<p>Votive temple of the 2nd c. B.C. to the Lares Permarini located <i>in campo Martio</i> (Livy 40.52.4-7: <i>aedem Larum permarinum in Campo</i>; Macrob., <i>Sat.</i> 1.10.10), and more specifically by the <i>fasti Praenestini</i> in the *Porticus Minucia ([LARIBVS PERM]ARINIS IN PORTI[CV MI]NVCIA: Degrassi, <i>Inscr. Ital.</i> 13.2, 139). Remnants of this temple were discovered in 1938 near the intersection of Via delle Botteghe Oscure and Via Celsa during a road-widening project (Richardson 233); the remains, dating to the late 1st c. B.C., correspond to a depiction of the temple on the Severan Marble Plan near the legend MINI[CIA] (Cozza 10, fig. 2; Rodríguez Almeida, <i>Forma</i> pl. 26, frags. 35 dd, ee, ff [399, 337, 322]). Ziolkowski (623) and Coarelli (1981, 40-46), however, continue to identify *Temple D in the *“Area Sacra” of Largo Argentina with the Lares Permarini temple, despite Rickman’s well-formulated objections to their arguments. From the fragments, it appears that the temple was situated SE of the central axis of the Porticus Minucia, which would have been built around the temple in <i>c</i>. 110 B.C. Peripteral, octastyle with 12 columns along its flanks, it had a deep pronaos and colonnaded <i>cella</i>, all situated on a high podium.</p>
<p>The praetor L. Aemilius Regillus vowed the temple in 190 B.C. (Livy 40.52.4) and L. Aemilius Lepidus dedicated it on 22 December 179 B.C., along with his own temples in the Campus (*Diana, Aedes [Campus Flaminius]; *Iuno Regina, Aedes). Part of the dedicatory inscription affixed above the temple doors is preserved in Livy (40.52.5-6). Note that this temple stood immediately W of the point where the *Porticus Aemilia (Campus Martius), which began at the *Porta Fontinalis, debouched onto the Campus Martius; such a collocation of Aemilian dedications would easily explain the application of the name *Aemiliana (2) to this area.</p>