• milliarium aureum. A golden column erected by Augustus in 29 B.C. at the point where the principal roads of the Roman empire terminated.
  • Milliarium Aureum. monument, probably of marble or gilded bronze, erected by the Emperor Caesar Augustus near the Temple of Saturn in the central Forum...
  • Scholars[7] now prefer to consider these fragments a section of the upper part of the Umbilicus Urbis Romae. Milliarium_Aureum, Roman forum, Rome.
  • El milliarium Aureum por tanto era el miliario más grande y estaba en el centro del Foro, junto al Templo de Saturno y los rostra.
  • So basically, milliarium aureum was a golden marker in Rome that showed people where the center of the Roman Empire was.
  • According to Schaaf, the phrase "all roads lead to Rome" is a reference to the Milliarium Aureum, as the specific point to which all roads were said to lead.
  • Augusto, siendo Curator Viarum, erigió el monumento en el año 20 a.C., y el nombre de Milliarium Aureum (Miliario Dorado) le llegó tras su inauguración.
  • Milliarium Aureum. The Milliarium Aureum (‘Golden Milestone’) was a gilded milestone erected in the Roman Forum.