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Monumentum Ancyranum

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Monumentum Ancyranum

Address
  
Hacı Bayram Mahallesi, 06030 Altındağ/Ankara, Turkey

Similar
  
Roman Baths of Ankara, Hacı Bayram Mosque, Juliansäule, War of Independence Museum, Ankara Castle

The Monumentum Ancyranum (Latin for "Monument of Ankara") refers to the inscription of the Res Gestae Divi Augusti ("Deeds of the Divine Augustus") located on the Augusteum (the Temple of Augustus and Rome) in Ankara, Turkey. It is the most intact copy of the Res Gestae in the world.

Contents

Construction

The temple was built 25 x 20 BC after the conquest of central Anatolia by the Roman Empire and the formation of the Galatia province, with Ancyra as its administrative capital.

The Res Gestae Divi Augusti

After the death of Augustus in AD 14, a copy of the text of the Res Gestae Divi Augusti was inscribed on both walls inside the pronaos in Latin, with a Greek translation on an exterior wall of the cella.

The inscriptions are the primary surviving source of the text, since the original inscription on bronze pillars in front of the Mausoleum of Augustus in Rome has long been lost, and two other surviving inscriptions of the text are incomplete.

The Monumentum Ancyranum was first made known to the western world by Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, ambassador of Ferdinand of Austria, to the Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent (1555–1562) at Amasia in Asia Minor. Busbecq first read the inscription and identified its origin from his reading of Suetonius; he published a copy of parts of it in his Turkish Letters.

References

Monumentum Ancyranum Wikipedia