The remains of a temple were excavated in 1939 under
Benito Mussolini, during the excavation underneath Piazza del Campidoglio for the creation of the Gallery Junction. This may now be seen in the
tabularium under the
Capitoline Museums. It had been saved by being superimposed underneath the foundation of later buildings on the site on the
Capitoline Hill. It was identified as the temple of Veiovis from the ancient sources and from the discovery of a marble cult statue in its
cella. The sources state that his statue had a beardless head and carried a bundle of arrows in his right hand. The chief feature of this temple, and one which is not shared by many other Roman buildings – probably on account of the very limited space available – is the transversally-elongated cella, whose width is almost double its depth (15 x 8.90 metres). The temple's high podium has a lime-and-mortar internal nucleus lined with
travertine marble, the same stone that was used to pave the temple court. The façade runs in line with the road that climbed up from the
Clivus Capitolinus, and features a pronaos with four pillars in the central part preceded by a flight of steps. Three distinct building phases have been identified, the last of which has been dated to the first quarter of the 1st century BC and is linked with the building of the Tabularium. The temple was then restored by emperor
Domitian with the addition of brick pillars and coloured marble lining the floor and cella walls. ==See also==