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- Porta_Carmentalis abstract "The Porta Carmentalis was a double gate in the Servian Walls of ancient Rome. It was named for a nearby shrine to the goddess or nymph Carmenta, whose importance in early Roman religion is also indicated by the assignment of one of the fifteen flamines to her cult, and by the archaic festival in her honor, the Carmentalia. The shrine was to the right as one exited the gate.The gate's two arches seem to have been set at angles, and were known by separate names. It was unlucky to leave the city through the arch called Porta Scelerata ("Accursed Gate"), which was supposed to have been named for the military disaster at Cremera in 479 or 478 BC, since the 306 Fabii who died had departed through it. The Servian Walls, however, did not exist at that time. The accursed nature of the gate probably derives from the transport of corpses out of the city proper to funeral pyres on the Campus Martius. The family tomb of the Claudii was located outside the Porta Carmentalis.The other gate was the Porta Triumphalis. A governor returning from his province could not enter through this gate unless he had been awarded a triumph. It therefore must have been routine to use the Porta Scelerata for entering, and the Triumphalis for exiting. Funeral processions reversed the normal direction of traffic flow for the Scelerata, as the triumphal procession did for the Triumphalis. Augustus was accorded the special honor of having his funeral procession exit by the Triumphalis.The temples of Mater Matuta and Fortuna were nearby. The Carmentalis was rebuilt by Domitian, and topped with a sculpture group of a triumphal chariot drawn by elephants. The gate is depicted in relief sculpture dating to the reign of Marcus Aurelius.The Vicus Iugarius forked just before reaching the Porta Carmentalis, with one branch passing through the Forum Holitorium by making a right curve around the foot of the Capitoline Hill, and the other passing through the Forum Boarium to the mouth of the Cloaca Maxima on the Tiber. The precise location of the Porta Carmentalis itself remains unclear, despite excavations in the area from the late 1930s onward. Livy names the Porta Carmentalis as the point of entry for a ritual procession undertaken in 207 BC as part of an expiatory sacrifice for Juno. Two white cows were led from the Temple of Apollo through the Carmentalis and along the Vicus Iugarius to the Forum.".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageID "40328071".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageLength "4452".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageOutDegree "29".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageRevisionID "604875674".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Augustus.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_the_Cremera.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Campus_Martius.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Capitoline_Hill.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Carmenta.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Carmentalia.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gates_in_the_Servian_Wall.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Claudia_(gens).
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Cloaca_Maxima.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Domitian.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Fabia_(gens).
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Flamen.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Fortuna.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Forum_Boarium.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Forum_Holitorium.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Juno_(mythology).
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Livy.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Marcus_Aurelius.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Mater_Matuta.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Relief.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Relief_sculpture.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Religion_in_ancient_Rome.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Roman_festivals.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Roman_governor.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Roman_province.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Roman_triumph.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Servian_Wall.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Servian_Walls.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Tiber.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Vicus_Iugarius.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLink Vicus_Jugarius.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLinkText "Porta Carmentalis".
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageWikiLinkText "porta Carmentalis".
- Porta_Carmentalis hasPhotoCollection Porta_Carmentalis.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Porta_Carmentalis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Porta_Carmentalis subject Category:Gates_in_the_Servian_Wall.
- Porta_Carmentalis hypernym Gate.
- Porta_Carmentalis point "41.89138888888889 12.480277777777777".
- Porta_Carmentalis type Building.
- Porta_Carmentalis type SpatialThing.
- Porta_Carmentalis comment "The Porta Carmentalis was a double gate in the Servian Walls of ancient Rome. It was named for a nearby shrine to the goddess or nymph Carmenta, whose importance in early Roman religion is also indicated by the assignment of one of the fifteen flamines to her cult, and by the archaic festival in her honor, the Carmentalia. The shrine was to the right as one exited the gate.The gate's two arches seem to have been set at angles, and were known by separate names.".
- Porta_Carmentalis label "Porta Carmentalis".
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porta_Carmentalis.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porte_Carmentale.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porta_Carmentale.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porta_Carmentalis.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porta_Carmentalis.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Porta_Carmental.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs m.0wxvzwd.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Ворота_Карменты.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Ворота_Карменти.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Q1544611.
- Porta_Carmentalis sameAs Q1544611.
- Porta_Carmentalis lat "41.89138888888889".
- Porta_Carmentalis long "12.480277777777777".
- Porta_Carmentalis wasDerivedFrom Porta_Carmentalis?oldid=604875674.
- Porta_Carmentalis isPrimaryTopicOf Porta_Carmentalis.