<p>Temple of Minerva on the *Aventine, apparently in a prominent place (<i>in arce</i>: Ov., <i>Fast</i>. 6.728), but without identified remains. It is mentioned in reference to events of the late 3rd-c. B.C. (Festus 446/48) and depicted on the Severan Marble Plan (Rodríguez Almeida, <i>Forma</i> pl. 15, frag. 22: MINERBAE; cf. <i>Templum Dianae et Minervae</i> in the Regionary Catalogues, <i>Regio XIII</i>). The temple was rebuilt by Augustus (<i>feci</i>: <i>RG</i> 19), together with (on the Aventine) the temples of *Iuppiter Libertas and *Iuno Regina (Vendittelli; cf. Richardson; Ziolkowski). Its precise location depends on the position of the Marble Plan’s fragment, which has recently been disputed, but the most plausible solution still speaks for the traditional placement in the N center of the hill (for details, s.v. Diana Aventina, Aedes). With due caution, our map shows the temple at that place and assumes that the size of its platform (<i>c</i>. 25 x 50 m) had not changed since the Augustan period.</p>