<p>The temple dedicated to the ‘young’ or ‘bad’ Jupiter in 192 B.C. (Livy 35.41.8, cf. Gell., <i>NA</i> 5.12.8-10) and rebuilt in the early 1st c. B.C. was located <i>inter duos lucos</i> (Vitr., <i>De arch</i>. 4.8.4: <i>inter duos lucos Veiovis</i> [sc. <i>aedes</i>]; Ov., <i>Fast</i>. 3.430: <i>templa ... lucos Veiovis ante duos</i>; Gell., <i>NA</i> 5.12.2: <i>aedes Vediovis ... inter Arcem et Capitolium</i>), in the same area as the *Asylum. It has been identified with the remains of a small temple under the SW corner of Palazzo Senatorio on the *Capitol, nestled into a corner of the later *Tabularium. Its ground-plan, unusual on account of its transverse <i>cella</i> fronted by a tetrastyle <i>pronaos</i> (described by Vitruvius, as noted by La Rocca), is well established through excavations (Colini).</p>