Sacra Via proper

Looking west from the Arch of Titus down the Sacra Via into the Forum Romanum.

Now you are continuing to descend the sacer clivus (Sacra Via) towards the entrance to the Forum Romanum.

Although the part east of the Arch of Titus, and the further extension through the Forum, were clearly often referred to as Sacra Via, it seems that for many the term "Sacra Via" or "sacer clivus" (clivus is a slope, a street going up or down a hill, sometimes steeply) referred to just the descent from the Velia to the eastern entrance to the Forum Romanum. Varro tells us that the Sacra Via went from the sacellum Streniae in the Colosseum valley to the Arx on the Capitoline, which meant it had to go through the forum, but then he adds that popularly only this stretch, from the Velia down to the eastern entrance to the Forum, is called Sacra Via.

Varro, de Lingua Latina 5.47: "hinc [near the Carinae] oritur caput sacrae viae ab Streniae sacello quae pertinet in arcem, qua sacra quotquot mensibus ferunter in arcem et per quam augures ex arce profecti solent inaugurare. huius sacrae viae pars haec sola volgo nota quae est a foro eunti primore clivo."

Sites along the Sacra Via

Coming down the Sacra Via from the top of the Velia from the early shrines or the Arch of Titus were, in Republican times,

In Imperial times, a traveller might see

Whatever may have been sacred about the Sacra Via, it was certainly a busy street.

Finally you reach the entrance to the eastern end of the Forum Romanum, the Fornix Fabianus in Republican times and and the Arch of Augustus in Imperial times.

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Sources:
Horace, Odes, Epode, and Satires, including notes by E.C. Wickham in Quinti Horatii Flacci opera omnia, Oxford University Press, 1877.
Platner 1911
Martial
Pliny the Elder, NH
Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed.
S.B. Platner and T. Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, Oxford UP, 1929
Richard Stillwell, Ed., Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, x.v. Roma, Princeton: Princeton U.P, 1976
Ernest Nash, A Pictorial Dictionary of Ancient Rome, New York: Praeger, 1962.