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BOVILLAE , an See also: ancient See also: town of See also: Latium, a station on the Via See also: Appia (which in 293 B.C. was already paved to this point),r1 m
.
S.E. of See also: Rome
.
It was a colony of See also: Alba Longa, and appears as one of the See also: thirty cities of the Latin See also: league; after the destruction of Alba Longa the sacra were, it was held, transferred to Bovillae, including the cult of See also: Vesta (in inscriptions virgines Vestales Albanae are mentioned, and the inhabitants of Bovillae are always spoken of as See also: Albani Longani Bovillenses) and that of the gens Julia
.
The existence of this hereditary worship led to an increase in its importance when the Julian See also: house See also: rose to the highest power in the See also: state
.
The knights met See also: Augustus's dead See also: body at Bovillae on its way to Rome, and in A.D
.
16 the shrine of the.See also: family worship was dedicated anew,' and yearly See also: games in the circus instituted, probably under the See also: charge of the sodales Augustales, whose official See also: calendar has been found here
.
In See also: history Bovillae appears as the scene of the See also: quarrel between See also: Milo and See also: Clodius, in which the latter, whose See also: villa See also: lay above the town on the See also: left of the Via Appia, was killed
.
The site is not naturally strong, and remains of early fortifications cannot be traced
.
It may be that Bovillae took the place of Alba Longa as a See also: local centre after the destruction of the latter by Rome, which would explain the deliberate choice of a strategically weak position
.
Remains of buildings of the imperial period—the circus, a small theatre, and edifices probably connected with the
See also: post-station—may still be seen on the See also: south-west edge of the Via Appia
.
See L
.
See also: Canina, Via Appia (Rome, 1853), i
.
202 seq.; T . See also: Ashby in Melanges de l'ecole francaise de Rome (1903), p
.
395
.
(T
.
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