Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T16:33:26.453Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

II. Inscriptions1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2017

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Roman Britain in 1956
Copyright
Copyright ©R. P. Wright 1957. 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

2 It is said to have been found in Kingscote parish, four miles west-north-west of Tetbury, and by 1795 it was built into the barn of Calcot Farm, Newington Bagpath. To prevent further weathering Mr. A. D. Passmore, while replacing it by a replica, added the original to his collection and in 1955 presented it to the Ashmolean Museum, where it remains. Baddeley, , Bristol and Glos. AST XLVII (1925) with plateGoogle Scholar; Passmore ibid. LX (1938), 347, pl. IV; Lindley ibid. LXXIII (1954), 230; Ashmolean Museum Report (1955), 30, pl. IV, a; JRS XLVI (1956). 152.Google Scholar

3 Found during conservation by H.M. Ministry of Works; Mr. J. M. Lewis kindly sent a photograph and details. The stone is now in the National Museum of Wales; Mr. G. C. Boon kindly sent a squeeze.

4 EE VII, 848, Caerleon Cat. no. 6 with plate. PX[X]XIIS Collingwood; PXXXIS Nash-Williams.

5 Mr. L. Alcock kindly sent a photograph and full details. Alcock, Radnorshire Soc. Trans. XXVI (1936), 19, pls. II, IIIGoogle Scholar. Now in Llandrindod Wells Public Library.

6 Stukeley, Soc. Ant. London MS 265 f. 43, MS 264 f. 8. Professor I. A. Richmond kindly drew attention to this record.

7 The tower lies in the basement of Messrs. Charles Hart's shop at the junction of Market Street with Feasegate. Mr. I. M. Stead, who took charge of the excavation for H.M. Ministry of Works, kindly sent details.

8 Found with other burials, of which one was in an uninscribed leaden coffin. Mr. H. G. Ramm kindly sent full details. The coffin is now in the Yorkshire Museum; Mr. G. F. Willmot kindly supplied a photograph. At the right-hand end of the lid the intact portion at the back was deleted on the negative.

9 CIL VII, 246, Yorkshire Museum Cat. no. 41.

10 Mr. J. Brown has presented the coffin to the Yorkshire Museum, York. Mr. L. P. Wenham kindly sent full details and, aided by Professor E. Birley, a reading. Mr. H. G. Ramm, on request, kindly provided a squeeze. No other Roman find is known from this vicinity. While few bones could be recovered from the coffin, there were parts of four thigh bones which seemed to be too large to be female. If this estimate proves to be correct it shows that, as an interment for two men, this was secondary, and this is supported by the concealment in the ground of the primary text.

11 The mason has failed to differentiate the letters M and A. For the cognomen Wenham reads ; from the squeeze it seems to be MAMMIOLAE, a diminutive formed from the well-attested nomen Mammius.

12 CW2 LV (1955), 46.Google Scholar

13 CW2 XXX (1930), 106Google Scholar. After checking the original stone in the British Museum, in l. 7 the present writer accepts SVRINO; the tail of the letter R is present, though damaged. Collingwood's block for the Roman Inscriptions of Britain shows this damaged tail, but when he made a similar block for CW his addition of much shading eliminated it.

14 Professor E. Birley pointed out that Cox Magna Britannia, Cumberland (1720), 384, recorded this altar; see CW2 LVI (1956)Google Scholar, forthcoming.

15 For the site see Gillam, CW2 LIV (1954), 266.Google Scholar

16 Mr. N. Shaw kindly drew attention to it.

17 Professor E. Birley and Miss M. G. Simpson kindly sent notification.

18 In Chesters Museum; 1903 Cat. no. 146, 1926 Cat. no. 139.

19 Mr. C. Anderson kindly gave details.

20 CIL VII, 810. Horsley, Brit. Rom. 252, Cumb. II. Bruce, Lap. Sept. 349.

21 Professor E. Birley kindly suggested c(ohortis) I pr(aetoriae). C as the abbreviation of c(ohors) occurs on CIL VII, 302. For evocatus cohortis in the third century see CIL X, 538 (Salernum), CIL V, 543 (Tergeste), Mommsen EE V, p. 147. The title Maximiniana was applied to the barracks of the equites singulares (CIL XVI, no. 146) in A.D. 237, and to legio III Augusta (ILS 4194) and to a cohors Maurorum (ILS 2552); this is its sole occurrence in Britain. It dates the stone to A.D. 235–8.

