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Roman Roadworks near Vindolanda and the Cohors I Tungrorum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 January 2017

Anthony R. Birley*
Affiliation:
Vindolanda Trust, Bardon Millarbirley@aol.com
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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.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2017. Published by The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 

INTRODUCTION

The Roman road known as the Stanegate,Footnote 1 which runs from east to west just north of Vindolanda, has the distinction of having on this stretch two surviving milestones approximately one Roman mile apart, though, as will be seen, the distance is rather more than the ‘standard’ length of 1,000 paces, 5,000 Roman feet, equivalent to about 1,481 m or 1,617 yards. The eastern milestone, close to Vindolanda, is still complete, but uninscribed. There was once a partly legible inscription on the western one, at Seatsides, which was reported by antiquaries in the eighteenth century, but it was cut down and split in the early nineteenth century and no lettering was visible on the pieces when they were last seen. R.P. Wright's introduction to his entry for this stone, recorded in RIB I, 2308, may be cited in full. (Metric equivalents of imperial measurements here and in other quotations are added in square brackets.)

Cylindrical milestone seen in, or before, 1725 standing on the north side of the Stanegate 1 Roman mile west of the Roman milestone which stands 120 yds. [109.7 m] east of Chesterholm fort (Vindolanda). About 1815 it was split vertically into two pieces to serve as gate-posts; but the roughly rectangular base of buff sandstone, 19 × 11 × 19 in. [48 × 28 × 48 cm], with the lower end of the shaft 19 in. [48 cm] in diameter, and 24 in. [61 cm] in overall height, is still in position on the north side of the Stanegate. Two parts of the main shaft survive at the gateway on the road 160 yds. [146.3 m] to the west. Both have been roughly dressed and carry no trace of extant lettering. One comprises half the column, 19 in. [48 cm] in diameter, and stands 50 in. [1.27 m] above ground as the north gate-post. The other part, 66 in. [1.67 m] long but only 12 in. [30.5 cm] in diameter, now (1944) lies disused near the gate. Reproduced from Horsley. Base measured by R.P.W., 1944.Footnote 2

John Horsley, in Volume II of his Britannia Romana (published in April 1732, a few weeks after his death),Footnote 3 had illustrated the western of the two milestones as his inscription no. LIX (fig. 1), the drawing reproduced in RIB, commenting as follows:

LIX. Near Little chesters [one of several names formerly given to Vindolanda] there are some of the milliary stones, which are said to have been erected at the end of each mile upon the military ways … One of these is thrown down, and lies under an hedge near the rivulet, a little east of this station.Footnote 4 … But the most curious one is standing at about a mile's distance from this place to the west. The military way that passes directly from Walwick Chesters to Carrvoran is here very visible, and close by the side of it stands a piece of a large rude pillar, with a remarkable inscription upon it in large letters, but very coarse, BONO REIPVBLICAE NATO. No doubt this was a compliment to the emperor then reigning, nor is it an uncommon one. I don't find that this has ever been taken notice of before.Footnote 5

FIG. 1. Drawing from John Horsley, Britannia Romana or the Roman Antiquities of Britain (London, 1732), Vol. II, Northumberland LIX.

In his Preface Horsley took the opportunity to include ‘some additional remarks, which have occurred on the last revisal of the printed sheets sent down to me from London’. On this milestone he was able to add a whole paragraph with new information and conjecture:

I proceed therefore to the inscription LIX on the milliary pillar near this place, BONO REIPVBLICAE NATO. This is an usual compliment paid to the emperors, but what particular emperor it is designed for in this inscription, may need a farther enquiry. The faint letters DRI, which on the last review were discovered above the word BONO, render it very probable that either Hadrian or Antoninus Pius has been intended. The implication of the letters DR is the same as in the Benwell inscription [a note refers to his drawing Northumberland no. VII, now RIB I, 1330] to the emperor Antoninus Pius, and Hadrianus is generally inserted among the names of this emperor. But as there is no room between the letters DRI and the word BONO for the other usual names of Antoninus Pius, I think Hadrian must have been the emperor to whom this pillar has been inscribed, and to him the compliment upon it is very suitable. And if this be admitted, we shall hence be furnished with a strong argument to prove, that this military way from Walwick-chesters by Little-chesters to Carrvoran was laid in the time of Hadrian, and most probably at the same time when the vallum was raised, which favours the scheme I have advanced concerning this vallum [a note refers to his Vol. I, p. 127].Footnote 6

Clearly Horsley or more likely a correspondent had had a further look at the stone between autumn 1729 and autumn 1731, which delivered the extra reading DRI. It need hardly be stated that his notion that the compliment to the reigning emperor, bono reipublicae nato, was appropriately applied to Hadrian cannot be right. The formula seems not to be attested before the late third century at the earliest and on our milestone it was undoubtedly secondary.

It is worth noting here that Horsley's account of this milestone, as also much else in his great book, was shamelessly plagiarised 20 years later by the unscrupulous John Warburton, by then Somerset Herald and a Fellow of the Royal Society (but expelled in 1757), in his best-selling Vallum Romanum, dedicated to the Duke of Cumberland, a conveniently sized quarto volume, favoured by travellers. He did not, however, cite Horsley's important postscript in his Preface.

At the end of his own Preface, Warburton wrote:

I am next to apologize for the great liberty I have taken with the works of my late learned friend, and co-adjutor, Mr. John Horsley, of Morpeth, in Northumberland. This gentleman, during my survey of that county, frequently accompanied me in my journeys, and perambulations, and to him I submitted the reading of all the Roman inscriptions I discovered on my survey, before they were engraved in my map, so that the faults he accuses me of (if any such there are) were not of my making, but his own. However, this affair has laid me under a necessity of copying his remarks and observations, and I do not fear the reader's being displeased with me on that account.Footnote 7

In Macdonald's words, ‘John Warburton bears an evil name as the Vandal who openly boasts of having prompted the scheme under which Hadrian's Wall was destroyed for many miles, in order to facilitate the building of the Newcastle–Carlisle road …’ Further, he ‘was a consummate and unblushing liar’. His claim to have been frequently accompanied by Horsley on his journeys is one of his many inventions: ‘my journeys and perambulations’ refer to 1715, when the Old Pretender was strongly supported in the county and, as an Excise supervisor based at Hexham, travelling at public expense, Warburton ‘distinguished himself by giving notice from time to time of the several steps made by the Rebells whilst they were in Northumberland’.Footnote 8

Meanwhile, William Stukeley, who toured the Wall in 1725 with his friend Roger Gale, riding from west to east, had noted in an account that was only published posthumously, over 50 years later:

Before we come to Little Chester [another of the names by which Vindolanda was then called] is a most noble column, or milestone, set upon the road: it is of a large bulk and height, with an inscription, but only not quite defaced. Mr. Gale thought he could read TVNG. upon it: it is the finest stone of this sort I have seen, and would have informed us who made the road … In a corner of a field below, by the side of a brook, and as the military [road] turns up the hill, is another such milliary stone, but no inscription legible.Footnote 9

In RIB I, 2308 R.P. Wright took DRI as part of the primary inscription, the rest as secondary:

Primary text: …]DRI

Secondary text: bon[o] | rei|public[ae]| nato.

