Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Tabularium


Related Topics

In the News (Tue 7 Oct 08)

  
  Tabularium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Tabularium was the official records office of ancient Rome, and also housed the offices of many city officials.
Situated within the Forum Romanum, it was on the front slope of the Capitoline Hill, below the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, to the southeast of the Arx and Tarpeian Rock.
"Tabularium" being the general term for any building containing records, there were a number of other tabularia scattered around the city.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tabularium   (204 words)

  
 TABULARIUM - LoveToKnow Article on TABULARIUM
It was situated on the west side of the Forum Romanum, and its great corridor, 220 ft. long, raised 50 ft. above the forum on a massive substructure, is still partly preserved.
Traces of an upper corridor with semi-detached columns of the Ionic order have been found in the Tabularium, but this structure was much changed in the 13th century, when the Palace of the Senators was built.
To properly cite this TABULARIUM article in your work, copy the complete reference below:
www.1911encyclopedia.org /T/TA/TABULARIUM.htm   (111 words)

  
 Where did Tabularium come from?
Tabularium was conceived in the later Keeping Archives workshops run by the New South Wales Branch of the Australian Society of Archivists in the early 1990s, in which it became clear that archivists, particularly in small archives, need an easy-to-use software product to help them manage their archives.
Tabularium Version 1 was extensively tested and/or reviewed by a group of about 15 archivists in local government bodies, universities, schools, professional associations and community groups, mostly in Sydney and Melbourne, during late 1996 and 1997.
Tabularium was also adopted as the basis for the control system for the State archives in NSW, which has proved that Tabularium is scaleable to a large archives institution and adaptable to the complex administrative structures spanning 200 years of colonial and State government.
tabularium.records.nsw.gov.au /wheredid.html   (672 words)

  
 Capitoline Museums and Piazza del Campidoglio - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Tabularium, also located underground beneath the piazza, occupies a building of the same name built in the 1st century BC to hold important Roman records of state.
The main attraction of the Tabularium, besides the structure itself, is the Temple of Veiovis.
Michelangelo devised a monumental stair (the Cordonata) to reach the high piazza, so that the Campidoglio resolutely turned its back on the Roman Forum that it had once commanded, and he gave the space a new building at the far end, to close the vista.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Musei_Capitolini   (1280 words)

  
 Tabularium - a collection management system for archives
Tabularium is a collection management system for archives which is available as freeware.
Both Version 2.1 and the upgrading file are available from the Download Tabularium page.
Tabularium is now freeware, as a result of the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in Australia.
tabularium.records.nsw.gov.au   (239 words)

  
 ROMAN MILITARY GLOSSARY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The cross-hall beyond the courtyard extended across the entire width of the building, and was usually the tallest structure in the interior of the camp, having celestory windows in rows, to provide light for the commander's tribunal and auguratorium which it housed.
Centrally located in the rear range of the principia, the sacellum was flanked on one side by the tabularium and on the other by the offices of the signiferi.
The records were inscribed on a variety of media, depending on local availability; slate, wooden waxed tablets, written in ink on papyrus, etc. The tabularium was the office of the cornicularius, who was assisted in his administrative duties by his deputy the actuarius and a number of librarii.
www.roman-britain.org /glossary_m.htm   (7214 words)

  
 Musei Capitolini: Ancient Capitol - Tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The greatest respect was held for the already-existing temple of Veiovis, whose area on the western corner of the Tabularium was delimited by a four-sided indentation.
The narrow corridor on the first floor, illuminated by rectangular openings hewn out of the sturdy basement, is covered by a pavilion-vaulted gallery with large archways framed by architectural features; the gallery can still be visited and is well preserved.
In the Middle Ages a fortress was built over the remains of the Tabularium, and this was later transformed into the Palazzo Senatorio.
www.museicapitolini.org /en/Museo/sezioni.asp?l1=5&l2=6   (378 words)

  
 the Tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
Tabularium has got the shape of a trapezium.
In the Middle Ages the tabularium lost its dignity and was used as salt stores.
In the 16th century three new storeys were build upon the second floor of the old tabularium.
intranet.grundel.nl /thinkquest/tabularium.html   (144 words)

