Temple of Jupiter Stator (2nd century BC)

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The Temple of Jupiter Stator was a temple of Ancient Rome named after the god Jupiter in his form of Jupiter Stator (Jupiter the stayer). Together with the temple of Juno Regina (Juno in the form of "Queen Juno") and the enclosing Porticus Metelli (later rebuilt as the Porticus Octaviae), it was built by Q. Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus after his triumph in 146 BC. It is referred to as aedes Iovis Metellina[1] and aedes Metelli.[2] It was inside the porticus Metelli,[3] close to the circus Flaminius,[4] and its exact site is known to have been beneath the church of Santa Maria in Campitelli. The Temple of Juno Regina was just west of this, on the opposite side of the Via della Tribuna di Campitelli.

It is not stated in so many words by Velleius that Metellus built both temples, but this is the natural inference from the passage. He is also said to have been the first to build a temple in Rome entirely of marble, and this statement probably applies to both structures. In front of the temples Metellus placed Lysippus' equestrian statues of Alexander's generals, and in them were a number of famous works of art.[5]

According to Vitruvius (iii.2.5) the Temple of Jupiter was the work of Hermodorus of Salamis.[6] It was a Hexastyle peripteral building with six columns along the short sides and eleven on the long sides. The space between the columns was equal to that between the columns and the wall of the cella. As there were no inscriptions on the temples[7] and evidently representations of a lizard and a frog among the decorations (σαύρα, βάτραχος), the legend arose that the architects were two Spartans, Saurus and Batrachus; and further that, as the decorations in the temple of Jupiter belonged to that of Juno, and vice versa, the statues of the deities had been set up in the wrong cellae by the mistake of the workmen.[8] The idea that an Ionic capital now in S. Lorenzo fuori le Mura has anything to do with these temples has generally been abandoned.[9]

Notes

  1. Festus 363.
  2. Pliny NH xxxvi.40; CIL vi.8708.
  3. Vitr. iii.2.5.
  4. Macrobius iii.4.2; Hemer. Urb., CIL i2 p252, 339.
  5. Festus 363; Pliny NH xxxvi. 24, 34, 40.
  6. RE viii.861‑862.
  7. Vell. loc. cit.
  8. Pliny NH xxxvi.42‑43; RE iii.145.
  9. HJ 539, n87.

External links

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This article contains text from Platner and Ashby's A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, a text now in the public domain.