He added in a note: ‘Presumably for l. 3: TVNG Gale; quoted by Stuk.’ In other words, he assumed that Gale had misread PVBLIC –– where Horsley's drawing shows the second and third letters, VB, in this line ligatured –– as TVNG. This must mean that Gale read P as T, the ligatured VB as V, LI as N and (which is easier to accept) C as G. Of course, Gale was far from infallible: his rendering of a key part of the famous Chichester inscription of King [Co]gidubnus was not finally demonstrated to be mistaken until over 250 years later.Footnote 10 Still, it is fair to suppose that the state of the milestone (for example, lichen growth) and the light conditions during the probably brief inspection by the two antiquaries could have made the secondary inscription more or less invisible and have revealed an underlying TVNG (probably in smaller and better carved lettering than the ‘very coarse’ secondary text). However this may be, Stukeley's inference is not registered by Wright. It surely deserves discussion, since it has not previously been notedFootnote 11 that Gale's TVNG perhaps indeed ‘informs us who made the road’. Only since Robin Birley's discovery of the writing-tablets has the presence of the cohors I Tungrorum at nearby Vindolanda become known.Footnote 12

COHORS I TUNGRORUM AT VINDOLANDA

There is now ample evidence, not only from the writing-tablets but also from stone and other inscriptions, for this cohort having been stationed at Vindolanda in the later first and early second centuries. For the sake of completeness, it may first be noted that the first mention of the Tungrians in Britain is Tacitus’ account of the role in the Battle of Mons Graupius of four Batavian and two Tungrian cohorts.Footnote 13 It is not known where these units were stationed at the time of the battle, or indeed how long they had been in Britain, but it may be assumed that they were brought to the island by the governor Q. Petillius Cerialis in the year a.d. 71, when he arrived after suppressing the Batavian revolt.Footnote 14

To turn to the evidence for cohors I Tungrorum at Vindolanda, it derives from several of the early periods, which may be summarised as follows:

Period 1: c. a.d. 85–92. Only the defensive ditches (four on the west side and one on the south) have been examined; they are dated principally by a deposit of La Graufesenque terra sigillata in the innermost western ditch. The two strength reportsFootnote 15 and an unpublished stylus-tablet, show that the garrison was the coh. I Tungrorum.

Period 2: c. a.d. 92–c. a.d. 100/103. A much larger fort, of which the central buildings, with via principalis running north–south, were built above the innermost Period 1 ditch and rampart. The garrison was evidently at first coh. I Tungrorum, by now milliaria; then certainly coh. VIIII Batavorum equitata, also probably milliaria; but unlike I Tungrorum, it was equitata. The south gate and part of the praetorium have been excavated. West of the via principalis, overlying the outer Period 1 ditches, was part of a Period 2 and 3 building, probably a barrack-block, overlaid by a Period 4 structure, perhaps a schola.

Period 3: c. a.d. 97/100–c. a.d. 105. The garrison was coh. VIIII Batavorum equitata. Numerous tablets derive from this period, mostly from the praetorium and adjacent roads. Dating evidence includes tablets with consular dates for a.d. 98, Inv. 87.725 (an unpublished stylus tablet), and a.d. 103 and 104, perhaps also a.d. 102, all from Tab. Vindol. II, 581. The main excavated structures, part of the praetorium and south gate, may be described as largely a rebuilding, on a more substantial scale, of the underlying Period 2 ones.

Period 4: c. a.d. 105–c. a.d. 120 or somewhat later. The garrison was coh. I Tungrorum milliaria, plus a cavalry detachment, equites Vardulli, from the coh. I fida Vardullorum equitata,Footnote 16 and some legionaries.Footnote 17 Buildings excavated include a barrack-block overlying levelled remains of the Periods 2–3 praetoria; part of another barrack-block further west; a possible schola adjacent to the Period 4 praetorium; a possible hospital; and a ‘palatial building’ originally assigned to Period 5. Dating evidence includes a tablet dated by the consuls of a.d. 111,Footnote 18 coins of Trajan and one coin of Hadrian. It is difficult to fix the exact date at which Period 4 ended.

Period 5: c. a.d. 120 or somewhat later to c. a.d. 128, in which a fabrica replaced the Period 4 barrack-block overlying the earlier praetorium.Footnote 19

Of the writing-tablets the earliest and most important are the two strength reports: the better preserved one was found in the innermost Period 1 western ditch. It is dated xv K(alendas) Ịuṇịas, 18 May, but does not name the year. It registers the n(umerus) p(urus) [co]ḥ(ortis) ị Tụng̣̣̣rọṛụṃ cui prae(e)st Iulius Verec̣ụndus praef(ectus), ‘the net number of the First Cohort of Tungrians, of which the commander is Julius Verecundus, prefect’. The total number of men was 752, including six centurions; but 456 men were absent, including five out of the six centurions. The majority of the absentees, 337, were at Coria, identifiable as the Roman fort at Corbridge. Of the 296 still present, 15 are listed as sick, six as wounded and ten as lippientes, suffering from conjunctivitis.Footnote 20 An unpublished stylus-tablet found in the same innermost western ditch carried an address ending […] c(o)ho(rtis) Tung(rorum).Footnote 21 The much more fragmentary second strength report was found in the outermost of the four Period 1 western ditches. It is clearly a similar document, refers to the same cohort and the same prefect, and indeed may even have been written by the same scribe as the first one.Footnote 22 It must be stressed that the more complete strength report came from a Period 1 context, not Period 2 as urged by the editors, who have regularly been followed by others.Footnote 23 The editors were understandably influenced by the presence in the Period 2 fort of other documents naming the prefect Julius Verecundus. It is, however, preferable to explain this situation otherwise. One may infer that the 337 men at Coria were recruits being trained and that the cohort was at this time being enlarged from a standard total of some 480 men to 800, i.e. was about to become a cohors milliaria.Footnote 24 Fragments of letters to the prefect Julius Verecundus have been found in both Period 1 and Period 2 contexts.Footnote 25 The Period 1 fort was only large enough to house a cohors quingenaria. It may be inferred that the Period 2 fort was about double the size of its predecessor, since its central range of buildings was built above the line of the innermost western ditch. As two of the letters to Julius Verecundus were found in the Period 2 praetorium, Robin Birley inferred that it was built by the First Tungrians, now definitely milliaria, and that this cohort carried on for a time as the garrison at Vindolanda, occupying, from c. a.d. 92, the much larger Period 2 fort.Footnote 26

It may be noted here that in spite of the change of size of his regiment, Julius Verecundus continued to have the title praefectus, not tribunus, the standard one for commanders of cohortes milliariae. In fact, all the known commanders of both coh. I and coh. II Tungrorum, when milliary, still had the title praefectus. The reason could be that members of the Tungrian aristocracy had previously been given this title in the homeland, as praefecti civitatis, administering their people for Rome. If the commanders of the Tungrian regiments were also Tungrian nobles, as seems probable, they may have insisted on retaining the title ‘prefect’. A similar situation may be detected in the case of the Batavians.Footnote 27

