[2] The building was located in the Saepta Julia,[3][4] a large square in the Campus Martius used for public comitia (assemblies).
The square, a large free space surrounded by porticoes, was finished by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa,[5] admiral and friend of emperor Augustus, in 27 BC.
[6] Studies of the Forma Urbis (an ancient detailed plan of Rome) have located the portico in what is now Via della Minerva, near the basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva.
[7] A brickwork wall preserved along the eastern side of the Pantheon has been assigned to the Porticus Argonautarum.
This article about an ancient Roman building or structure is a stub.