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  1. Barbatus was buried in a monumental stone sarcophagus with a Latin inscription (see below). Other family members occupy other parts of the tomb, in many cases with inscriptions identifying the individuals and charting their public careers.

  2. According to Coarelli, the capacity of 30 burial places was reached, and the main body of the complex was essentially complete, by the middle 2nd century BC, but new burials continued at long intervals until the 1st century AD. During that time the tomb was a landmark in ancient Rome.

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  4. Jun 25, 2020 · The Cornelii Scipiones, a branch of the famous patrician gens Cornelia, were one of the most powerful and influential families of the Roman Republic.Together, Scipio Africanus and Scipio Aemilianus, the two most famous members of the family, led Rome to victory over Carthage in the Punic Wars and, at the same time, laid the foundation for the return of monarchy through the transition from ...

    • John Jacobs
    • 2020
  5. Aug 21, 2022 · The family tomb of the Cornelii Scipiones, located along the Via Appia leading south from the city of Rome, was first rediscovered in 1614. Its remains constitute one of the most important examples of Late Republican funerary culture at Rome and demonstrate how an illustrious family worked to maintain its image in a changing world.

  6. Many of the Cornelii Scipiones, beginning with Scipio Barbatus (see above), were interred in an impressive mausoleum known as the Tomb rP of the Scipios. This tomb, located along a side road near the intersection of the Via Appia and the Via Latina, not far from the Porta Capena, was in use between the early 4th c. BCE and the early ee 1st c. CE.

    • John Jacobs
  7. This is the family tree of the Cornelii Scipiones — a prominent family of the Roman Republic — who were allied with the Sempronii Gracchi, Aemilii Paulli, and Caecilii Metelli, whose members are also shown. Only magistracies attested with certainty in Broughton's Magistrates of the Roman Republic have been mentioned. The dotted lines show ...

  8. Other articles where Cornellii Scipiones is discussed: Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus: …leading families—most notably with the Cornelii Scipiones, the most continuously successful of the great Roman houses—through his mother, Cornelia, daughter of the conqueror of Hannibal, and through his sister Sempronia, wife of Scipio Africanus, the destroyer of Carthage. He was equally associated with ...

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