- Temple of Venus Genetrix
The Temple of Venus Genetrix is a temple in the
Forum of Caesar ,Rome , dedicated to the Romangoddess "Venus Genetrix", the goddess of motherhood and domesticity. It was dedicated to the goddess in 46 BC byJulius Caesar .Caesar originally planned to build the temple to Venus Victrix, but the
Battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC postponed the construction. He decided to dedicate his own temple to Venus Genetrix as the mother ofAeneas , considered the ancestor of the "gens " Julia to which Caesar belonged.The temple was built in the city of Rome, in the new Forum of Caesar. It was placed at the end of a long enclosure by the Forum, a practice that was borrowed by the Romans from the Etruscans and which later became a standard architectural feature throughout the
Roman Empire .The temple was built of solid marble with eight columns ("
octostyle ") on thefacade on a raisedpodium ascended by two small lateral staircases. Inside was a cult statue of Venus, as well as statues of Caesar and Cleopatra; numerous works of art, including Greek paintings; six collections of engraved gems; and a breastplate decorated with pearls fromBritannia .The area was damaged by the fire in 80 AD. Later the temple was rebuilt by
Domitian and was restored byTrajan in 113 AD. The three columns now visible belong to this later reconstruction.References
*cite book|last=Nagle|coauthors=D. Brendan|year=2005|title=The Roman World: Sources and Interpretation|publisher=Pearson Education|id=ISBN 0-13-110083-1
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.