:''For other uses see
Rostrum.''
The 'Rostra', located in the
Roman Forum, was the platform beside the
Curia from which
orators spoke to the assembled people. Its name was taken from the bronze ships' beaks (''
rostrum'') that decorated the front (some of the first of which, were taken from the victories in the battles of
Anzio against the
Volscians and
Mylae in
260 BC), their supporting vertical slots and large holes still to be seen.
The Rostra was planned by
Caesar but given its final form by Octavian (later Augustus) in
42 BC. It was here that
Mark Antony delivered his funeral speech for Caesar, and here that the
Triumvirs proscribed
Cicero and other political foes.
Five honorary columns were erected behind the Rostra: a taller one in the middle, carrying a statue of
Jupiter (the patron god of Diocletian), the others, the
Augusti and Caesars when
Diocletian visited
Rome for the first time in AD
303 to celebrate the twentieth year (''vicennalia'') of his reign and the tenth year (''decennalia'') of the
Tetrarchy.
Next to the Rostra is an unassuming brick-built circular construction, some two meters high and two meters in diameter. This is the
Umbilicus Urbis, the nominal centre of Imperial Rome, from which all distances to distant towns and cities was reckoned. The
Lapis Niger, the ancient shrine that was said to be the grave of
Romulus, first
king of Rome, lies next to the Rostra.
The ruins now visible of the Rostra are an early twentieth-century restoration.
See also
Plan showing location in the Forum Romanum
Coin depicting the ships prows attached to the rostra, and photograph showing the length of the rostra
Further on the history of the rostra in the Forum Romanum
★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>/2/5.html Graphic reconstruction of the view of the rostra with the ships prows