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Procuratorial Tile Stamps From London

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

I.M. Betts
Affiliation:
Museum of London Archaeology Service

Extract

At present 200 procuratorial stamped tiles are known from Roman Britain, the vast majority from the City of London. A small number of other stamps are known from Westminster, Barking in Essex, Brockley Hill in Hertfordshire, and possibly Saunderton in Buckinghamshire. Eight procuratorial stamped mortaria have also been found in London. All the procuratorial stamped tiles found up to 1986, with two exceptions found too late for inclusion, are listed in RIB II. The considerable number of stamped tiles found in London after this date, almost all of them unpublished, are included in an appendix to this report.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 26 , November 1995 , pp. 207 - 229
Copyright
Copyright © I.M. Betts 1995. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

1 R.G. Collingwood and R.P. Wright, (RIB II), The Roman Inscriptions of Britain 11.5, Eds S.S. Frere and R.S.O. Tomlin (1993), 30–40.

2 Correct up to the end of 1993. All but one of these stamps was excavated by the Museum of London Archaeological Service, or its predecessors.

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8 Wright favours the plural form p(rocuratores) based on the analogy of a writing-tablet from London, RIB 2443.2, where dederunt shows thatproc. is intended to be plural. RIB II, op. cit. (note 1), 30.

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10 These tile stamps are examined in more detail on p. 224.

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13 Museum of London tile fabric types 2452, 2459A, 3006. Tile fabric was examined using a binocular microscope at xio magnification. The description of the mortarium fabric is derived from examination of examples from King William Street and 55–61 Moorgate, London and that given in Hartley, op. cit. (note 3).

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