- A
miliarium (classical Latin: [miːllɪˈaːrɪ.ũː ˈau̯rɛ.ũː]) was a cylindrical, oval or
parallelepiped column placed on the edge of
Roman roads to mark the...
- '
Miliarium Aureum', in E. M.
Steinby (ed.)
Lexicon Topographi****
Urbis Romae (1996) vol. 3, pp. 250-251 (Italian). ISBN 88-7140-096-8; '
Miliarium Aureum...
- was five
Roman feet, or in
total 1,476 m (4,843 ft). A milestone, or
miliarium, was a
circular column on a
solid rectangular base, set more than 2 feet...
-
Stadiasmus Patarensis, also
known as the
Stadiasmus Provinciae Lyciae and the
Miliarium Lyciae, is an
ancient Roman milliarium from the city of Patara. The stadiasmus...
- mark" even if the road is only
marked with a
stone once
every 10 miles).
Miliarium (classical Latin: [miːllɪˈaːrɪ.ũː ˈau̯rɛ.ũː]) were
originally stone obelisks...
- A three-tiered
water boiler (
miliarium)...
- is uncertain.
Theories include a
derivation from cis
tertium [lapidem
miliarium], "this side of the
third (milestone)" of the
Roman road
connecting Langres...
- inval.
Decandolia effusa (Lam.) T.****
Melica effusa (L.) Salisb.
Miliarium effusum (L.)
Moench Milium adscendens Roxb. nom. inval.
Milium confertum...
-
coinage bears numerous subjects such as a
column with the
inscription MILIARIUM SAECULUM or one with the
inscription COS III, or the
inscription LUDI...
-
temple to Mars in Rome, "Templum
Martis in Clivo".
Built near the
first miliarium of the Via Appia, it was where, in
Republican times, the
legions gathered...