Tabularium

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{{LanguageBar | Tabularium}}
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{{LanguageBar|Tabularium}}{{AlsoNR}}[[Image:View from tabularium arches Agricola.jpg|frame|right|View across Roman forum from inside tabularium structure, Roma. Photo by M. Lucretius Agricola.]]
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The '''''Tabularium''''' was built by [[Lucius Cornelius Sulla]] "Felix," ([[dictator]] 83-80 BCE). It was designed to house Rome's bureaucracy. In it were stored the laws, edicts, and treaties that Rome's magistrates produced. The Tabularium (or "Hall of Records") is located at the west end of the '''[[Forum Romanum]]'''.[[Image:Vaults inside tabularium Agricola.jpg|frame|left|Vaulting inside tabularium structure, Roma. Photo by M. Lucretius Agricola.]]
  
The '''''Tabularium''''' was built by [[Lucius Cornelius Sulla]] "Felix," ([[dictator]] 83-80 BCE). It was designed to house Rome's bureaucracy. In it were stored the laws, edicts, and treaties that Rome's magistrates produced. The Tabularium (or "Hall of Records") is located at the west end of the '''[[Forum Romanum]]'''.
 
  
==See also==
 
  
* Nova Roma [[Tabularium (Nova Roma)|Tabularium]].
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[[Category:Archaeological sites in Rome]]
 
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[[Category:Archeological sites in Rome]]
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Latest revision as of 08:57, 27 July 2023

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This article is about Tabularium in the ancient world. For Tabularium in Nova Roma, see Tabularium (Nova Roma).
View across Roman forum from inside tabularium structure, Roma. Photo by M. Lucretius Agricola.
The Tabularium was built by Lucius Cornelius Sulla "Felix," (dictator 83-80 BCE). It was designed to house Rome's bureaucracy. In it were stored the laws, edicts, and treaties that Rome's magistrates produced. The Tabularium (or "Hall of Records") is located at the west end of the Forum Romanum.
Vaulting inside tabularium structure, Roma. Photo by M. Lucretius Agricola.
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