It is clear that coh. I Tungrorum was replaced during Period 2, probably c. a.d. 97,Footnote 28 by coh. VIIII Batavorum, which before long rebuilt at least parts of the fort in what is labelled Period 3, lasting from c. a.d. 97/100 to a.d. 105. The Batavians remained for the rest of Period 2 and for the whole of Period 3, at the end of which the cohort was withdrawn to serve on the Continent. Thereupon the coh. I Tungrorum returned, and radically reconstructed the fort: this was Vindolanda's Period 4, from a.d. 105 until at least early in Hadrian's reign. A letter found in a Period 4 context was written to Priscinus, clearly the prefect of coh. I Tungrorum. The first sheet reads: Oppius Niger Priscino [suo] ṣ[alutem] Crispum et P̣ẹ[… mili]ṭeṣ coh(ortis)·i·Tungrorum quos cum epistulis ad consularem n(ostrum) miseras, a Bremetennaco …, ‘Oppius Niger to his Priscinus greeting. Crispus and Pe…, soldiers of cohors I Tungrorum, whom you had sent with letters to our governor, [I have sent on?] from Bremetennacum …’. Only the closing greeting of the second sheet survives, ṿale dọmịṇẹ frater.Footnote 29 Three further tablets are very fragmentary letters, also to Priscinus, and also from Period 4 levels: of Tab. Vindol. II, 296+add. only the opening survives, [F]ḷạvius F̣ontanus Priscino [suo] ṣạḷ[utem]; 297 is from [Fi]ṛminus to Priscinus; it has a few legible phrases, including, at the beginning of the letter, […] niḥil · malo · animo · feci, ‘I have done nothing with ill intent’, and in the next line comes the words in contractụ, ‘in a (or the) contract’. Firminus calls Priscinus frater, ‘brother’, so was presumably a fellow-officer. Of 298 virtually no text survives except Priscino, ‘to Priscinus’, at the beginning; but the address shows it was written to him [a Ca]ecilio Septembre, ‘by Caecilius September’. The latter, an officer, was also a correspondent of Flavius Cerialis, prefect of coh. VIIII Batavorum in Period 3.Footnote 30 Further tablets naming Priscinus are all very fragmentary and from a Period 3 context,Footnote 31 as is a more interesting one, which one may infer was written to his wife: … qua · me […]cunde · consolarịs sicut mater facẹret. hunc enim · adfectum animus meus … et comṃ[ode] conṿaḷẹscebam · tu [..] quid agas cum Priscinó tuo …, ‘with which you … console me, just as a mother would do. For my mind … this sympathy (?) … and I was convalescing comfortably. As for you, what are you doing with your Priscinus?’ A tablet which comes from the beginning of a letter, probably from a Period 4 level, may be quoted: quod ̣P̣rịsciṇum n(ostrum) ịṇcommodiụs mansisse scrịpsisti mihi t…[…]rum…[ ], ‘because you write to me that our Priscinus has inconveniently remained …’.Footnote 32 Numerous other writing-tablets from the periods when the Tungrians were at Vindolanda might be mentioned, as giving an indication of the names of the members of the cohort, but they are not relevant in the present context.Footnote 33

It is not absolutely certain how long the Tungrians remained at Vindolanda, but it now seems highly probable that they were still there at the start of Hadrian's reign, in the light of other evidence. First, there is a partly preserved funerary stone (reused in the fourth-century praetorium):

D(is) [M(anibus)] | T(itus)· Ann[…] | centur[io cohortis I] | Tungr[orum stipen]|diorum [… annorum …] | T · in bell[o inter] | fectus […] fil(ius) et Arc[…lib(ertus)?] | h(eredes) e[x test(amento) f(aciundum) c(uraverunt)].

To the divine shades (and) Titus Ann[…], centurion of the [First] Cohort of Tungrians, of … years of service, [aged … years], T. (= deceased?), killed in the war: […] his son and Arc… [his freedman?], his heirs, had this made in accordance with his testament.Footnote 34

The date has to be inferred. In view of the wording, with D.M. abbreviated, but Tungrorum and stipendiorum written out in full, the war in which this centurion died can be plausibly identified with that which broke out on Hadrian's accession in a.d. 117, causing serious Roman losses.Footnote 35 One may also register an iron spearhead inscribed Tung(rorum) in punched letters. It came from the packing above a Period 5 floor, between the mid-second-century fort ditches. Of course, this object could have been made long before it was lost.Footnote 36

A second stone inscription, found in 2012, is a fragmentary dedication to a previously unknown goddess.Footnote 37 It was published with the following reading: Ahvardvae | deae | [co]ḥ(ors) Ī Tungṛ[o|rum ∞ (milliaria) e]x [voto | posuit].Footnote 38 An alternative version was subsequently offered: Ahvardvae | deae | [co]h(ors) Ī Tungr[o|rum] ∞ (milliaria) [cui | praeest praenomen nomen | cognomen | praef(ectus].Footnote 39 These details are not material in the present context, the question being what date can be assigned to the stone. Because the rather rare placing of the word for deity after the deity's name best fits an early Hadrianic date,Footnote 40 it is plausible to assign it to the same period as the centurion's tombstone.

Further, there is a fragment of a military diploma. From parts of the consuls’ names it can be dated to the first three months of a.d. 146; it was issued to [A]mandius, a veteran of [… co]h. I Tun[gror(um) ∞ (milliariae) (?),] cui [prae(e)st …] Paterniu[s … ]. If discharged after the standard 25 years, [A]mandius must have been recruited in a.d. 121.Footnote 41 The fact that his diploma was found at Vindolanda suggests that he served there initially and settled there when his service ended. But it is quite possible that the cohort had in the meantime been based elsewhere. In due course, it was to be based at Housesteads. A probably Hadrianic inscription from Carrawburgh (Brocolitia) on Hadrian's Wall, a relatively late addition to the system, is a dedication-slab: [……Had]ṛị[ano Aug(usto)…] co(n)s(uli) [……co]h(ors) I Tun[grorum…] fec[it…].Footnote 42 This indicates that the Tungrians had been building (or helping to build) this fort. But Carrawburgh was too small to house a milliary cohort, unlike nearby Housesteads (Vercovicium), the fort at which the First Tungrians were eventually to be stationed for over 200 years.

The solution once seemed to be that the cohort had been reduced in size under Hadrian, for it is listed without the milliaria sign on the diplomas for the British army of a.d. 122.Footnote 43 It was long supposed that this was because the cohort had sent a detachment to the army of Noricum, as appeared to be recorded on a fragmentary diploma for that province's army, from the years between a.d. 133 and 138. The same was also supposedly the case on another incomplete Norican diploma.Footnote 44 But the reading of the Tungrian cohort's number on these two diplomas as I has been convincingly rejected.Footnote 45 Further, on a subsequently published diploma of the British army, of August a.d. 127, the cohort is once again listed as milliary.Footnote 46 Hence one must seek another explanation for the absence of the milliary symbol for coh. I Tungrorum on the diplomas of a.d. 122 and 124. It can hardly have been to save space for the engraver, since other milliary units on these documents are properly so labelled. Perhaps the cohort had been so depleted in the war in which the centurion T. Ann[ius …] lost his life that it was for a few years no longer milliary; but by a.d. 127 was back to strength.

