<p>Small shrine to Victoria Virgo which stood on the SW *Palatine between the temples of *Magna Mater and *Victoria. Dedicated on August 1, 193 B.C. by M. Porcius Cato, the shrine shares its <i>dies natalis</i> with the adjacent <i>aedes</i> of Victoria (Livy 35.9.6: <i>aediculam Victoriae Virginis prope aedem Victoriae M. Porcius Cato dedicavit</i>; Degrassi, <i>Inscr. Ital.</i> 13.2, 489). Pensabene was the first to associate the extant remains, traditionally identified as the “Auguratorium” (Platner–Ashby, Coarelli), with Victoria Virgo’s temple (1988, 57; followed by Richardson, Coarelli, Papi). The brick ruins visible today date from the Hadrianic period; below these are incomplete late-Republican foundations for a rectangular room which has been identified as the <i>aedicula</i> of Victoria Virgo based upon their date and literary sources that place Cato’s shrine in close proximity to the Palatine Temple of Victory (Pensabene 1985, 198; id. 1988, 57; id., <i>LTUR</i>). While the Republican shrine was certainly much smaller than the Hadrianic building, its full dimensions are not preserved; thus it is represented on our map by an index number.</p>