Curator aedium sacrarum et operum locorumque publicorum

Inscriptions use any combination of the words curator, aedium sacrarum, et operum, locorumque publicorum, and populi Romani to refer to the office.

One inscription records an individual named Julius Galerius Asper, who was allowed to hold this position before he had become a quaestor.

[14] One inscription from Bremenium mentions a subcurator operum publicorum who is the husband of a woman named Julia Lucilla.

[16] It was established between 11 BCE and 14 CE by Augustus or Tiberius to manage the upkeep and construction of public works,[17][18][19] sacred places, and temples.

[27] It is also possible that it continued to exist, even into the Later Roman Empire, becoming known as the curator operum publicorum vir clarissimus by the time of Diocletian.

The Temple of Portunus , Rome. The curatores aedium would have been responsible for managing such buildings.