Temple of Vesta, Tivoli

Falls of the Aniene by Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich, c. 1745-50: a romanticized view
A modern photograph

The so-called Temple of Vesta is a small circular Roman temple (so a tholos) in Tivoli, Italy, dating to the early 1st century BC. Its ruins are dramatically sited on the acropolis of the Etruscan and Roman city,[1] overlooking the falls of the Aniene and a picturesque narrow gully.

Drawing of a 19th-century "Tivoli order" capital, reconstructing those of the temple

The temple's capitals have been much admired and imitated and their variation of the Corinthian order sometimes called the "Tivoli order". They have two rows of acanthus leaves, and its abacus is decorated with oversize fleurons in the form of hibiscus flowers (probably intended to be Hibiscus syriacus) with pronounced spiral pistils. The column flutes have flat tops. The frieze exhibits fruit swags suspended between bucrania. Above each swag is a rosette. The cornice does not have modillions.

The site now forms part of the Villa Gregoriana park.

  1. ^ Then "Tibur", now Tivoli