No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
7 Dragendorff, H. and Kruger, E., Das Grabmal von Igel (Trier, 1924)Google Scholar.
8 Gabelmann, H., ‘Römische Grabmonumente mit Reiterkampfszenen im Rheingebiet’, Bonnet jahrb. clxxiii (1973), Bild 40.Google Scholar
9 R.C.H.M., , Roman London (London, 1928), p. 103Google Scholar and pl. 16.
10 G. E. Fox, Archaeologia, liii (1892), p. 284 and pl. xxiv, 7.
11 The block illustrated in fig. 2 has three 6- cm. wide grooves scored by the teeth of the excavating machine; they have been omitted from the illustration for the sake of simplicity.
12 R.C.H.M., , Roman London (London, 1928), p. 100Google Scholar and pls. 31–2.
13 Wright, R. P. and Richmond, I. A., Catalogue of the Roman Inscribed and Sculptured Stones in the Grosvenor Museum, Chester (Chester, 1955), p. 54Google Scholar, no. 164, and pl. xxxix.
14 Records of unpublished material cited here are held by T. F. C. Blagg at the University of Kent at Canterbury, in the archive of the Corpus of Roman Architecture in Britain.
15 Maloney, J., ‘Recent work on London's defences’, in J. Maloney and B. Hobley (eds.), Roman Urban Defences in the West, C.B.A. Res. Rep. 51 (1983), pp. 96–117Google Scholar, at p. n o and fig. 107; cf. D. Baatz, ‘Town walls and defensive weapons’, ibid., pp. 136–40, at pp. 136–7 and fig. 122.
16 Forster, R. H., ‘Corstopitum: report of the excavations in 1907’. Arch. Ael. 3rd ser. iv (1908), pp. 205–303, at p. 237Google Scholar and fig. 29.
17 In Italy: Toynbee, J. M. C., Death and Burial in the Roman World (London, 1971), pls. 20, 21Google Scholar; and in Germany, D. Baatz, pers. comm.
18 By analogy with Canterbury, where the Richborough road was flanked by cemeteries for at least half a mile beyond the town walls: Canterbury Archaeological Trust, Topographical Maps of Canterbury (Canterbury, n.d.), map i.