<p>An early-Republican cult site of Iuppiter Victor on the <i>collis Quirinalis</i> (*Quirinal) near the Temple of *Quirinus. The <i>dies natalis</i> of the ‘<i>templa</i>’ was April 13 (Ov., <i>Fast</i>. 4.621-22; Degrassi, <i>Inscr. Ital.</i> 13.2, 440). A 3rd-c. B.C. inscription found in the papal gardens on the Quirinal during the 17th c. records the restoration of a shrine to Iuppiter Victor: [D]IOVEI VICTORE T.MEFV[…] M. F. III VIR [RESTI]TVIT (<i>CIL</i> VI 438=30767a) and suggests the location of the cult site (Coarelli, Ziolkowski, Carafa fig. 3). This sanctuary may have been vowed in 295 B.C. by Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus (<i>RE</i> VI Fabius 114; Livy 10.29.14), and dedicated a few years later, perhaps in 289 B.C. by Q. Fabius Maximus Gurges (<i>RE</i> VI Fabius 112), who was the son of Rullianus and consul that year (Coarelli; with greater caution, Ziolkowski, who recounts the history of confusion with the cult of *Iuppiter Invictus on the *Palatine, which had a <i>dies natalis</i> on June 13: Ov., <i>Fast</i>. 6.650).</p>