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CURES , a See also: Sabine See also: town between the See also: left See also: bank of the See also: Tiber and the Via See also: Salaria, about 26 m. from See also: Rome
.
According to the See also: legend, it was from Cures that Titus Tatius led to the Quirihal the Sabine settlers, from whom, after their union with the settlers on the Palatine, the whole See also: Roman See also: people took the name Quirites
.
It was also renowned as the birthplace of Numa, and its importance among the Sabines at an early See also: period is indicated by the fact that its territory is often called simply ager Sabinus
.
At the beginning of the imperial period it is spoken of as an unimportant place, but seems to have risen to greater prosperity in the 2nd century
.
It appears as the seat of a See also: bishop in the 5th century, but seems to have been destroyed by the See also: Lombards in A.D
.
589
.
The site consists of a See also: hill with two summits, round the
See also: base of which runs the Fosso Corese: the western, See also: summit was occupied by the See also: necropolis, the eastern by the citadel, and the See also: lower ground between the two by the city itself
.
A See also: temple, the forum, the See also: baths, &c., were excavated in 1874—1877
.
See T
.
See also: Ashby in Papers of the See also: British School at Rome, iii
.
34
.
(T
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