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The '''Temple of Mars in Clivo''' () was a temple on the western side of the [[Via Appia]] in [[Rome]], between the first and second milestones, built in the early 4th century BCE, and dedicated to [[Mars (mythology)|Mars]]. It was the oldest standing temple dedicated to Mars within the city.
==Location and history==
Situated around two kilometres from the [[Porta Capena]], the Temple of Mars used to sit just outside the [[Porta Appia]], beyond the [[Aurelian Walls]]. It was positioned overlooking the valley where the brook [[Almone|Almo]] ran, and it stood next to a grove.<ref>Platner, pg. 327</ref> Its name stemmed from a rise in the road leading to it (in Latin a ''clivus'').
According to [[Livy]], the temple was vowed to the god Mars in the aftermath of the Roman defeat at the [[Battle of the Allia]] in 390 BCE by the [[Senones]]. It was dedicated on 1 June 387 by Titus Quinctius, one of the ''[[Duumviri|Duumviri sacrorum]]''.<ref>Livy, Book 6, 5.8 https://ift.tt/302Ne9O> In 189 BCE the Via Appia was paved from the Porta Capena to this point, along with the stretch of road that linked the Via Appia to the temple (the ''Clivus Martis''). This road was then referred to as the Via Tecta, named after the construction of a portico along the road.<ref>Platner, pg. 327</ref>
Within the temple were a statue of Mars and figures of wolves, which were considered sacred to the god. The statue of Mars was most probably the one erected by the former [[Roman consul|consul]] [[Marcus Claudius Marcellus]] in 211 BCE, fulfilling a vow made during the [[Siege of Syracuse (213–212 BC)|conquest of Syracuse]] in 212 BCE.<ref>Luci, Fabio, ''Monuments and Inscriptions in Republican Rome: Linguistic Framework for Interpreting Art and Text'' (2019), pgs. 249-250 (https://ift.tt/33ZVTuH> The writer [[Julius Obsequens]] noted in his book the "Prodigiorum liber" (Book of Prodigies) that observers in the past had seen the statue sweating.<ref>Rome and Art, ''TEMPLUM MARTIS IN CLIVO''</ref>
Also within the temple was kept one of the two ''[[Lapis manalis]]'' stones. This stone was used as part of a ceremony of [[Etruscan]] origin called the ''aquaelicium'' which sought to produce rain in times of drought. The stone was removed from the temple by the ''[[Pontiff|pontifices]]'', and taken by procession to the [[Capitoline Hill]], and a sacrifice was made to [[Jupiter (mythology)|the god Jupiter]], petitioning him to send rain.
The district around the temple, reaching as far as the Almo, was known as ''ad Martis''. It was in this area around the temple that the soldiers of the [[Roman Republic|Republic]] would assemble before heading off to fight their wars, and it was here that they would return to lay down their arms prior to re-entering the city.<ref>Rome and Art, ''TEMPLUM MARTIS IN CLIVO''</ref> It was also the spot where, on 15 July, the ''[[Transvectio equitum]]'' procession would commence, to commemorate the victory at the [[Battle of Lake Regillus]].
Today, this temple no longer exists, and there are no details as to when it was demolished. It was mentioned in the ''[[Einsiedeln Itinerary]]'' as still standing in the 8th century. No images exist of the temple except for a frieze on the [[Arch of Constantine]].
==Notes==
==References==
* Platner, Samuel Ball, ''A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome'', Oxford University Press (1929) https://ift.tt/2Ew0E6G
* Rome and Art, ''TEMPLUM MARTIS IN CLIVO'' (2016) https://ift.tt/3j2smah
[[Category:Roman temples by deity]]
[[Category:Temples of Ares]]
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