As to when it first moved from Vindolanda to Housesteads, it may be that a fragmentary dedication-slab from the latter fort registered it there under Hadrian: im[p(eratori) Caes(ari) divi Traian(i) Parth(ici) fil(io)] | d[ivi Ner(vae) nep(oti) Traian(o) Hadriano Aug(usto)] coh[(ors) I Tungrorum (?)| mi[l(liaria)…].Footnote 47 As mentioned above, the Tungrian cohort could have helped in the construction of Carrawburgh from a new station at Housesteads, rather than from Vindolanda, alongside cohors I Aquitanorum, also attested as building at Carrawburgh under Hadrian, during the governorship of Sex. Julius Severus in the early a.d. 130s.Footnote 48

At all events, at latest soon after the death of Hadrian, cohors I Tungrorum must have moved north. It is recorded at Castlecary, on the Antonine Wall, by a dedication-slab: Imp(eratori) Caes(ari) T(ito) Ael(io) Ant(onino) | Aug(usto) Pio p(atri) p(atriae) | coh(ors) I Tungro|rum fecit ∞ (milliaria).Footnote 49 But before the occupation of the Antonine Wall ended, it had been replaced at Castlecary by cohors I fida Vardullorum equitata civium Romanorum milliaria.Footnote 50 One further, fragmentary diploma, dated by the name of the governor, [Sex. Calpurnio Ag]ricola names the cohort, but only […e]t I Tung(rorum) […] is preserved, so it is not certain whether it was labelled milliaria.Footnote 51 Thereafter one can point to a rich crop of inscriptions at Housesteads;Footnote 52 the cohort is still listed there in the Notitia Dignitatum: tribunus cohortis primae Tungrorum, Borcovicio [sic: to be emended to Vercovicio], by when all the commanders of the old auxiliary cohorts had the title of tribune.Footnote 53

ROAD-BUILDING ON THE STANEGATE IN THE EARLY SECOND CENTURY

To return to the question of road-building in the early second century. Two partly preserved writing-tablets from Period 3 contexts, when cohors VIIII Batavorum was the garrison, have been thought to suggest that roadworks were already in progress. It was surely the commander of the Batavians who was informed in a letter from an unknown writer that steps had been taken ‘that wagons may be given to you and … other … to Vocusius Africanus the prefect …’.Footnote 54 Another unknown writer, also presumed to be addressing the Vindolanda garrison commander, discusses wagon-loads of stone in a further fragmentary letter. The key passage is: quem modum carrulorum | missurus sis domine | deliberare tecum debes | ad lapidem portandum, ‘you should weigh up in your mind, my Lord, what quantity of wagons you are going to send to carry stone’.Footnote 55 Stone was already being quarried just to the north-east of the fort, up the Cockton burn, and perhaps on nearby Barcombe hill, where it was extensively worked at latest in Hadrian's reign.Footnote 56 It might be inferred that the Vindolanda garrison was being required to contribute to a major programme involving several units, most likely road-construction. It has indeed been suggested that the wagon-loads of stone mentioned in this writing-tablet must have been intended for road-building, hence that work was being carried out on the Stanegate adjacent to Vindolanda early in Trajan's reign.Footnote 57 But of course large quantities of stone were also required in the immediate outskirts of the fort, in particular for the large bath-house, discovered in 2000, although work on this may have begun in Period 2: among the large numbers of men whose duties are listed in a writing-tablet from Period 2 or 3 are 18 s[tr]uctores ad balneum, ‘builders to the bath-house’.Footnote 58 A document dated 7 March in an unknown year, but clearly within Period 3, records that 30 structores were ‘sent to make the guest-house’, ad hospitị[u]ṃ … faciendum, and 19 men were assigned to ‘burning stone’, [a]ḍ lapidem flạṃṃạndum, presumably quarried nearby, to produce lime for mortar.Footnote 59 One letter suggests that the Vindolanda garrison was supplying lime, presumably for building but hardly for roadworks, to another fort.Footnote 60

The Batavians may indeed have been carrying out roadworks early in Trajan's reign, and the Tungrians may simply have resurfaced the Stanegate about a decade and a half later, in expectation of Hadrian's visit.Footnote 61 Road repairs needed to be carried out regularly. The war in which the centurion of cohors I Tungrorum lost his life, was probably linked to the British uprising on Hadrian's accession (see above). The Roman response, culminating in the decision to build the Wall and Hadrian's arrival in a.d. 122 would have involved a good deal of extra heavy traffic on the Stanegate and connecting roads.Footnote 62 It could be argued that the milestone was set up simply to make a good impression on Hadrian. Such a practice — erecting a milestone in honour of the emperor without any roadworks having been carried out — was without doubt commonly the case in the third and fourth centuries.Footnote 63 It is less likely in the early second century.

The army no doubt regularly built and repaired roads, but its role was seldom explicitly stated on milestones.Footnote 64 ‘Native’ forced labour may have been used extensively, if one believes the rhetorical complaint in Calgacus’ speech before the battle of Mons Graupius: ‘corpora ipsa ac manus silvis ac puludibus emuniendis inter verbera et contumelias conteruntur’, ‘our very bodies and hands are worn down by metalling roads in forests and marshes’.Footnote 65 However this may be, the engineering work involved — of which by paradox the sole detailed literary description is supplied by the poet Statius, celebrating the via Domitiana Footnote 66 — must surely in a frontier district have been the work of military structores and architecti.Footnote 67

Auxiliary units seldom feature on milestones anywhere, although there are examples in a few provinces.Footnote 68 But this is the case on an early Antonine one from Ingliston, Midlothian, not far south of the Firth of Forth, and close to the line of the Antonine Wall, which was then being constructed. It shows that an auxiliary cohort, cohors I Cugernorum, was road-building; and also that two lines of the text had been deleted the milestone was previously thought to be Severan, with the deletion being of the name of Geta, so often treated this way. But once the two parts of the stone were reunited, it was apparent that [Anto]nino must have come in line 3 rather than line 5, and refer to Antoninus Pius, not Caracalla. The deletion must therefore be of the name of the governor, tentatively identified as Cornelius Priscianus, whose term of office is datable to c. a.d. 142 (Antoninus is cos. [I]II, hence dating the stone to the years a.d. 140–44). This man was subsequently condemned in the Senate at Rome for ‘disturbing the peace of the province of Spain’ on 15 September a.d. 145: presumably he undertook some action interpreted as an attempted coup when governor of Hispania Tarraconensis, a post to which he will have moved after Britain. A conjectural restoration of the Ingliston stone may be offered:

[Imp(eratori) Caes(ari) T(ito) | Ael(io) Hadr(iano) Anto]|nino Aug(usto) Pio,4| p(atri) p(atriae), co(n)s(uli) [I]II,| [[sub ?Corn(elio)| Prisciano?, | leg(ato) Aug(usti) pr(o) pr(aetore)?]],| [co]h(ors) I Cugernor(um) 8| [Tri]monti(o) m(ilia) p(assuum) | […].

