286 ISIS ATHENODORIA—IULIUS, DIVUS, AEDES
must then have been just inside the boundary of Region III (HJ 304 ;
LR 360 ; BC 1915, 115-122 ; DAP 2. xiii. 295-296).
Isis Athenodoria : mentioned only in the Notitia (Reg. XII), and presum-
ably a statue of Isis by the Greek artist Athenodorus (c. IOO b.c.), which
may perhaps have given its name to a shrine in which it was placed.
The site of the monument was probably near the baths of Caracalla and
the via Appia, but fragments of sculpture found in this vicinity cannot
be identified with certainty (HJ 197 ; Gilb. iii. 112 ; BC 1914, 351-352 ;
RE ii. 2047 J ix. 2132, and literature there cited).
Isis Curiana : a possible shrine of Isis built by Q. Curius, the existence
of which depends on a conjectural emendation of a corrupt reading—
phocis Curiana—in Cicero ad Att. ii. 17. 2 (Hermes 1898, 341 ; 1908, 642 ;
WR 351)· If there was a temple of Isis Curiana, it may be referred to in
Arnobius (ii. 73) and Tertullian (Apol. 6 ; ad nat. i. 10).
Isium Metellinum : see Is/s (2) in Reg. III.
Isis Patricia : a shrine or statue of Isis in Region V, known only from
Not. If it stood in the Vicus Patricius (q.v.) and was in Region V,
which is supposed to have been wholly outside the Servian wall, it must
have been not far from the porta Viminalis. This would imply that the
vicus Patricius extended beyond the line of that wall (HJ 371).
Isis Pelagia : a shrine (aedes ?) of Isis, the protectress of sailors, known only
from one inscription (CIL vi. 8707 : aedituus ab Isem Pelagiam; WR
354)·
Ab Isis et Serapis : probably the name of a street leading to the temple
of Isis and Serapis in Region III (CIL vi. 2234, 32462 ; Rostowzew, Syll.
tess. No. 494).
Isis et Serapis in Capitolio : shrines (τβμεΗσματα) of these two divinities,
said to have been destroyed by order of the senate in 48 b.c. (Cass. Dio
xlii. 26. 2). Earlier action of a similar kind is recorded (Arnob. ii. 73 ;
Tert. Apol. 6 ; ad nat. i. 10 ; Cass. Dio xl. 47 ; Vai. Max. ep. i. 3. 4 ;
cf. Isis Curiana), but whether it concerned these particular shrines is
uncertain. That temples of Isis were again built on the Capitoline is
certain (CIL vi. 351, 2247 ( = i2. 1263), 2248 ( = i2. 986) ; Suet. Dom. 1 ;
see Jord. i. 2. 47 ; Gilb. iii. I io ; Rosch. ii. 401 ; WR 351-353 ; BC 1896,
272). See Obeliscus Capitolinus.
Isis et Serapis in Campo : see Isis.
Iulius, Divus, aedes (delubrum, Pl. ; ηρώου, Cass. Dio; ν€ώς, App.) :
the temple of the deified Julius Caesar, authorised by the triumvirs in
42 b.c. (Cass. Dio xlvii. 18), but apparently built by Augustus alone
(Mon. Anc. iv. 2 : aedem divi Iuli . . . feci), and dedicated 18th August,
29 b.c. (Cass. Dio li. 22 ; Hemerol. Amit. Antiat. ad xv Kai. Sept.).
The body of Caesar was burnt at the east end of the forum, in front of
the Regia (Liv. ep. 116 ; Plut. Caes. 68), and here an altar was at once
must then have been just inside the boundary of Region III (HJ 304 ;
LR 360 ; BC 1915, 115-122 ; DAP 2. xiii. 295-296).
Isis Athenodoria : mentioned only in the Notitia (Reg. XII), and presum-
ably a statue of Isis by the Greek artist Athenodorus (c. IOO b.c.), which
may perhaps have given its name to a shrine in which it was placed.
The site of the monument was probably near the baths of Caracalla and
the via Appia, but fragments of sculpture found in this vicinity cannot
be identified with certainty (HJ 197 ; Gilb. iii. 112 ; BC 1914, 351-352 ;
RE ii. 2047 J ix. 2132, and literature there cited).
Isis Curiana : a possible shrine of Isis built by Q. Curius, the existence
of which depends on a conjectural emendation of a corrupt reading—
phocis Curiana—in Cicero ad Att. ii. 17. 2 (Hermes 1898, 341 ; 1908, 642 ;
WR 351)· If there was a temple of Isis Curiana, it may be referred to in
Arnobius (ii. 73) and Tertullian (Apol. 6 ; ad nat. i. 10).
Isium Metellinum : see Is/s (2) in Reg. III.
Isis Patricia : a shrine or statue of Isis in Region V, known only from
Not. If it stood in the Vicus Patricius (q.v.) and was in Region V,
which is supposed to have been wholly outside the Servian wall, it must
have been not far from the porta Viminalis. This would imply that the
vicus Patricius extended beyond the line of that wall (HJ 371).
Isis Pelagia : a shrine (aedes ?) of Isis, the protectress of sailors, known only
from one inscription (CIL vi. 8707 : aedituus ab Isem Pelagiam; WR
354)·
Ab Isis et Serapis : probably the name of a street leading to the temple
of Isis and Serapis in Region III (CIL vi. 2234, 32462 ; Rostowzew, Syll.
tess. No. 494).
Isis et Serapis in Capitolio : shrines (τβμεΗσματα) of these two divinities,
said to have been destroyed by order of the senate in 48 b.c. (Cass. Dio
xlii. 26. 2). Earlier action of a similar kind is recorded (Arnob. ii. 73 ;
Tert. Apol. 6 ; ad nat. i. 10 ; Cass. Dio xl. 47 ; Vai. Max. ep. i. 3. 4 ;
cf. Isis Curiana), but whether it concerned these particular shrines is
uncertain. That temples of Isis were again built on the Capitoline is
certain (CIL vi. 351, 2247 ( = i2. 1263), 2248 ( = i2. 986) ; Suet. Dom. 1 ;
see Jord. i. 2. 47 ; Gilb. iii. I io ; Rosch. ii. 401 ; WR 351-353 ; BC 1896,
272). See Obeliscus Capitolinus.
Isis et Serapis in Campo : see Isis.
Iulius, Divus, aedes (delubrum, Pl. ; ηρώου, Cass. Dio; ν€ώς, App.) :
the temple of the deified Julius Caesar, authorised by the triumvirs in
42 b.c. (Cass. Dio xlvii. 18), but apparently built by Augustus alone
(Mon. Anc. iv. 2 : aedem divi Iuli . . . feci), and dedicated 18th August,
29 b.c. (Cass. Dio li. 22 ; Hemerol. Amit. Antiat. ad xv Kai. Sept.).
The body of Caesar was burnt at the east end of the forum, in front of
the Regia (Liv. ep. 116 ; Plut. Caes. 68), and here an altar was at once