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SIGNIA (mod. Segni)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 78 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SIGNIA (mod. Segni)  , an ancient
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town of
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Latium (adiectum), Italy, on a projecting
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lower
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summit of the Volscian mountains, above the Via
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Latina, some 35 M . S.E. of Rome . The
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modern railway station, 33 M . S.E. of Rome, lies 5 M . S.E. of Signia, 669 ft. above sea level . The modern town (2192 ft.) occupies the lower
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part of the ancient site . Pop . (1901) 6942 . Its foundation as a
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Roman colony is ascribed to Tarquinius Superbus, and new colonists were sent there in 495 B.C . Its position was certainly of
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great importance: it commands a splendid view, and with Anagnia, which lies opposite to it, guarded the approach to the valley of the Trerus or Tolerus (Sacco) and so the road to the south . It remained faithful to Rome both in the Latin and in the Hannibalic
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wars, and served as a place of detention for the Carthaginian hostages during the latter . It seems to have remained a place of some importance .

Like Cora it retained the right of coining in

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silver . The wonderfully hard, strong cement, made partly of broken pieces of pottery, which served as the lining for Roman
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water cisterns (opus signinum) owes its name to its invention here (Vitruvius, viii . 7, 14) . Its wine,
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pears and
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charcoal were famous in Roman times . In 90 B.C. it became a municipium with a senatus and praetores . In the
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civil war it joined the democratic party, and it was from here that in 82 B.C . Marius marched to Sacriportus (probably marked by the
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medieval castle of Piombinara, near Segni station, commanding the junction of the Via
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Labicana and the Via Latina; see T . Ashby, Papers of the
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British School at Rome,
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London, 1902, i . 125 sqq.), where he was defeated with loss . After this we hear no more of Signia until, in the
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middle ages, it became a papal fortress . The city wall, constructed of polygonal blocks of the mountain
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limestone and It m. in circumference, is still well preserved and has several gates; the largest, Porta Saracinesca, is roofed by the gradual inclination of the sides until they are close enough to allow of the placing of a lintel . The other gates are mostly narrow posterns covered with flat monolithic lintels, and the careful jointing of the blocks of which some of them are composed may be noted .

Their date need not be so

early as is generally believed (cf .
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NORBA) and they are certainly not pre-Roman . A portion of the wall in the modern town has been restored in opus quadra.tuna of tufa in Roman times . Above the modern town, on the highest point, is the church of S . Pietro, occupying the central
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cella of the ancient Capitolium of Signia (which had three celiac) . The walls consist of rectangular blocks of tufa, and the whole rests upon a platform of polygonal masses of limestone (see R . Delbriick, Das Capitolium von Signia, Rome, 1903) . An open circular cistern in front of the church lined with rectangular blocks of tufa may also be noted . (T .

End of Article: SIGNIA (mod. Segni)
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