22 The map reference is NT/027827. The stone is now in the National Museum of Antiquities, Edinburgh. Mr. R. B. K. Stevenson kindly sent details, and Dr. K. A. Steer sent a photograph and answered inquiries.

23 Richmond, and Crawford, Arch. XCIII (1949), 19Google Scholar; O.S. map of Roman Britain, ed. 3 (1956), p. 41.

24 Mr. H. Price, one of the earlier finders of the stone, saved it from destruction. When informed of it by Mr. A. Rees, Mr. T. Pennant Williams borrowed it for temporary study and kindly supplied full details, photographs, and a squeeze. Mr. G. Webster kindly sent notification and recognized it as a milestone of Severus Alexander.

25 CIL VII, 1164. NVM may now be conjectured from the reading N.VMNC of ‘Mr. Davies of Bangor’ (as R. Fenton recorded in his ‘Tours in Wales (1804–13)’, published as Cambrian Arch. Assoc. suppl. vol. (1917), p. 215).

26 Mr. D. A. Thompson found the first pig in ploughing and with Mr. H. W. W. Ashworth and Professor L. S. Palmer excavated the other three. The pigs are now on loan in Wells Museum. The site (grid ref. ST 576514) lies about 1,200 yards north of the cross-roads at Green Ore formed by the Bristol-Wells road and the Roman road which runs south-eastward from Charterhouse-on-Mendip; it is about 700 yards north-east of this Roman road. Despite the absence of habitation-material, many sherds have been found in this field; part of a bowl found in the pit has been dated to the period A.D. 60–80, and other sherds assigned to the third century. Grateful acknowledgments are due to Professor L. S. Palmer for the loan of his report, to Professor I. A. Richmond for taking measurements and making squeezes, and to Mr. H. E. Balch and Mr. G. Webster.

27 EE III, 121a, with JRS XXI (1931), 256 (Charter-house-on-Mendip)Google Scholar; PSA2 XXXI (1918), 37 (Bitterne)Google Scholar; ibid. (Bitterne).

28 Dessau ILS gives ten examples of this name in one or other of its spellings; the feminine name Trifosa at Bath (CIL VII, 53), presumably a variant of the Greek Tryphosa, supports Trifo as a variant of Trypho.

29 Triferna (CIL XV, 2467), Trifaustus (CIL XIII, 2830), Trifolius (P-W, s.v. ‘Trifolius’), Trypherus (CIL VI, 8588, ILS 1463; also two instances on Greek inscriptions).

30 On the pig of A.D. 60 from Stockbridge (CIL VII 1203, with Webster Flints. Hist. Soc. Publ. XIII (1952–3), 5). He reappears as the main text moulded on a pig found at Carmel, Flints. (JRS XLI (1952), 142Google Scholar, Webster l.c.).

31 CIL VII, 1215a, 1215b (four examples).

32 Prof. L. S. Palmer and H. W. W. Ashworth with an epigraphic note by the present writer, Som. Arch. Soc. forthcoming.

33 CIL VII, 1203, EE VII, 1120. When reweighed in 1952, it weighed 166 lb. or 230 librae. The value of the libra is here taken to be 11·55 oz. (avoirdupois).

34 PSA2 XXXI (1918), 37Google Scholar. The weight of the heavier pig recorded in 1918 as 178 lb. proved to be 174 lb. (or 241 librae) when weighed by the present writer in 1951. The incuse numbers are IIVI, presumably a mistake for VIII. The lighter pig, now lost, was stamped VIII and is recorded as having weighed 166 lb. (or 230 librae).

35 Miss D. Charlesworth found it in 1956 in sorting the material stored by H.M. Ministry of Works in Wall Museum, and kindly sent it for study.

36 Found by Master P. Marsden; on temporary loan to Guildhall Museum.

37 Mr. S. S. Frere kindly submitted it. For the site see Frere, Ant. Jour. XXXVII (1957), 14, pl. IV b.Google Scholar

38 Now in the British Museum. Found by the Axbridge Caving Group and Archaeological Society. Dr. D. B. Harden kindly lent his detailed report and photographs; see Harden Axbridge Caving Group Journal, forthcoming; see also JRS XLV, 140.

