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  2. Piazza della Minerva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piazza_della_Minerva

    Piazza della Minerva is a piazza in Rome, Italy, near the Pantheon. Its name derives from the existence of a temple built on the site by Pompey dedicated to Minerva Calcidica , whose statue is now in the Vatican Museums .

  3. Minerva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minerva

    In Rome her bellicose nature was emphasized less than elsewhere. [17] According to Livy's History of Rome (7.3), the annual nail marking the year, a process where the praetor maximus drove a nail in to formally keep track of the current year, happened in the temple of Minerva because she was thought to have invented numbers. [18] [19]

  4. Santa Maria sopra Minerva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Maria_sopra_Minerva

    Santa Maria sopra Minerva is one of the major churches of the Order of Preachers (also known as the Dominicans) in Rome, Italy.The church's name derives from the fact that the first Christian church structure on the site was built directly over (Italian: sopra) the ruins or foundations of a temple dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis, which had been erroneously ascribed to the Greco-Roman ...

  5. Temple of Minerva Medica (nymphaeum) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Minerva_Medica...

    The Temple of Minerva Medica is a ruined nymphaeum of Imperial Rome which dates to the late 3rd or early 4th century CE. It is located between the Via Labicana and Aurelian Walls and just inside the line of the Anio Vetus. [1]

  6. Elephant and Obelisk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_and_Obelisk

    The obelisk was rediscovered in 1665 during excavations near the church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva. It had probably been brought to Rome in the first century AD for the temple to the Egyptian goddess Isis that was located there. The obelisk is 5.47 meters tall and is the smallest of the 13 ancient obelisks present in Rome nowadays. [2]

  7. Temple of Minerva Medica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Minerva_Medica

    The temple of Minerva Medica (akin to the temple of Apollo Medicus) was a temple in ancient Rome, built on the Esquiline Hill in the Republican era, [1] though no remains of it have been found. Since the 17th century, it has been wrongly identified with the ruins of a nymphaeum on a nearby site , on account of the erroneous impression that the ...

  8. Temple of Minerva Chalcidica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Minerva_Chalcidica

    The Temple of Minerva Chalcidica or Minervium was a small temple in the Campus Martius in ancient Rome, dedicated to Minerva. It was built by Pompey the Great in around 60 BC (next to the later site of the Temple of Isis and Serapis) and probably destroyed in the fire of 80 AD which destroyed the Campus Martius. It was then rebuilt by Domitian. [1]

  9. Capitoline Triad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitoline_Triad

    The Capitoline Triad was a group of three deities who were worshipped in ancient Roman religion in an elaborate temple on Rome's Capitoline Hill (Latin Capitolium). It comprised Jupiter, Juno and Minerva. The triad held a central place in the public religion of Rome. [1]