Construction and renovation .
Titus began construction and presumably finished the foundations, made of
tuff concrete, and the core of the podium, made of white marble.
Domitian, however, completed the interior work after
Titus’ death. The interior is highly ornate and the
frieze depicts sacred objects that would have been used as the symbols, or badges, of the various priestly
collegia in
Rome. Beneath the previous inscription a new one is added: IMPP. CAESS. SEVERVS ET ANTONINVS PII FELIC[ES] AVGG RESTITVER[ENT]. Only the last word is saved on the frieze of the front.
Medieval and modern history The temple suffered significant damage during medieval times, particularly c. 1300 (under
Pope Boniface VIII), and in
Pope Nicholas V's remodelling of the Forum (which involved the demolition of both angles of the temple on the Forum side and the reconstruction of its front as a fortress with corner towers). All that survives today is the
podium's core (with some of its
peperino lining), parts of the
cella (two fragments of its
travertine wall and part of the pedestal at its back for the
cult statues), and three
Corinthian columns at
pronaos's south-east corner. ==See also==