For the Emperor Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius, father of the fatherland, consul three times, under Cornelius Priscianus (?), propraetorian legate of the Emperor, the First Cohort of Cugerni (set this up). From Trimontium, … miles.Footnote 69

In view of the use of ligature (I and O in Pio, line 3) and a small O inserted between N and R in Cugernor(um), in the surviving part of the text, it might be possible to restore the governor's name a little differently. In the light of the above, an extremely hypothetical restoration of the primary text on the western Stanegate milestone may be offered: [Imp. Caes. Trai|anus Ha]dri[anus | Aug. p.m. tr. p. VI | p.p. cos. III 4| sub A. Platorio Nepote, leg(ato) Aug(usti) pr(o) pr(aetore)? | coh. I] Tung[rorum | a Coris | m.p. XVI.Footnote 70 One might perhaps suggest that in the case of this milestone and of the Ingliston milestone auxiliary cohorts were assigned to road-building because the legions were fully engaged in the construction of, respectively, Hadrian's Wall and the Antonine Wall.

Governors are not regularly named on provincial milestones: it has been calculated that of over 6,000 milestones set up before a.d. 284 only 13 per cent name the governor.Footnote 71 Only two cases are known in Britain, apart from the Ingliston example: C. Julius Marcus under Caracalla in a.d. 213 and Cl(audius) Xenophon in a.d. 223 under Severus Alexander.Footnote 72 It has been plausibly suggested that the governors concerned were motivated by their wish to display themselves and by their self-importance.Footnote 73 The former motive certainly fits C. Julius Marcus, who was responsible for a large series of dedications honouring Caracalla and his mother Julia Domna, several of them with the unique formula, pro pietate ac devotione communi, ‘out of common dutifulness and devotion’. It looks as if Marcus was desperate to ingratiate himself with Caracalla, but in vain his name was systematically deleted, except on the milestone.Footnote 74 For Xenophon, who is also recorded restoring a gate and towers at Vindolanda, there is no obvious motivation.Footnote 75

One further observation is required about this stretch of the Stanegate. The distance between the two milestones, as mentioned at the start of this paper, at some 1,698 yards or 1,552 m, is rather more than the ‘standard’ length of 1,000 paces, 5,000 Roman feet, equivalent to about 1,481 m or 1,617 yards. Bishop has recently noted that the group of milestones at Crindledykes,Footnote 76 east of the standing Vindolanda milestone, is about the same distance from its western counterpart, about 1,550 m. He makes the attractive suggestion that the distances imply a pes of 0.31 m, close to the so-called pes Drusianus, reckoned to be 0.33 m.Footnote 77 This term, about which much has been written, is known only from a passage in Hyginus: ‘item dicitur in Germania in Tongris pes Drusianus qui habet monetalem pedem et sescunciam’, ‘the same is called in Germania among the Tongri the Drusian foot, which has the length of the “monetal” foot plus one eighth’.Footnote 78 It would serve little purpose to attempt further analysis here, but it may simply be suggested that the cohors I Tungrorum was particularly likely to have used a unit of measurement which the Romans had encountered in Tongris.

THE SECONDARY INSCRIPTION ON RIB I, 2308

The wording of our secondary text, bon[o] | rei|public[ae] | nato, ‘born for the good of the commonwealth’, was to become a common formula in the fourth century.Footnote 79 The earliest known example seems to be on a milestone in the Valais, two Roman miles from Forum Claudii Vallensium (Octodurus), datable to the Tetrarchy, hence from the years a.d. 292–305: the ‘unconquered emperors’, invicti Aug(usti), Diocletian and Maximian, and the ‘most noble Caesars’, nobili[ssimi] C{c}a[e]ss, Constantius and Galerius, are styled [bo]no r.p. natis et invict[is p]rincip[ib]us.Footnote 80 A supposedly earlier example, from north-west Spain, heavily restored as referring to Carus (reigned a.d. 282–3), must be regarded as doubtful. The text offered by the editors is [D(omino) n(ostro) victori |ac tr]iump[hatori semper | Aug(usto) M(arco) Aur(elio) C]aro | [Germ]anico | [maximo p]atri patr[iae] | [A]ug(usto) imp(eratori) I trib(unicia) [potestate] | [bon]o rei (publicae) nato. But they concede that their transcription is very conjectural: the entry is headed ‘Emperador indeterminado’ and is not indexed under Carus.Footnote 81 At any rate, Constantine I soon used the label on his early coinage, issued from Lugdunum between a.d. 307 and 309. The formula was discussed in full by Andreas Alföldi, who cites these coins as evidence that Constantine was called bono rei publicae natus before his conversion (no doubt assuming that this took place in a.d. 312). As he points out, the sentiment occurs at a much earlier date. He cites among other examples Cicero on the future Augustus, ‘quo maior adulescens Caesar maioreque deorum immortalium beneficio rei publicae natus est’, ‘and on this account we ought to consider Caesar a still more admirable young man; and that a still greater kindness of the immortal gods which gave him to the commonwealth’; and an inscription of a.d. 32, which hails the providentia of Tiberius (after the suppression of Sejanus), nati ad aeternitatem Romani nominis, ‘born for the eternity of the Roman name’. In the later Empire the formula was understood in the sense that the emperors were not only destined to reign but that they had received from heaven all the qualities of royalty. At all events, what Alföldi called the ‘colourless’ nature of the titulature made it suitable for use by Christian as well as pagan emperors.Footnote 82 It was certainly favoured by the apostate Julian as well as by his Christian kinsmen and predecessors and by subsequent Christian rulers.Footnote 83 The latest milestone inscriptions in Britain are from the house of Constantine, but of course this does not help to date the Seatsides secondary inscription. All the same, as Eberhard Sauer points out, ‘the latest milestones from Britain post-date Crispus’ and Constantine II's elevation to the rank of Caesar in a.d. 317, and quite possibly were even set up to mark this event … [so] it seems unlikely to me that your milestone is much later’.Footnote 84

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Much appreciated encouragement, advice and comment were offered at varying stages by Andrew Birley, Robin Birley, Paul Holder, Anne Kolb, David Mattingly, Alexander Meyer and (especially) Eberhard Sauer, as well as by one of Britannia’s referees. None of them must be assumed to agree with everything in this paper and any remaining mistakes are my own.

Footnotes

1 E. Birley Reference Birley1961, 132, notes that the surveyor Henry Mac Lauchlan ‘was the first [in 1858] to mention the name by which it has since come to be known generally, though from Chesterholm westwards, towards Seatsides, it is called “the Causey”’.

2 Sedgley Reference Sedgley1975, 45, no. 90 reported that ‘the part which in 1944 was being re-used as the north gate-post … now seems to have disappeared; the other part … still, in 1968, lies disused near the gate’. The latter has also in the meantime disappeared. This is unfortunate, as modern laser and photographic techniques might have obtained a reading of the lettering reported by Horsley.

3 See E. Birley Reference Birley1974, iii–v: Horsley had begun to write up his materials in 1727 and Books I and II were ‘substantially completed by the autumn of 1729, but the discovery of some more inscriptions, and the decision to add the geographical Book III, delayed the printing, and it was not until the closing weeks of December 1731 that he was able to complete his long Preface; on 2 January he composed his dedication of the book to Sir Richard Ellys and sent it off to London with the text of the preface’; but he died on 11 January, aged only 46, cf. Macdonald Reference Macdonald1933, 1, the first page of the printed version of the memorial lecture delivered in Newcastle upon Tyne two centuries after Horsley's death.