  
 ASA NSW Update February 1998
Tabularium (the name is Latin for a record office or registry) is a Microsoft Access database, that is, a collection of tables, queries, on -screen forms and reports tied into a coherent system.
Tabularium is strongly based on the Australian series system, using the essential elements of ‘classic’ practice under that system.
Tabularium is not a commercial venture: the registration fee is $25, which covers distribution costs and helps fund tools for further work.
www-personal.usyd.edu.au /~trobinso/ASA_NSW/upd_feb.htm   (2085 words)

  
 AEDIS - Online Information article about AEDIS
The size of the earlier and smaller temple is indicated by the rough blocks on the face of the wall of the Tabularium, close against which the temple stands.
When the Tabularium was built It was not thought worth while to dress to a smooth face that part of its wall which was concealed by the then existing temple of Concord.
The so-called Tabularium 5 occupies the central part of the side towards the Forum; it is set on the tufa rock, which is cut away
encyclopedia.jrank.org /ADA_AIZ/AEDIS.html   (9053 words)

  
 The Tabularium
The Tabularium was built between the two summits of the Capitoline Hill, the Arx and the Citadel.
The planning of the Tabularium's construction was started, and building work continued, during the reign of Sulla.
In the 17th century the Palazzo de Senatores was designed and built by Michelangelo above the Tabularium, and the top level of Corinthian columns was destroyed in the process.
www.sionmc.com /Rome/forum/tabularium.htm   (345 words)

  
 Capitoline Museums: Tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
From the museum, passing through the Gallery Junction, we come to the Tabularium.
On this gallery is the entrance to another area containing the remains of buildings pre-existent to the Tabularium.
The areas on the north-eastern side of the Tabularium feature a lintel bearing an inscription testifying to the date of the building's inauguration; they can be seen from outside the Museum complex, alongside Via di S. Pietro in Carcere.
www.museicapitolini.org /en/Museo/percorso_Tabularium_intro.htm   (108 words)

  
 Tabularium, Capitolium (Photo Archive)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The Tabularium is at the western extreme of the Forum Romanum, behind the Temple of Concord, the Temple of Vespasian and Titus and the Portico of the Dii Consentes.
The Tabularium was build in 79 BC on initiative of the consul Quintus Lutatius Catulus as a part of the reconstruction efforts on the Capitolium after the fire of 83 BC.
In the Middel Ages the Tabularium formed part of a fortress on the Capitoline Hill, later it was incorporated into the Palazzo Senatorio of which it is still a part.
sights.seindal.dk /sight/163.html   (402 words)

  
 Rome - Forum and Capitol from near the Basilica of Constantine
The officer's name was Vespasian, and when years after he became the Emperor of the Roman Empire, this incident was recalled, and it was interpreted as a prophecy of his future greatness.
Beside the pavement already alluded to, the fragments of cornices and capitals belonging to the structure and now preserved in the corridor of the Tabularium prove that the building was splendidly adorned.
It was a name given to that part of the famous Sacra Via which ran in a zigzag course from the base to the summit of the Capitoline Hill.
www.oldandsold.com /articles26/rome-29.shtml   (5201 words)

  
 Twelve Tables, Tabularium
One of these buildings, the Tabularium at the base of the Capitoline Hill facing the Forum, was built to house the Tables, and other public legal documents were soon added.
The Rome Tabularium grew to become a huge central depository, and by the end of the 2nd century AD it was a multi-story "national archive", towering with arches and statues, that stood across the entire western end of the forum.
The Tabularium part of the pile was reopened for public visitation when the Capitoline Museums were reopened in 2000.
www.mmdtkw.org /VTwelveTables.html   (1005 words)

