Domus (names of owners given in the nominative)—continued:
1874, 58 sqq.) and inscribed pipes have been found (CIL xv. 7563).
Vettius was praef. urbi in 367 a.d. From the apparent extent of this
property, it may perhaps be regarded as horti (HJ 368).
Virius Lupus Iulianus : on the western slope of the Quirinal, where
ruins and inscriptions have been found in the Via dei Serpenti, near
the Banca d’Italia (CIL vi. 31774 ; NS 1910, 420 ; 1911, 316; BC
1911, 202). Virius was legatus of Lycia and Pamphilia in the second
century.
Vitruvius Vaccus : on the Palatine. It was destroyed in 330 b.c.,
when its owner, a native of Fundi, was put to death for treason. The
site was afterwards known as Vacci prata (Cic. de domo 101 ; Liv.
viii. 19. 4, 20. 8 ; Jord. i. I. 189).
L. Volumnius : on the Quirinal in the vicus Longus (Liv. x. 23. 6).
Volumnius was consul in 296 b.c.
Vulcacius Rufinus : on the Quirinal, near the vicus Longus. The
ruins of this house, and an inscribed base (CIL vi. 32051 ; PT 178) were
found under the Ministero della Guerra. Vulcacius was consul in
347 ; praef. urbi in 349 a.d., and an uncle of the Emperor Julian
(BC 1885, 17).
Duo Aedes : a locality, probably a street, mentioned only in Not. as in
Region IX (Eranos, 1924, 88-90).
Duodecim Portae, (i) Mentioned in the Regionary Catalogue in Region
XI, and probably by Obsequens (77 : mula ad d. p. peperit). It
was probably the name of the open space or street at the west end of
the circus Maximus, derived from the twelve carceres of the circus.
(2) Possibly a popular designation of some opening in the Servian wall
(Plin. NH iii. 66), but no satisfactory explanation of this passage has
been given (Jord. i. 1. 203 ; ii. 86-88 ; Mitt. 1897, 157 ; Mel. 1909, 132 sq.).
Duas Domos, ad : the name applied to the church of S. Susanna on the
Quirinal, under which remains of a house of the third century a.d. have
been found (Kirsch, Rom. Titelkirchen, 70-74).
Duos Amantes, ad : a locality mentioned in the life of S. Silvester (LP
xxxiv. 3), so that the name probably goes back to classical times. A
church of S. Salvatore ad duos amantes occurs in various documents of
the eleventh century, and may be identical with S. Salvatore de Camiliano
(HCh 433, 601) to the west of the Saepta.
Domus (names of owners given in the nominative)—continued:
1874, 58 sqq.) and inscribed pipes have been found (CIL xv. 7563).
Vettius was praef. urbi in 367 a.d. From the apparent extent of this
property, it may perhaps be regarded as horti (HJ 368).
Virius Lupus Iulianus : on the western slope of the Quirinal, where
ruins and inscriptions have been found in the Via dei Serpenti, near
the Banca d’Italia (CIL vi. 31774 ; NS 1910, 420 ; 1911, 316; BC
1911, 202). Virius was legatus of Lycia and Pamphilia in the second
century.
Vitruvius Vaccus : on the Palatine. It was destroyed in 330 b.c.,
when its owner, a native of Fundi, was put to death for treason. The
site was afterwards known as Vacci prata (Cic. de domo 101 ; Liv.
viii. 19. 4, 20. 8 ; Jord. i. I. 189).
L. Volumnius : on the Quirinal in the vicus Longus (Liv. x. 23. 6).
Volumnius was consul in 296 b.c.
Vulcacius Rufinus : on the Quirinal, near the vicus Longus. The
ruins of this house, and an inscribed base (CIL vi. 32051 ; PT 178) were
found under the Ministero della Guerra. Vulcacius was consul in
347 ; praef. urbi in 349 a.d., and an uncle of the Emperor Julian
(BC 1885, 17).
Duo Aedes : a locality, probably a street, mentioned only in Not. as in
Region IX (Eranos, 1924, 88-90).
Duodecim Portae, (i) Mentioned in the Regionary Catalogue in Region
XI, and probably by Obsequens (77 : mula ad d. p. peperit). It
was probably the name of the open space or street at the west end of
the circus Maximus, derived from the twelve carceres of the circus.
(2) Possibly a popular designation of some opening in the Servian wall
(Plin. NH iii. 66), but no satisfactory explanation of this passage has
been given (Jord. i. 1. 203 ; ii. 86-88 ; Mitt. 1897, 157 ; Mel. 1909, 132 sq.).
Duas Domos, ad : the name applied to the church of S. Susanna on the
Quirinal, under which remains of a house of the third century a.d. have
been found (Kirsch, Rom. Titelkirchen, 70-74).
Duos Amantes, ad : a locality mentioned in the life of S. Silvester (LP
xxxiv. 3), so that the name probably goes back to classical times. A
church of S. Salvatore ad duos amantes occurs in various documents of
the eleventh century, and may be identical with S. Salvatore de Camiliano
(HCh 433, 601) to the west of the Saepta.