4 This seems at first sight to be an odd mistake. The milestone in question is ‘the Roman milestone which stands 120 yds. [109.7 m] east of Chesterholm fort (Vindolanda)’ (Wright in RIB I, 724–5). Bruce Reference Bruce1867, devotes several pages to it (222–5), with a fine illustration by H.B. Richardson facing p. 223. After quoting Horsley he comments that his ‘pen must have slipped when he states that the pillar “a little to the east of the station” was thrown down, and was lying under the hedge near the rivulet’. (The ‘rivulet’ is the stream known now as the Cockton or Brackies burn, which a few yards further south unites with the Bradley burn and becomes the Chineley or Chainley burn, which flows into the river South Tyne a mile further south.) Bruce's view, which is probably correct, was that ‘[i]f it had once been thrown down it would never have been re-erected. He cites locals ‘who have known the district longest, and most intimately … who never knew the stone in any other position than its present one’ and quotes Stukeley on his visit in 1725 (cf. below), who did not write that the stone was on its side, while Wallis and Brand both described it as standing in 1769 and 1789 respectively. However, Haverfield Reference Haverfield1911 (with a photograph by J.P. Gibson) clearly believes that Horsley was right, and, while not referring to Bruce (or Wallis and Brand), and not stating this explicitly, must have assumed that the stone was re-erected.

5 Horsley Reference Horsley1732, vol. II, 228.

6 Horsley Reference Horsley1732, v, xiv–xv. Horsley, like many before and after him, believed the (so-called) Vallum to be Hadrian's Wall and the stone Wall to have been set up by Severus.

7 Warburton Reference Warburton1753, 70, with his pl. 4, opposite, where he redrew Horsley's illustrations; viii.

8 The quotations are from Macdonald Reference Macdonald1933, 40, 41 and 45. Macdonald Reference Macdonald1933, 41–56 systematically exposes Warburton's lies and in particular his plagiarism from Horsley, see especially 51: in Warburton's book ‘[t]here are 159 pages of text and I think I am within the mark when I say that half a dozen of these would afford comfortable accommodation for the whole of Warburton's own contributions if they were strung together end to end’.

9 Stukeley Reference Stukeley1776, vol. II, 60. Macdonald Reference Macdonald1933, 16–17, notes that it had been suggested that Stukeley should visit Horsley, whose ‘reputation was firmly established, at all events locally’, but ‘[f]or some reason nothing came of the hint. Horsley did not meet Stukeley until three or four years later’; cf. ibid., 40, quoting Stukeley's letter to Gale of 4 February 1728/9, about his first meeting with Horsley. Bosanquet Reference Bosanquet1933, 71 observes that Stukeley and Gale, as was the case with Sir John Clerk the previous year, did not come to Morpeth to call on Horsley at the time of their ride along the Wall, whereas a few years later they, along with Sir John Clerk, were among his helpers and correspondents; cf. E. Birley Reference Birley1961, 15–17; Piggott Reference Piggott1985, 74–5. Bishop Reference Bishop2014, 117, who cites Gale's work on Roman roads, states that ‘it is unsurprising that Horsley's Britannia Romana of 1732 contains so much on the subject of Roman roads, since Horsley originally undertook his journey in the company of Gale’, but he evidently confuses Horsley with Stukeley.

10 Horsley (Reference Horsley1732) quoted Gale's discussion (published in 1723) of the Chichester inscription in extenso, with approval, at 332–7, although he added Ward's objections, 337–8. See Bogaers Reference Bogaers1979, whose detailed correction of Gale's reading, which had been taken over largely unchallenged, e.g. by CIL VII, 12 and RIB I, 91, is now available in RIB I2, p. 758, with a few notes by Tomlin, who emends the restoration of the king's name in line 5 to [To]gidubni: for this he relies on Murgia Reference Murgia1977, 339, who showed that in Tacitus, Agricola 14.1, referring to the same man, ‘quaedam civitates Togidumno regi donatae’ is a better reading than Cogidumno.

11 It is, however, proper to register here that I contributed a brief note (limited to 500 words) in the Roman Society's Epistula, interpreting Gale's observation and Stukeley's inference in the light of the relatively new evidence for coh. I Tungrorum having been based at Vindolanda: A.R. Birley Reference Birley2015; noted by Tomlin Reference Tomlin2015, 418. The present article offers a correction in one particular and a good deal of further comment.

12 Spaul Reference Spaul2000, 225–7 registers some of the Vindolanda evidence, but a good deal more has accrued in the past decade and a half, see A.R. Birley et al. Reference Birley, Birley and de Bernardo Stempel2013, 291–6, an account of which a good deal is reproduced in the present article.

13 Tacitus, Agricola 36.1.

14 On the earlier history of the Tungrian cohorts see e.g. Alföldy Reference Alföldy1968, 73; E. Birley Reference Birley and Birley1993, 5–8; A.R. Birley et al. Reference Birley, Birley and de Bernardo Stempel2013, 291–3. For the date of Mons Graupius, late September a.d. 83, see A.R. Birley Reference Birley2005, 77–8. On Petillius Cerialis, ibid., 62–8.

15 Tab. Vindol. II, 154 and III, 857.

16 Tab. Vindol. II, 181.

17 Tab. Vindol. II, 180.

18 Tab. Vindol. II, 186.

19 The above largely follows R. Birley Reference Birley2009, 45–112.

20 Tab. Vindol. II, 154+add. It might be conjectured that the six wounded were casualties of the Battle of Mons Graupius. Not impossible, even if the earliest evidence for Period 1 slightly post-dates the battle.

21 Inv. 787, registered by A.R. Birley Reference Birley and Birley1993, 23.

22 Tab. Vindol. IV.1, 857.

23 cf. on this A.R. Birley Reference Birley2002, 60 and n. 9, 168–9, referring to the discovery of the further, very fragmentary strength report, now Tab. Vindol. IV.1, 857, in an unequivocally Period 1 context.

24 Thus E. Birley Reference Birley, Birley and Birley1993, 6–7. This view is also taken by Nouwen Reference Nouwen and Lodewijckx1995. On the probable ‘standard’ sizes of auxiliary cohorts see Holder Reference Holder1980, 5–9; Reference Holder1982, 34–7.

25 Tab. Vindol. II, 210, 211+add. (Period 2) and 212 (Period 1). A letter, also found in the Period 1 innermost western ditch, with an interesting ‘shopping-list’ (beans, chickens, apples, eggs, fish-sauce, olives), Tab. Vindol. II, 302, was addressed to Verecundi [servo?], very probably a slave of the same Verecundus.

26 R. Birley Reference Birley2009, 58 sums up the question as follows: ‘The occupation date of the period II fort must lie somewhere between a.d. 92 and 103, probably ending nearer a.d. 100 than 103.’

