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CURTIUS

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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:curtius:c2371ecd6a04
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
6ee2564be1f02c334c13d8fec2fb7de64c1a324cef602c116fdc7286437fd7ab
Computed Hash
6ee2564be1f02c334c13d8fec2fb7de64c1a324cef602c116fdc7286437fd7ab
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:03
Source URL

Verified Text

curtius, marcus, a legendary hero of ancient rome. it is said that in 362 b.c. a deep gulf opened in the forum, which the seers declared would never close until rome's most valuable possession was thrown into it. then curtius, a youth of noble family, recognizing that nothing was more precious than a brave citizen, leaped, fully armed and on horseback, into the chasm, which immediately closed again. the spot was afterwards covered by a marsh called the lacus curtius. two other explanations of the name lacus curtius are given: (1) a sabine general, mettius (or mettus) curtius, hard pressed by the romans under romulus, leaped into a swamp which covered the valley afterwards occupied by the forum, and barely escaped with his life; (2) in 445 b.c. the spot was struck by lightning, and enclosed as sacred by the consul, gaius curtius. it was marked by an altar which was removed to make room for the games in celebration of caesar's funeral (pliny, _nat. hist._ xv. 77), but restored by augustus (cf. ovid, _fasti_, vi. 403), in whose time there was apparently nothing but a dry well. the altar seems to have been restored early in the 4th century a.d. in april 1904, on the n. side of the via sacra and 20 ft. n.w. of the equus domitiani, remains of the buildings were discovered. see livy i. 12, vii. 6; dion halic. ii. 42; varro, _de lingua latina_, v. 148; ch. hulsen, _the roman forum_ (eng. trans. of 2nd ed., j. b. carter, 1906); o. gilbert, _geschichte und topographie der stadt rom im altertum_, i. (1883), 334-338.