  
 ViaVenetoRoma.it - Rome's tourist guide - Events, itineraries, museums, exhibitions
The Tabularium is an imposing late-republican building, the remains of which form the foundations of the Palazzo Senatorio.
In Roman times its function was to house the bronze tabulae with the laws and official acts of the Roman state.
In the Middle Ages a fortress was built on the remains of the Tabularium and was subsequently converted to become the Palazzo Senatorio.
www.viavenetoroma.it /en/musei/DettaMusei.asp?id=58   (286 words)

  
 Klexus Search Engine: tabularium (10)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
Tabularium, archiwum w staro¿ytnym Rzymie, gdzie przechowywano u³o¿one chronologicznie dokumenty, spisane na tabliczkach, na...
The Tabularium of Senex Caecilius I keep the family accounts (tabulae) and the portraits of our ancestors (imagines) in m...
THE ROMAN FORUM TABULARIUM TEMPLE TO SATURN TEMPLE OF CASTOR AND POLLUX TEMPLE OF VESPASIAN SECRETAIUM SENATUS (SS.
www.klexus.com /tabularium   (182 words)

  
 TABULARIUM (tabula, board, picture, also archives, records) - Online Information article about TABULARIUM (tabula, ...
TABULARIUM (tabula, board, picture, also archives, records) - Online Information article about TABULARIUM (tabula, board, picture, also archives, records)
TABULARIUM (tabula, board, picture, also archives, records), the architectural
End of Article: TABULARIUM (tabula, board, picture, also archives, records)
encyclopedia.jrank.org /SUS_TAV/TABULARIUM_tabula_board_pictur.html   (283 words)

  
 Legion XXIV - Plan of Roman and Imperial Forums   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
It also is decorated with the prows (rostra) of sea vessels; hence this platform was termed the "Rostrum" from which our modern term for a speaking level or podium is derived.
The arched structure above was the Tabularium (national archives) on the Capitoline (Capitol) Hill.
This site is now occupied by the Piazza de Campidoglio surrounded by the three Palazzo (Palaces), designed by Michelangelo for Pope Paul III, and which were erected on the lower foundations of the Tabularium in the 1400's.
www.legionxxiv.org /lrgforumplan   (266 words)

  
 Tabularium - Services
For specific questions, you can ask the assistance of other members of the Tabularium and of the University Archives.
The visitor can have documents transferred from the State Archives in Brussels to the Tabularium to read or consult them here.
Two museums are closely connected to the Tabularium.
www.bib.kuleuven.ac.be /test/archief/cbib/english/leeszalen/btab/info/dienst_e.htm   (245 words)

  
 Glossary
The tabularium was the records office, which normally consisted of 2 rooms in the rear range of the prinicipia, to one side of the sacellum.
The tabularium equitum was the administrative office of the legionary cavalry.
Also the Tabularium in the Forum Romanum was the public record office, where state records were kept.
myweb.tiscali.co.uk /temetfutue/glossary/glossaryT.htm   (13651 words)

  
 Version history
Point release to fix a problem in Version 2.0 whereby a search using the 'Photograph search' form returned the same photograph multiple times where the photograph had been indexed with more than one indexing term (subject heading, person name or place name).
The menus, forms and reports from the 'Brevis' version have been added to the 'full' version of Tabularium.
The two 'versions' are retained so that the new Tabularium Brevis user does not have to edit a macro before being able to use the database.
tabularium.records.nsw.gov.au /version.html   (1058 words)

  
 Musei Capitolini: Ancient Capitol -   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The main buildings faced the Ancient Roman Forum, from which a carriageable road known as the Clivus Capitolinus led up the hill to the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, the most important and imposing temple in Rome.
In addition to this temple and those dedicated to Juno Moneta, Veiovis and in the Area Capitolina, the Capitoline Hill was the headquarters of the Public Roman Archive (Tabularium) and, in Republican Age, of the Mint.
Many ancient ruins can be seen along the Museums' exposition routes while others can be viewed in the open air on the hill where they still stand.
www.museicapitolini.org /en/Museo/sezioni.asp?l1=5&l2=6   (187 words)

