Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:57:43.970Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Sepulchral Monument of the Procurator C. Julius Classicianus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

R.D. Grasby
Affiliation:
Bedchester, Shaftesbury
R.S.O. Tomlin
Affiliation:
Wolfson College, Oxford, [email protected]

Extract

The evidence for an altar tomb of the Procurator of Britain, C. Julius Classicianus, consists of a richly carved bolster stone and two substantial lettered fragments, found at the foot of a Roman bastion of London's city wall during two excavations separated in time by eighty years. Reunited. at the British Museum in 1935, they form one of the most important and beautifully lettered archaeological documents of Roman London.

The purpose of this study is to reassess the information contained in the worked faces of each fragment, to review the assumptions which led to the disposition of the fragments in their present setting, and to consider whether a measured survey of lettering and layout might contribute to a fuller reconstruction of the tomb and its text.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 33 , November 2002 , pp. 43 - 75
Copyright
Copyright © R.D. Grasby and R.S.O. Tomlin 2002. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ashby, T. 1927: Architecture of Ancient Rome, LondonGoogle Scholar
Barber, B., and Bowsher, D. 2000: The Eastern Cemetery of Roman London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Barber, B., and Hall, J. 2000: ‘Digging up the people of London: interpreting evidence from Roman London cemeteries’, in Haynes, I., Sheldon, H. and Hannigan, L. (eds), London Under Ground — the Archaeology of a City, Oxford, 102–20Google Scholar
Bell, W., Cottrill, F., and Spon, C. 1937: London Wall through Eighteen Centuries, LondonGoogle Scholar
Birley, A.R. 1981: The Fasti of Roman Britain, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Burkitt, A.H. 1852: ‘Excavations near the Roman Wall on Tower Hill, London’, JBAA, 240–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Catich, E. 1968: The Origin of the Serif, Davenport, IowaGoogle Scholar
Collingwood, R.G. 1928: An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in London, vol. 3, Roman London, RCHM, LondonGoogle Scholar
Collingwood, R.G. 1936: ‘Roman Britain in 1935: II Inscriptions’, JRS 26, 263–7Google Scholar
Cottrill, F. 1936: ‘A bastion of the town wall of London, and the sepulchral monument of the Procurator Julius Classicianus’, Antiq. Journ. 16, 17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Espérandieu, E. 1915: Bas-reliefs, statues, et bustes de la Gaule romaine, vol. vi, Belgique - deuxième partie, ParisGoogle Scholar
Evetts, L.C. 1938: Roman Lettering, LondonGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, G. (ed.) 1852: ‘The Roman wall of the City of London, and relics’, The Builder 10, 562–3Google Scholar
Gordon, A.E. 1983: Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy, Los Angeles/LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grasby, R.D. 1989: Lettercutting in Stone, OswestryGoogle Scholar
Grasby, R.D. 1992: ‘The making of two Roman inscriptions — Part I’, The Scribe 56, 38Google Scholar
Grasby, R.D. 1993: ‘The making of two Roman inscriptions — Part II’, The Scribe 57, 310Google Scholar
Grasby, R.D. 1996: ‘A comparative study of five Latin inscriptions: measurement and making’, PBSR 64, 95138Google Scholar
Hambidge, J. 1967: The Elements of Dynamic Symmetry, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. 1936: British Museum Quarterly 10, 53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henig, M. 2000: ‘Art in Roman London’, in Haynes, I., Sheldon, H. and Hannigan, L. (eds), London Under Ground — the Archaeology of a City, Oxford, 6284Google Scholar
Hill, P.R. 1981: ‘Stonework and the archaeologist’, Archaeologia Aeliana ser. 5, 9, 114Google Scholar
Holder, A. 1896: Alt-celtischer Sprachschatz, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Keppie, L. 1991: Understanding Roman Inscriptions, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lethaby, W.R. 1924: Londinium — Architecture and the Crafts, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Mallon, J. 1952: Paléographie romaine, MadridGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1965: Roman City of London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1969: Roman London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1983: London, City of the Romans, LondonGoogle Scholar
Perkins, T. 1997: ‘The Trajan secrets’, The Edge I, 1115Google Scholar
Price, J.E. 1885: ‘Meetings of antiquarian societies: London and Middlesex Archaeological Society’, The Antiquary 11, 33Google Scholar
Roach, Smith C. 1859: Illustrations of Roman London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stevens, Curl J. 1999: Dictionary of Architecture, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Susini, G. 1973: The Roman Stonecutter, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Syme, R. 1958: Tacitus, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Toynbee, J.M.C. 1971: Death and Burial in the Roman World, Baltimore/LondonGoogle Scholar
Uhlaner, J.E. 1941: ‘The effect of thickness of stroke on the legibility of letters’, Iowa Academy of Sciences, Proceedings 48, 319–24Google Scholar
Walker, S. 1985: Memorials to the Roman Dead, LondonGoogle Scholar
Walker, S., and Burnett, A. 1981: The Image of Augustus, LondonGoogle Scholar
Warnes, A.R. 1926: Building Stones, their Properties, Decay and Preservation, LondonGoogle Scholar