SOURCE: Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Vedute di Roma (Rome, [1747?-1788]), pl. 68 NOTES: The Roman bridge over the Aniene, named after Lucanus Plautius, was rebuilt several times between the 15th and 19th centuries. It is next to the Tomb of the Plautii which dates from 10-14AD.
SOURCE: Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Vedute di Roma (Rome, [1747?-1788]), pl. 72 NOTES: The brick tomb on the left dates from the 1st century AD. The circular 4th century tomb was converted into a church and then a granary.
SOURCE: Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Vedute di Roma (Rome, [1747?-1788]), pl. 106 NOTES: This brickwork 2nd century building was long thought to be the Temple of Deus Rediculus but is now identified as the tomb of the wife of Herodes Atticus.
NOTES: The present church is thought to date back to the 10-11th century. although there was a monastery on the site from 705. It was converted into a school and cottage in the 18th century and largely forgotten, until rediscovered in 1856. It was later restored to ecclesiastical use from 1874-1880