Page:The age of Justinian and Theodora (Volume 1).djvu/92

 Forum are very numerous: the Fortune of the City, called Anthusa, was originally set up here, and adored with bloodless sacrifices; a pair of great crosses inscribed with words of the Creed and Doxology are erected on opposite sides; Constantine with his mother Helena, and a pair of winged angels form a group about the one, whilst the sons of the same emperor surround the other. Here also may be seen Athene, her neck encircled by snakes emanating from the Gorgon's head fixed in her aegis; Amphitrite distinguished by a crown of crab's claws; a dozen statues of porphyry ranged in one portico, and an equal number of gilded sirens or sea-horses in the other; and lastly the bronze gates bestowed by Trajan on the temple of Diana at Ephesus, embossed with a series of subjects illustrating the theogonies of Greece and Rome. These latter adorn the entrance to the original Senate-house which is situated on the south side of the Forum.

If we diverge from the Mese slightly to the north-east of the Pavement, we shall enter a large square named the Strategium, from its forming a parade-ground to the barracks of the Palatine troops. Amongst several monuments a Theban obelisk conspicuously occupies the middle place, but the most striking object is an equestrian figure of Con-*

mistake almost incredible in the latter, a resident, considering that the pillar of Constantine still exists in a scarred and mutilated condition; hence known as the "Burnt Pillar," and called by the Turks "Djemberli Tash," or Hooped Stone; see Grosvenor, op. cit., p. 374, etc.]
 * [Footnote: been confounded with the Augusteum both by Labarte and Paspates, a