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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MIC-MOL |
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MINTURNAE , an ancient city of the Aurunci, in Italy, situated on the N.W. bank of the Liris with a suburb on the opposite bank 11 m. from its mouth, at the point where the Via Appia crossed it by the Pons Tiretius. It was one of the three towns of the Aurunci which made war against Rome in 314 B.c., the other two being Ausona (see SESSA AURUNCA) and Vescia; and the Via Appia was made two years later. It became a colony in 295 B.C. In 88 B.C. Marius in his flight from Sulla hid himself in the marshes of Minturnae. The ruins consist of an amphitheatre (now almost entirely demolished, but better preserved in the 18th century), a theatre, and a very fine aqueduct in opus reliculalum, the quoins of which are of various colours arranged in patterns to produce a decorative effect. Close to the mouth of the river was the sacred grove of the Italic goddess Marica. It is still mentioned in the 6th century, but was probably destroyed by the Saracens, and its low site, which had become unhealthy, was abandoned in favour of that of the modern town of Minturno (known as Traetto until the 19th century), 459 ft. above sea-level. A tower at the mouth of the river, erected between 961 and 981, commemorates a victory gained by Pope
inscriptions and sculptures.See T. Ashby
R. Laurent-Vibert and A. Piganol, ibid. (1907), p. 495; G. Q. Giglioli, Notizie degli Scavi (1908) p. 396. (T. As.) ,MINUCIUS, FELIX
pagan
work
The Octavius is admittedly earlier than Cyprian's Quod idola dii non lint, which borrows from it; how much earlier can be determined only by settling the relation in which it stands to Tertullian's Apologeticum. Since A. Ebert's exhaustive argument in 1868, repeated in 1889, the priority of Minucius has been generally admitted; the objections are stated in the Dict. Chr. Biog. article by G. Salmon. Editions: F. Sabaeus-Brixianus, as Bk. viii. of Arnobius (Rome, 1543) ; F. Balduinus, first separate
Pagan
Herzog 's Realencyk. vol. 13. and the various histories of early Christian Literature by A. Harnack, G. Kruger, A. Ehrhard and O. Bardenhewer.End of Article: MINTURNAE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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