(latter 2nd century AD) The college was founded by Salvia Marcellina, the
mater (female chief
patron) of the college, to preserve the memory of her husband, Marcus Ulpius Capito, and the procurator Flavius Apollonius, for whom he had worked. Capito is commemorated in the inscription as
maritus optimus piissimus, "best and most devoted husband". Apollonius had overseen the art galleries
(pinacothecae) at the imperial palace. According to the inscription, the building in which the college was housed took the form of a shrine
(aedicula) and
pergola, with an attached covered
solarium. It had a marble statue of
Aesculapius, a god of healing. The
cult of Aesculapius and
Hygia had come to Rome in 293 BC. Although Hygia had been officially recognized as the counterpart of Roman
Salus ("Health, Wellbeing, Salvation, Security") in 180 BC, she was rarely cultivated apart from Aesculapius, and her devotees at Rome were typically Greek. The
collegium also had an obligation to take part in
Imperial cult by observing the birthday of the reigning emperor,
Antoninus Pius. The name of Flavius Apollonius, the procurator who was the joint honoree of the college, indicates that he was a
freedman of a
Flavian emperor, most likely
Domitian. Commemoration of the emperor's birthday was the only observance required of the college that specifies a site other than its headquarters:
in templo Divorum in aede divi Titi, "in the shrine
(aedes) of the divinized
Titus within the precinct
(templum) of the Divine [Emperors]
(Divi)". This cultic link between Aesculapius–Hygia and the
Temple of Vespasian and Titus is one of several indications that the divinized Flavii were also regarded as healers. ==Funding==