TheTemple of Jupiter Anxur (Italian:Tempio di Giove Anxur) is anAncient Roman temple that is located inTerracina, Italy.[1]

The temple was built between the mid-second and mid-first century BC and is dedicated toJupiter, who was the protector of Anxur.[2] It was located along theVia Appia which passed through the city of Terracina and is situated atop Mount Sant’Angelo. The site is erected on top of a terraced platform that usesopus incertum. The largest temple is dedicated to Jupiter while a smaller temple dedicated toVenus Obsequens ("Indulgent Venus") sat next to it. After the Roman period, the sanctuary was destroyed.[3] The remains were known in the medieval times as “Theodoric’s palace,” and in the early Middle Ages, a monastery dedicated toSt. Michael the Archangel occupied the smaller temple. The interior was transformed into a church, and 9th-centuryfrescos can still be found inside. The first excavations of the temple date to 1894 by Pio Capponi.[4]
Architecture
editThe temple was built on a previous place of worship. The complex consists of three terraces: the upper terrace, the middle terrace, and the lower terrace. The upper terrace is characterized by a long corridor that borders the square on three sides and opens to the south. The middle terrace houses the main temples of worship, and the base is made by a succession of twelve arches inopus incertum that is transversely connected to each other to create the illusion of a long corridor, which is still well preserved today. To the east of thecryptoporticus is an access to a small cave that probably connected with the oracular sanctuary. The large temple stood on a high podium and is oriented almost perfectly along the north–south axis with sixCorinthian columns lining the front of the building and four on each side. Thepronaos is almost as deep as thecella. Located behind the temple is a portico where traces of frescos can still be seen. Recently, the attribution of the temple to Jupiter has been questioned due to a few dedicatory inscriptions probably to Venus Obsequens.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- "Santuario di Giove Anxur,"Archived 2020-03-21 at theWayback MachineTerracina Cultura. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
- "Temple of Jupiter Anxur,"Archived 2020-08-11 at theWayback MachineVisitLazio. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
- "Il Tempio de Giove Anxur a Terracina." Retrieved March 21, 2020. Archived fromoriginal on March 4, 2012.
- Gabellone, F. (2013). "Il santuario di Giove Anxur a Terracina. Una ricostruzione tipologica come ausilio alla visita in situ",Virtual Archaeology Review, 4(9). Retrieved fromhttps://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/var/article/view/4260/4419. Retrieved on March 21, 2020.
41°17′28″N13°15′35″E / 41.29111°N 13.25972°E /41.29111; 13.25972