Cohors+I+Tungrorum&rft.title=Britannia&rft.issn=0068-113X&rft.date=2017&rft.volume=48&rft.spage=1&rft.epage=17&rft.aulast=Birley&rft.aufirst=Anthony&rft.au=Anthony+R.+Birley&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017/S0068113X16000532">Roman Roadworks near Vindolanda and the Cohors I Tungrorum
Authors:Anthony R. Birley Pages: 1 - 17 Abstract: On the Stanegate near Vindolanda two milestones are still in situ. The complete eastern one lacks an inscription. Only the base of the western one survives, cut down and split c. 1815; but eighteenth-century antiquaries read an inscription on it, now recognised as secondary, and a little of a primary text, probably naming Hadrian and perhaps a Tungrian unit. Writing-tablets and inscriptions show cohors I Tungrorum at Vindolanda in the late first and early second century, so it may have set up the milestone. Evidence from elsewhere names army units as road-builders on milestones. The distance between the Stanegate milestones is greater than the ‘standard’ length, hence perhaps the so-called pes Drusianus was used. The final section discusses the secondary inscription. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X16000532 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Antonietta Lerz; Martin Henig, Kevin Hayward Pages: 19 - 35 Abstract: The limestone sculpture of an eagle firmly clasping a serpent in its beak was recovered from within the eastern Roman cemetery of London on the last day of excavations at 24–26 Minories, EC3 in September 2013. The sculpture, which is dated stylistically to the late first or early second century a.d., had been carefully buried within the backfill of a roadside ditch no later than the mid-second century. The Minories eagle is one of the finest and earliest examples of freestone sculpture from the London cemeteries and presumably adorned the tomb of a rich and important individual or family located nearby. Petrological analysis of the sculpture has revealed it is carved from oolitic limestone quarried from the south Cotswolds. The article presents the context of the findspot and a detailed description of the eagle sculpture with an in-depth discussion of the iconography of the image and the results of the petrological examination. The Supplementary Material available online (http://journals.cambridge.org/bri) presents an account of the site stratigraphy, integrated with the specialist finds and the environmental reports. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000010 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Dominic Perring Pages: 37 - 76 Abstract: Recent work has advanced our understanding of human crania found in London's upper Walbrook valley, where skull deposition appears to have peaked during the occupation of the Cripplegate fort, itself probably built soon after London's Hadrianic fire. Although this fire is usually considered to have been accidental, parallels can be drawn with London's Boudican destruction. This article explores the possibility that these three strands of Hadrianic evidence — fire, fort and skulls — find common explanation in events associated with a British war of this period. This might support the identification of some Walbrook skulls as trophy heads, disposed as noxii in wet places in the urban pomerium. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000113 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Peter Warry Pages: 77 - 115 Abstract: This paper explores the development of tile-stamping in the period a.d. 100–50 by the Gloucester and Cirencester civic authorities, and by private tile-makers in Gloucestershire, and the territorial divisions between them. It argues that builders’ merchants were used in tile distribution and building reclamation and, inter alia, identifies Hucclecote villa as such a site. It proposes that Gloucester tiles stamped just RPG were issued annually and were used for commercial purposes while tiles with magistrates’ names were issued as required, but only for use on public buildings. The evidence suggests that these stamps were subsequently extensively curated. This paper adds nearly 200 new stamps to the existing catalogues and proposes significant revisions to the magistrate dies as a result. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X1700023X Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Simon Hughes; Naomi Payne, Paul Rainbird Pages: 117 - 133 Abstract: A saltern associated with salt production was excavated at Pyde Drove, near Woolavington. The large assemblage of briquetage recovered has allowed for some novel interpretations of the function of the different component types within the hearth structures. The saltern comprised a mound of waste material adjacent to 12 brine-settling tank pits and two salt water channels. A further settling tank was revealed beneath the mound. The pottery indicates that activity on the site dates to the later Romano-British period. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000228 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Lisa A. Lodwick Pages: 135 - 173 Abstract: In tandem with the large-scale translocation of food plants in the Roman world, ornamental evergreen plants and plant items were also introduced to new areas for ritual and ornamental purposes. The extent to which these new plants, primarily box and stone-pine, were grown in Britain has yet to be established. This paper presents a synthesis of archaeobotanical records of box, stone-pine and norway spruce in Roman Britain, highlighting chronological and spatial patterns. Archaeobotanical evidence is used alongside material culture to evaluate the movement of these plants and plant items into Roman Britain, their meaning and materiality in the context of human-plant relations in ornamental gardens and ritual activities. Archaeobotanical evidence for ornamental evergreen plants elsewhere in the Roman world is presented. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000101 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Claire M. Hodson Pages: 195 - 219 Abstract: The discovery of perinatal and infant individuals is common in the excavation of Iron Age and Romano-British domestic sites. In recent years, the discovery of many such burials has led to interpretations of infanticide and unceremonious disposal. Although this has been a widely discussed phenomenon, much of the literature has focused on the funerary context, and the biological age and sex estimates of these individuals, with little consideration of the palaeopathological evidence. This article provides a detailed analysis of 17 perinates/infants from the late Iron Age/early Roman site of Piddington, Northants. It discusses the skeletal evidence for poor health and growth, and highlights the potential of these remains to reveal alternative insights into perinatal and infant death. Evidence of growth changes and pathological lesions were identified, suggesting that these individuals experienced chronic episodes of poor health that affected their skeletal development. The study explores the implications of these findings within the context of Iron Age and Roman Britain. At Piddington, the death of these infants is not associated with the cultural practice of infanticide, but occurred due to poor health, highlighting the precarious nature of infant survival in the past. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000137 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Anna Rohnbogner Pages: 221 - 252 Abstract: Childhood palaeopathology remains an underutilised resource in the study of Roman Britain, particularly for exploring the lives of the rural population. Lesions in child skeletons provide unique insights into past lifeways and population health, as adverse environmental conditions translate more readily into the osteological record of these vulnerable members of society. To demonstrate the range of information gleaned from the children, 1,279 non-adults (0–17 years) from 26 first- to fifth-century urban and rural settlements were analysed, comparing morbidity and mortality in the most comprehensive study to date. The distribution of ages-at-death suggests migration between country and town, the latter presenting a stressful and unsanitary environment. However, as demonstrated by high rates of metabolic disease and infections, life in the countryside was hampered by demanding physical labour and potentially oppressive conditions with restricted access to resources. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000149 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Rebecca C. Redfern; Michael Marshall, Katherine Eaton, Hendrik N. Poinar Pages: 253 - 277 Abstract: The Museum of London selected four individuals for multidisciplinary scientific analyses in order to establish their ancestry, aspects of their personal appearance and health. We also reinterpreted their burial context in order to better understand how identity was constructed and expressed in this unique Roman settlement. Our study discovered the presence of people with Black and White European ancestry, some of whom had migrated from the southern Mediterranean. The most surprising result was that Harper Road woman's chromosomes were male. Overall, our experience of undertaking a multidisciplinary study served to further underline the need for these different techniques to be used in combination when investigating past identities. The mtDNA results were very broad and required the mobility isotopes to better understand their significance, while the aDNA evidence confirmed the osteological analysis. In terms of public engagement at the Museum of London, the ability to determine hair and eye colour had a significant impact. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000216 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:John Creighton; Martyn Allen Pages: 279 - 287 Abstract: North Leigh Roman villa ranks as one of the largest known courtyard villas of Roman Britain. 1 Situated just above the floodplain of the river Evenlode, which loops around the site, the villa lies c. 2 miles north of North Leigh village and 10 miles west of Oxford (SP 397 154). The building developed within the Late Iron Age earthwork complex of the North Oxfordshire Grim's Ditch, a discontinuous bank and ditch which partly encloses a 22-square mile area of this landscape. 2 The villa is under English Heritage guardianship (Scheduled Ancient Monument no. 334573) and a programme of geophysical survey was conducted at their request to assist in management of the site. 3 PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000022 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Dan Dana Pages: 287 - 298 Abstract: A military diploma of 2 July a.d. 133 (RMD I, 35), first discovered in 1960 but published several times since, has provoked a debate concerning the origin of the discharged soldier, with commentators proposing either Corinium in Britain or the Cornacates in Lower Pannonia. The new reading presented here suggests that the soldier was actually Cornovian, allowing a reassessment of the recruitment of Brittones in the Roman auxilia. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000034 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Steve Malone Pages: 298 - 304 Abstract: Processing and analysis of LiDAR data in Nottinghamshire has identified the survival of earthwork field-systems beneath woodland in some of the oldest established parts of Sherwood Forest. The morphology and alignment of these field-systems strongly suggest that they represent a survival of the late Iron Age and Roman brickwork-plan field-systems of North Nottinghamshire and South Yorkshire with considerable potential to elucidate the history of abandonment of these fields and the establishment of Sherwood Forest. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000046 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Pete Wilson Pages: 305 - 308 Abstract: A recently proposed alternative name for Roman-period Malton/Norton is challenged and a location for the previously unidentified site of Praetorio is offered. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000058 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Sara L. Wilson Pages: 308 - 311 Abstract: A relief-patterned flue-tile recovered during the excavations of the forum-basilica at the Roman town of Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester) features a previously unpublished roller-stamped design. The tile is described in terms of its fabric and design and compared to the other roller-stamped examples from Silchester. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X1700006X Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Authors:Stuart Wrathmell Pages: 311 - 318 Abstract: The recently published ‘Fields of Britannia’ project has lent a measure of support to the idea that the patterning of woodland and open land evident in the Anglo-Saxon period may in part have persisted since Roman times, if not before. This article explores the potential value of these woodland and open land contrasts in explaining the locations and distribution of a variety of Roman cultural material: coins, military installations and early road alignments. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000071 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)
Londinium&rft.title=Britannia&rft.issn=0068-113X&rft.date=2017&rft.volume=48&rft.spage=491&rft.epage=494&rft.aulast=Wallace&rft.aufirst=Lacey&rft.au=Lacey+Wallace&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017/S0068113X17000241">Social Groups and Synthesis in Londinium
Authors:Lacey Wallace Pages: 491 - 494 Abstract: London is probably the best excavated and most systematically studied provincial capital in the Roman Empire and publications like these exemplify the high-quality outputs of MOLA and PCA. The first three site reports are the results of meticulous excavation driven by development but, nonetheless, analysed and interpreted within broad research aims. The fourth volume is the much-anticipated publication of wooden writing-tablets from the Bloomberg site. PubDate: 2017-11-01T00:00:00.000Z DOI: 10.1017/S0068113X17000241 Issue No:Vol. 48 (2017)