<p>Temple to Victory on the SW *Palatine adjacent to the Temple of *Magna Mater and the shrine to *Victoria Virgo (Livy 29.14.13: <i>in aedem Victoriae</i>). Dedicated in 294 B.C. by L. Postumius Megillus (Livy 10.33.9, though a competing tradition associated the temple with Evander: Dion. Hal., <i>Ant. Rom.</i> 1.32.5), the temple was substantially restored in the late-Republican or early-Augustan era (Pensabene 1988, 55), perhaps in the wake of the fire of A.D. 3 (Papi). Substantial architectural remains, identified as the Temple of Victoria due to their location, size, and close relation to epigraphic material pertaining to Victoria (<i>CIL</i> VI 31059, 31060), include fragments of Corinthian capitals and other elements in travertine, which suggest a restoration during the third quarter of the 1st c. B.C. (Pensabene, <i>LTUR</i>). The temple’s <i>opus quadratum</i> podium (<i>c</i>. 33 x 19 m) originally supported a hexastyle, peripteral <i>sine postico</i> temple with a double row of columns along the façade (Pensabene 1988, 54-57; id., <i>LTUR</i>). The restoration retained the same plan, while augmenting the <i>cella</i> foundations to support an internal colonnade, and replacing the tufa superstructure with a Corinthian columnar order (Pensabene 1988, 55).</p>