<p>The Augustan-era compital shrine of the *Vicus Aesc(u)leti, whose marble altar and travertine pavement were found <i>in situ</i> during late-19th c. construction work in Via Arenula, SW of the *Circus Flaminius near the Tiber, where the shrine faced an ancient NW-SE thoroughfare (Lanciani, <i>FUR</i> pl. 28). Both the altar and its pavement carry dedicatory inscriptions of the <i>vicomagistri</i> ‘of the 9th year’ (<i>CIL</i> VI 30957=<i>ILS</i> 3615; pavement: MA]G[I]STRI VICI AESCLETI ANNI VIIII); thus they probably date from <i>c</i>. A.D. 2 (Panciera 63, 72; Hano, with 7 B.C. as the presumable first year of the office; cf. however Fraschetti). The compital <i>aedicula</i>, remains of which are also preserved, seems to have been restored under Domitian (Panciera 70-72; cf. Pisani Sartorio; cf. *Compitum Acili). The findspot of the compital sanctuary firmly anchors the location of the Vicus Aesc(u)leti neighborhood, and suggests (but does not make certain) that the thoroughfare in front of it be identified as the neighborhood’s eponymous street (Lanciani, Pisani Sartorio).</p>