  
 Roman Architecture   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The Tabularium, beneath the Palazzo Senatori on the Capitoline, facing the Forum
The Tabularium was built to house the pubblic archies of the state, probably built after the fire of 83 BC (probably around 78) by Q. Lucius Lutatius Catullus.
The arcaded open gallery was carved into the live tufa of the Capitoline Hill and can be seen from the
harpy.uccs.edu /roman/html/capitoline.html   (199 words)

  
 rome tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
Het Tabularium bevindt zich op de Mons Capitolinus, of beter gezegd tegen de helling ervan aan onder het huidige Palazzo Senatorio, waarvan het Tabularium het fundament vormt.
Het Tabularium was in de Romeinse het staatsarchief.
In de muur bevinden zich zes kleine vensters, die corresponderen met een reeks vertrekken, te bereiken via een trap, die nog goed bewaard gebleven is. Deze trap leidde naar beneden vanaf een poort, die later gesloten werd op het moment van de bouw van de tempel van Vespasianus en Titus.
www.xs4all.nl /%7Ewiebekoo/kt/italie/rome/tabul.htm   (239 words)

  
 Temple of Concord, Forum Romanum (Photo Archive)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The only surviving parts are the podium and the threshold of the door of the cella, both still in situ, and a fragment of the entablature, now kept in the Tabularium, and a Corinthian capital, now in the Antiquarium of the Forum.
During the reign of Tiberius the temple was also used as a kind of museum of Greek sculpture and painting.
The few surviving ruins of the temple can be seen from the Forum Romanum, but the best viewpoints are from within the Tabularium or from the stairs leading to the Capitoline Hill.
sights.seindal.dk /sight/162_Temple_of_Concord.html   (798 words)

  
 NOVA ROMA ::: Tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
The Tabularium was built by Lucius Cornelius Sulla "Felix," dictator 83-80 BCE.
It housed the laws, Edicts, and Treaties Rome's Magistrates produced.
The Tabularium or Hall of Records on the west end of theforum housed the state archives.
www.novaroma.org /tabularium   (151 words)

  
 Tabularium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
As you go down the Clivus Capitolinus, towards the Roman Forum, you see the only building from Republican Rome still in good condition — the Tabularium.
Built in 78 BC, it was designed to house the State Archives and was therefore a public building of some importance.
The Temple of Vesta and the House of the Vestal Virgins
www.romaviva.com /Fori-Imperiali/tabularium_eng.htm   (150 words)

  
 Capitoline Museums/Musei Capitolini:, All sections of the Capitoline Museums are now reopened to the public
A tunnel under Michelangelo's grand Campidoglio square which connects to the ancient Roman Tabularium (archives) which is directly below the Rome city government building at the back of the square.
The view over the Forum from the Tabularium is among the best you will find anywhere -- equivalent to what you can see from the top of the Farnese gardens on the Palatine hill, but from the other end of the Forum.
You can get into the tunnel and to the Tabularium from either the Palazzo Nuova or the Palazzo dei Conservatori.
www.mmdtkw.org /VCapMuseums.html   (940 words)

  
 Templum Vespasiani Divi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-02)
His son the emperor Titus began the construction of the temple to his now deified father, but he himself died before its completion, and the other son of Vespasian, Domitian, completed the temple and dedicated it to both of his deceased predecessors.
The space was rather cramped, so the temple backed right up to the Tabularium, and in fact an exit from the Tabularium to the formum became blocked by this new temple.
What remains in the site are three white columns in a "v" which marks a corner of the porch.
www.vroma.org /~forum/tvesp.html   (176 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.