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GABII

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 380 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GABII  , an

ancient city of
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Latium, between 12 and 13 M . E. of Rome, on the Via Praenestina, which was in early times known as the Via Gabina . The
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part played by it in the story of the expulsion of the Tarquins is well known; but its importance in the earliest
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history of Rome rests upon other evidence—the continuance of certain ancient usages which imply a period of hostility between the two cities, such as the adoption of the cinctus Gabinus by the consul when war was to be declared . We hear of a treaty of
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alliance with Rome in the time of Tarquinius Superbus, the
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original text of which,written on a bullock's skin, was said by Dionysius of Halicarnassus to be still extant in his day . Its subsequent history is obscure, and we only hear of it again in the 1st century B.C. as a small and insignificant place, though its desolation is no doubt exaggerated by the poets . From inscriptions we learn that from the time of Augustus or Tiberius onwards it enjoyed a municipal organization . Its
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baths were well known, and Hadrian, who was responsible for much of the renewed prosperity of the small towns of Latium, appears to have been a very liberal
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patron,
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building a senate-house (
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Curia Aelia
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Augusta) and an aqueduct . After the 3rd century Gabii practically disappears from history, though its bishops continue to be mentioned in ecclesiastical documents till the close of the 9th . The
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primitive city occupied the eastern
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bank of the lake, the citadel being now marked by the ruins of the
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medieval fortress of Castiglione, while the
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Roman
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town extended farther to the south . The most conspicuous relic of the latter is a ruined temple, generally attributed to
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Juno, which had six columns in the front and six on each side . The plan is interesting, but the style of architecture was apparently mixed . To the east of the temple
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lay the Forum, where excavations were made by Gavin Hamilton in 1792 .

All the

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objects found were placed in the
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Villa
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Borghese, but many of them were carried off to Paris by
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Napoleon, and still remain in the Louvre . The statues and busts are especially numerous and interesting; besides the deities
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Venus,
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Diana,
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Nemesis, &c., they comprise Agrippa, Tiberius, Germanicus, Caligula, Claudius,
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Nero, Trajan and Plotina, Hadrian and Sabina, M . Aurelius, Septimius Severus, Geta, Gordianus
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Pius and others . The inscriptions relate mainly to
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local and municipal matters . See E . Q .
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Visconti, Monumenti Gabini della Villa Pinciana (Rome, 1797, and Milan, 1835); T . Ashby in Papers of the ,
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British School at Rome, i . 18o seq.; G . Pinza in Bull . Com . (1903), 321 seq .

(T .

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