The capital was made with Proconnesian marble in the first decades of the 3rd century AD. It was found at an unknown time in the former farm of the Benedictines of Praglia located in Brusegana (Padua). The style is those of Corinthian Asian-style capital: a vegetable decoration, with acanthus crowns, run along the entire surface. They are depicted, however, in a peculiar form with very tall leaves with little expansion in width which leave gaps between each element. The rim of the capital is flared and projecting outward.
An interesting fact is that the capital, originally a solid block, was subsequently modified and carved out on the inside, transforming it into a puteal, that is, a small, richly decorated pit used as a water cistern.