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Temple of Augustus (Pula)

Temple of Augustus
Croatia Pula Temple of Roma and Augustus 2014-10-11 11-30-05.jpg
Temple of Augustus, Pula is located in Croatia
Temple of Augustus, Pula
Location within Croatia
Coordinates 44°52′13″N 13°50′30″E / 44.8702°N 13.8418°E / 44.8702; 13.8418Coordinates: 44°52′13″N 13°50′30″E / 44.8702°N 13.8418°E / 44.8702; 13.8418
Location Pula, Croatia
Type Roman temple
Length 17.85 metres (58.6 ft)
Width 8.05 metres (26.4 ft)
Height 14 metres (46 ft)
Beginning date circa 2 BC
Completion date circa 14 AD
Dedicated to Augustus

The Temple of Augustus (Croatian: Augustov hram) is a well-preservedRoman temple in the city of Pula, Croatia (known in Roman times as Pola). Dedicated to the first Roman emperor, Augustus, it was probably built during the emperor's lifetime at some point between 2 BC and his death in AD 14. It was built on a podium with a tetrastyle prostyle porch of Corinthian columns and measures about 8 by 17.3 m (26 by 57 ft), and 14 m (46 ft) high. The richly decorated frieze is similar to that of a somewhat larger and older temple, the Maison Carrée in Nîmes, France. These two temples are considered the two best complete Roman monuments outside Italy.

The temple was part of a triad consisting of three temples. The Temple of Augustus stood at the left side of the central temple, and the similar temple of the goddess Diana stood on the other side of the main temple. Although the larger central temple has not survived, the whole back side of the Temple of Diana is still clearly visible due to its incorporation into the Communal Palace, built in 1296.

Under Byzantine rule, the temple was converted into a church, accounting for its survival to modern times, and was later used as a granary.

By the late 19th century, the temple stood at the corner of the marketplace of Pula and was partly concealed by houses, "so that the visitor cannot obtain a view till he is close to it."

It was struck by a bomb during an Allied air raid in 1944, almost totally destroying it, but was reconstructed in 1947. It is today used as a lapidarium to display items of Roman sculpture.

The temple's dedication originally consisted of bronze letters affixed by nails to the stones of the architrave. Only the attachment holes now remain and much of the text has been destroyed over time. However, it consisted of a standard dedication also found on other Augustan temples, which read:


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