27 See Strobel Reference Strobel1987, 287–92, discussing the ‘Kommandostruktur der Bataverauxilien’, who notes that until a late date commanders of Batavian auxiliary units continued to have the title praefectus rather than tribunus even when their regiments were milliary, and at 289–90 notes that this also applied to the two cohortes Tungrorum in Britain. He cites in the case of coh. II Tungrorum the prefects in two inscriptions, RIB I, 1981–2, Birrens, who are described as ‘prefect of the Tungrians’ (cf. 1992–3, where the commanders are just called praef(ectus), also Birrens, not naming the cohort). He is followed by E. Birley Reference Birley and Birley1993, 8–9 and A.R. Birley Reference Birley2002, 61–2; Nouwen Reference Nouwen and Lodewijckx1995, 129 is hesitant. The complicated alternative explanation by Tomlin Reference Tomlin1996, 461, is less convincing than that of Strobel (some of whose evidence naturally requires revision in the light of new discoveries or improved readings of writing-tablets). Tomlin's further comments on Tab. Vindol. II, 154, ibid., are also implausible in certain respects.

28 It is not known where the Tungrians went after being replaced at Vindolanda. It is tempting to conjecture that the stamped tile of the cohort, RIB II.4, 2477, coh. I Tun[…], found four miles west of Birdoswald on the line of Hadrian's Wall, came from a fort in the vicinity. But Brampton Old Church, not far away, from which material of the right period has been found, would have been too small for the now milliary cohort, with an area of only 1.5 ha, cf. Breeze Reference Breeze2006, 455–6. Perhaps part of the cohort was stationed elsewhere.

29 Tab. Vindol. II, 295+add.

30 Tab. Vindol. II, 234, 252–3, III, 651, and his guest on one occasion, III, 581, line 80.

31 Tab. Vindol. III, 636–8. The editors of Tab. Vindol. III, at p. 12, no doubt justifiably, comment that this does not match ‘the hypothesis that Priscinus was in command of the Cohors I Tungrorum in Period 4’. There is, however, no real difficulty in supposing that when the Tungrians were building a new fort on their return, some of their ‘waste paper’ was added to remaining piles of the Batavians’ rubbish.

32 Tab. Vindol. III, 663, 665. III, 770, is just a scrap from the opening of a letter: Priscinus Celsọ […]. There is no way of knowing whether this is the same man as the prefect of the First Tungrians.

34 RIB III, 3364.

35 This dating was proposed by A.R. Birley Reference Birley1998, whose description of the stone as a ‘tombstone’ and excessively long expansions of the gaps in the text are corrected by Tomlin in RIB III, p. 243, with further suggestions.

36 SF 3745: published and illustrated by R. Birley Reference Birley and Birley1993, 91, Iron, no. 1, with fig. 9 (p. 89), no. 3; already recorded by Hassall and Tomlin Reference Hassall and Tomlin1988, 502, no. 70, but by oversight omitted from RIB II.

37 For a possible earlier attestation of the same goddess, clearly a Tungrian deity, in a very fragmentary bronze inscription from the Lower Rhineland, see now Rothenhöfer Reference Rothenhöfer2015, 27–31, on a bronze fragment from the museum at Krefeld, restored as: Ah[vardvae …equites vel sim. ex] alis Fro[ntoniana et … v.s. vel sim.]. For the ala Frontoniana Tungrorum, stationed at Asberg in the Julio-Claudian period and then in Pannonia see Alföldy Reference Alföldy1968, 38–9, 188–90; Spaul Reference Spaul1994, 117–19; Lörincz Reference Lörincz2001, 222–4.

38 A.R. Birley et al. Reference Birley, Birley and de Bernardo Stempel2013, 287–8, on the assumption that the panel enclosing the text was oval.

39 Tomlin Reference Tomlin2013, 384–5, n. 11, argues that the panel was circular, allowing him to offer a longer restoration. By oversight he includes (for milliaria), which is how he interprets the x in line 4, within the square bracket starting at the end of line 3.

40 As shown by Raepsaet-Charlier Reference Raepsaet-Charlier1975, especially 239, 274–5; Reference Raepsaet-Charlier1985; Reference Raepsaet-Charlier1993, especially 12–15.

41 RIB II.1, 2401.9=RMD 2, 97.

42 RIB III, 3317.

43 CIL XVI, 69, and 124, XVI, 70=RIB II.1, 2401.6.

44 CIL XVI, 174; RMD 2, 93.

46 AE 1997, 1780=RMD 4, 240.

47 RIB III, 3325. Tomlin, ibid., pp. 316–17, restores Hadrian's names but does not identify the milliary cohort as I Tungrorum.

48 RIB I, 1550.

49 RIB I, 2155.

50 RIB I, 2149; cf. Hodgson Reference Hodgson and Hanson2009, especially 190–1.

51 AE 2009, 1836. Sex. Calpurnius Agricola was governor of Britain from a.d. 161 or 162 until at least a.d. 163: A.R. Birley Reference Birley2005, 155–7.

52 RIB I, 1578, 1580, 1584–6, 1591, 1598, 1618, 1619; III, 3326.

53 ND Occ. XL.40.

54 Tab. Vindol. II, 315.

55 Tab. Vindol. II, 316.

56 See R. Birley Reference Birley2009, 123.

57 A.R. Birley Reference Birley2002, 93; 2015, 7. Poulter Reference Poulter1998, 54, n. 25 quotes an article (based on a lecture by Robin Birley) in Current Archaeology (Anon. 1992), where on Tab. Vind. II, 316 (then still unpublished) it was concluded that ‘[i]t sounds like road-building’. Poulter believes that ‘it is hard to imagine what the road would be, other than the Stanegate’. He argued that the Stanegate was first constructed in Trajan's reign, which seems implausible: ‘first consolidated’ might be more convincing. Contrast Haynes Reference Haynes2002, 117–18, citing with approval the estimate (by Maxwell Reference Maxwell1998) that over 590 km of roads were constructed in Scotland to support Agricola's campaigns in the late a.d. 70s and early 80s.

58 Tab. Vindol. II, 155+add. Andrew Birley and Beth Greene both drew my attention to this alternative need for stone at Vindolanda in the early Trajanic period. For the bath-house: A. Birley Reference Birley2001, 11–13, 15–34; R. Birley Reference Birley2009, 59, referring to this tablet as ‘[o]ne of the possible period II rather than III tablets’.

59 Tab. Vindol. II, 156.

60 Tab. Vindol. II, 314: [… ] missi quae calcem peteren[t] quam nobis commodasti, quas rogo continuo iubeas onerari ut prim[o] mane nobis item[] ‘I have sent [some mules?] to get the lime which you have provided for us. I ask you to order [them] to be loaded without delay, so that [the lime can be available?] for us at first light’. As the editors point out, what was to be loaded was feminine, hence their suggestion that quas agrees with mulae, mules.

61 See Zahrnt Reference Zahrnt1988, noting that the Hadrianic milestones from Britain — RIB I, 2244, just over two miles east of Leicester, dated to a.d. 120, 2265, seven miles west of Caerhun, dated to a.d. 121, and 2272, 4 miles north-north-east of Lancaster, datable only between a.d. 119 and 138 — might indicate road-improvement in advance of Hadrian's arrival, which can be assigned to summer a.d. 122 (A.R. Birley Reference Birley1997, 113–41). Halfmann Reference Halfmann1986, 88, while accepting that renovation of the road network would be part of the measures taken in advance of a forthcoming imperial visit, stresses that in most cases we are reduced to speculation about a direct link.