39 cf. Kisa Das Glas im Altertume III, 958, no. 205, CIL XIII, 10025, 211, or for the Greek in full, PIE ZESES, ibid. 959, no. 217, CIL XIII, 10025, 223.

40 For a close parallel with a hare-hunt he cites Landesmuseum, Bonn, no. 314; Lehner Führer durch die antike Abteilung, Bonn (ed. 2, 1924), 78, pl. XVII, 1; Bonner Jahrbücher LXIX, 50, pl. III.

41 Now in Salisbury Museum; Mr. H. de S. Shortt kindly submitted it. JRS XLV (1955), 142Google Scholar. Shortt Salisbury and South Wilts Museum Report (1954–5), II, pl. 1a. Professor I. A. Richmond kindly drew attention to the text on the base. Mr. Shortt kindly cited as an analogy an iron ‘knife with bronze handle 6 in. long … of which the blade terminates in a broad concave end’, which was found in 1861 in a stone coffin with other bathing implements at Urdingen, near Düsseldorf, and recorded in Arch. XLIII (1871), 255Google Scholar, pl. XXV, 3, which on p. 256 says that these antiquities were presented to the British Museum.

42 Mr. S. S. Frere kindly submitted it. Frere, Ant. Jour. XXXVII (1957), 14.Google Scholar

43 Now in the Castle Museum, Norwich; Mr. R. R. Clarke kindly sent full details and a squeeze.

44 CIL VII, 1223r; now in the Yorkshire Museum, York.

45 Now in the Grosvenor Museum; Mr. F. H. Thompson kindly sent details and squeezes.

46 Mr. I. D. Margary kindly gave notification, and Mrs. Eric Clarke kindly sent squeezes and rubbings.

47 The finds are in the Tolson Memorial Museum, Huddersfield; Mr. E. W. Aubrook kindly sent casts. For the types see I. A. Richmond, Huddersfield in Roman times (1925), 57–9, fig. 34.

48 Now in Gloucester Museum; Mr. J. N. Taylor and Miss M. Craster kindly sent it with details.

49 Mrs. Clifford, , JRS XLV (1955), 69.Google Scholar

50 Found by Master P. Marsden; on temporary loan to Guildhall Museum.

51 Mr. F. Jenkins kindly sent details and a rubbing; now in Dover Museum. For site 9 see Arch. Cant. LXIV (1951), 130, fig. 1.Google Scholar

52 Mr. S. S. Frere kindly submitted it.

53 Mr. R. L. Bellhouse kindly submitted it.

54 Now in Leicester City Museum; Mr. D.T-D. Clarke kindly submitted it. Clarke, , Leics. AST XXXII (1956), 90Google Scholar, fig. 4, reads FVIIR. Yet though the first letter seems to be F, it will not make praenomen; it seems preferable to read T, with the horizontal stroke duplicated.

55 Mr. D. F. Petch kindly sent the sherd. Now in the possession of Mr. H. O. Houldsworth, of 7 Sharphill Road, Edwalton, Nottingham. He found the platter on the south side of Lindfield Road at a point 70 yards north-west of its junction with Firsby Road.

56 Mr. G. Webster kindly submitted it from the Archaeological Research Group of Birmingham University.

57 Mr. G. Webster kindly sent details end submitted it.

58 Mr. S. S. Frere kindly submitted it.

59 Now in the possession of Mr. G. Ridsdill-Smith, of South Field, Hailey Lane, Hertford. Mr. J. Holmes kindly sent it for study.

60 Lieut.-Col. G. W. Meates kindly submitted it.

61 EE VII, 863; 49th Report of National Museum of Wales (1955–6), 46.

62 CIL VII, 150; EE VII, 859.

63 Presented by the late Mr. C. A. J. O. Silvertop; CIL VII, 638, EE IX, p. 588; EE VII, note to 981, IX, 1178; EE VII, note to 981, IX, 1180. For the Matres Bruce Lap. Sept. 230.

64 JRS XXVIII (1938), 199, nos. 3, 4, 5.Google Scholar

65 JRS XXXI (1941), 143, nos. 10, 13.Google Scholar