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XXI
Latin: For having the highways fortified (improved).
Please add updates or make corrections to the NumisWiki text version as appropriate.
There are passages in Dion which point with singular and luminous exactitude to the facts commemorated and typified on the above mentioned coins. "Augustus himself took the management of the formation of the Flaminian way; because he intended to lead forth an army in that direction, and so it was immediately renewed. On this account statues on arches were raised to Augustus as well on the bridge over the Tiber as at Ariminum." - This work of repairing the principal highways (or military roads), which diverged from Rome to the most remote territories of the republic, appears to have been begun in the year V.C. 727. "But the labour was great demanding both time and expense, and frequently it was obliged to be suspended. At length, in the year of Rome 738 (says Eckhel) it was finished, and then and for that reason were the statues placed and dedicated, which Dion notices and these medals represent. The same historian also adds that other roads were subsequently repaired. -There are, moreover, testimonies even more specific, which are related by Suetonius, who says, "In order, however, that the city might be more easy of access from all quarters, he took upon himself the task of constructing the Flaminian was as far as Ariminum, and distributed the others among individuals who had gained triumphs, to be laid down, and the expenses defrayed our of the money that the spoils of war were sold for." - And what Suetonius here states, without marking the time, is related by Dion to have taken place in the above year: "To those who had gained a triumph, he enjoyed that they should erect some monument in memory of their exploits, out of the money raised by the sale of the spoils.