Campus Agrippae
The Campus Agrippae is the area within the boundaries of ancient Rome named after Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. A number of construction projects were developed within its perimeters, including the Porticus Vipsania, built by his sister, Vipsania Polla, and finished by Augustus, which ran along the western perimeter, against the Via Lata. There was also a race course. In 7 BCE, Augustus declared the Campus open to the public. In the Porticus Vipsania Augustus had a world map engraved on marble, following the descriptions given in Agrippa's geographical work, the Commentarii.
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Campus Agrippae
The Campus Agrippae is the area within the boundaries of ancient Rome named after Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. A number of construction projects were developed within its perimeters, including the Porticus Vipsania, built by his sister, Vipsania Polla, and finished by Augustus, which ran along the western perimeter, against the Via Lata. There was also a race course. In 7 BCE, Augustus declared the Campus open to the public. In the Porticus Vipsania Augustus had a world map engraved on marble, following the descriptions given in Agrippa's geographical work, the Commentarii.
has abstract
Campo de Agripa (em latim: Cam ...... a incorporar parte do Pomério.
@pt
The Campus Agrippae is the are ...... aphical work, the Commentarii.
@en
Wikipage page ID
17,264,730
Wikipage revision ID
647,371,187
type
comment
Campo de Agripa (em latim: Cam ...... de Quirino ao Templo de Flora.
@pt
The Campus Agrippae is the are ...... aphical work, the Commentarii.
@en
label
Campo de Agripa
@pt
Campus Agrippae
@en