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ARIMINUM (mod. Rimini)

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 491 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARIMINUM (mod.
See also:
Rimini)
  , a city of Aemilia, on the N.E. coast of Italy, 69 m . S.E. of Bononia . It was founded by the Umbrians, but in 268 B.C. became a
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Roman colony with Latin rights . It was reached from Rome by the Via
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Flaminia, constructed in 220 B.C., and from that time onwards was the bulwark of the Roman power in Cisalpine Gaul, to which province it even gave its name . Its harbour was of some importance, but is now silted up, the sea having receded . The remains of its moles were destroyed in 1807–1809 . Ariminum became a place of considerable
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traffic owing to the construction of the Via Aemilia (187 B.C.) and the Via Popilia (132 B.C.), and is frequently mentioned by ancient authors . In 90 B.C. it acquired Roman citizen-
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ship, but in 82 B.C. having been held by the partisans of Marius, it was plundered by those of Sulla (who probably made the
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Rubicon the frontier of Italy instead of the Aesis), and a military colony settled there . Caesar occupied it in 49 B.C. after his
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crossing of the Rubicon . It was one of the eighteen richest cities of Italy which the triumviri selected as a
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reward for their troops . In 27 B.C . Augustus planted new colonists there, and divided the city into seven vici after the model of Rome, from which the names of the vici were borrowed .

He also restored the Via Flaminia (Mon . Ancyr. c . 20) from Rome to Ariminum . At the entrance to the latter the

senate erected, in his honour, a triumphal arch which is still extant—a
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fine
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simple monument with a single opening . At the other end of the decumanus maximus or main street (3000 Roman ft. in length) is a fine
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bridge over the Ariminus (mod . Marecchia) begun by Augustus and completed by Tiberius in A.D . 20 . It has five wide arches, the central one having a span of 35 ft., and is well preserved . Both it and the arch are built of Istrian stone . The
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present Piazza Giulio Cesare marks the site of the ancient forum . The remains of the amphitheatre are scanty; many of its stones have gone to build the city wall, which must, therefore, at the earliest belong to the end of the classical period . In .

A.D. i Augustus's

grandson
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Gaius Caesar had all the streets of Ariminum paved . In A.D . 69 the
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town was attacked by the partisans of
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Vespasian, and was frequently besieged in the
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Gothic
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wars . It was one of the five seaports which remained
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Byzantine until the time of Pippin . (See
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RIMINI.) See A . Tonini, Storia della Cilia di Rimini (Rimini, 1848-1862) . (T .

End of Article: ARIMINUM (mod. Rimini)
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