62 Kissel Reference Kissel2002, 131–3 stresses that ‘[b]y far the most damage to roads … was caused in times of large-scale military activities when whole armies with their baggage trains were marching to and from the frontier in connection with major campaigns’. David Mattingly suggests (pers. comm.) that ‘resurfacing and reconsolidation (perhaps even widening?) of the Stanegate would surely have been necessary preparation for the wall-building activity under Hadrian, as the main east to west communication and supply route serving the operation?’

63 This is shown in detail by Sauer Reference Sauer2014.

64 cf. Eck and Drew-Bear Reference Eck and Drew-Bear1976, 295, who comment that even in provinces in which legions were stationed, the latter are seldom mentioned on milestones as responsible for the building of a via publica, and that such mentions are found more frequently only in the case of legio III Augusta in Numidia and in the Danubian provinces (‘auch in den Provinzen, in denen Legionen stationiert waren, diese nur relativ selten auf Meilensteinen als diejenigen erscheinen, die den Bau einer via publica durchgeführt haben. Häufiger ist dies nur bei der legio III Augusta in Numidia und bei den Truppen der Donauprovinzen anzutreffen.’). These remarks are borne out by Rathmann Reference Rathmann2003, 31–41, who lists all the cases known to him of milestones which name army units. Two British cases are listed at p. 32: he correctly dates RIB I, 2313+add., giving the cohors I Cugernorum, to the time of Antoninus Pius, but doubts that another inscription, now lost, 2312, evidently from the Antonine Wall Military Way at Bar Hill, was a milestone: it was set up to Antoninus Pius, not more closely dated, by vexillatio[ne]es […].

65 Tacitus, Agricola 31.1. Kissel Reference Kissel2002, 134 calls this passage ‘[p]robably the most vivid and at the same time stirring reference to physical strength concerning ancient road-building’.

66 Statius, Silvae 4.3.40–55, briefly cited by Bishop Reference Bishop2014, 19. Cf. at greater length, Kissel Reference Kissel2002, 131, in his section ‘General remarks on Roman roads’, 129–33.

67 See the useful remarks, ‘Who undertook the roadworks?’, by Kissel Reference Kissel2002, 155–7.

68 Rathmann Reference Rathmann2003, 31–41, has a complete list. At 40–1 he argues that an intensive use of Roman soldiers for road-building in this period cannot be proved, and assumes that in most cases the towns of the provinces concerned had to pay for and carry out roadworks. In the case of frontier districts lacking urban development this may not have been feasible. Perhaps the Brittunculi made famous by Tab. Vindol. II, 164 were put to work on the Stanegate (treatment contributing to the uprising in a.d. 117, cf. A.R. Birley Reference Birley1998, 303–4). Note also Tab. Vindol. III, 649, wagons of Brittones delivering grain.

69 For the original reading, see RIB I, 2313. See the full account by Maxwell Reference Maxwell1983, 379–85, who notes that E. Birley Reference Birley1966, 230, had already argued that the milestone was Antonine, before the two pieces into which it had broken were reunited in 1971; Wright and Hassall Reference Wright and Hassall1973, 336–7 have the revised text, summarised in RIB I2, 2313, p. 800. On Cornelius Priscianus, cf. A.R. Birley Reference Birley1981, 115–16 (noted by Maxwell); improved in 2005, 141–2.

70 For Nepos, A.R. Birley Reference Birley2005, 119–24. The conjectured reading m.p. XVI seems appropriate, given that the Crindledykes milestone, at the mile-station east of Vindolanda, RIB I, 2299, has m.p. XIIII.

71 Rathmann Reference Rathmann and Kolb2006, 204, cf. Rathmann Reference Rathmann2003, 149–202 listing governors concerned province by province.

72 RIB I, 2298, near Hadrian's Wall milecastle 17; 2299, on the Stanegate a mile east of Vindolanda; and 2306, near Hadrian's Wall milecastle 42, on the Military Way. Rathmann Reference Rathmann and Kolb2006, 204 lists only these two cases in Britain, omitting the governor deleted on the Ingliston stone.

73 Rathmann Reference Rathmann and Kolb2006, 217–18 (‘Selbstdarstellung und Eigenwichtigkeit’).

74 For details A.R. Birley Reference Birley2005, 203–8.

75 In RIB I, 1796, Vindolanda (now lost) as well as on the Cawfields milestone, 2306, his cognomen was misspelt, as Xenepho[nte] and Xenephonte; spelt correctly in 2299, X[e]noph(onte). On the man, A.R. Birley Reference Birley2005, 345–6 (by mishap attributing the milestone misspelling to 2299 rather than 2306).

76 RIB I, 2299–2305.

77 Bishop Reference Bishop2014, 24–5. For the course of the Stanegate immediately east of Vindolanda, cf. Wright Reference Wright1937. On its westward course, cf. the results of excavation in 2007, reported by R. Birley in Burnham Reference Burnham2008, 280: ‘A by-product of this work [on the ditches of Stone Fort 2] was the significant discovery of the north-west wall of Stone Fort 1, extending c. 24 m beyond the north-west angle of Stone Fort 2 and effectively reaching to the field wall which now encloses the “Stanegate” road. This confirms that the modern line of the “Stanegate” was not the original Roman line, for there must have been a fort ditch where the road now runs.’ No doubt any difference to the overall distance to the next milestone will have been minimal.

78 Hyginus Gromaticus, De condicionibus agrorum 123.9.

79 Sedgley Reference Sedgley1975, 45 cites E. Birley Reference Birley1958, 90, who followed Haverfield and Dessau in regarding it as ‘a common 4th-century formula’, but noted that ILS 827 still gave it to King Theoderic in the last quarter of the fifth century.

80 CIL XVII/2, 111, an improved reading of CIL XII, 5520, cited by Berlinger Reference Berlinger1935, 89 as the earliest example of the formula.

81 Rodrίguez Colmenero et al. Reference Rodrίguez Colmenero, Ferrer Sierra and Álvarez Asorey2004, 351–2, no. 235, Torre del Bierzo: ‘A transcrición proposta ten moito de conxectural. Será preciso seguir traballando para acadar co tempo maiores logros. En calquera caso a fórmula victori triumphatori, aplicada con profusión nos sucesores de Constantino, resulta moi temperá aplicada a Caro.’ Cf. the index under Carus at p. 789. I am grateful to Eberhard Sauer for drawing my attention to this publication.

82 Alföldi Reference Alföldi1935, 94–5, with his very detailed n. 4 (reprinted in Alföldi Reference Alföldi and Alföldi1970, 212–13, with n. 4). The coins that he cites may now best be consulted in RIC VI, mint of Lugdunum, autumn 307 to c. 309/10, p. 261, no. 252, CONSTANTINO AVG BRPNAT; p. 262, nos 270–1; 263, no. 286; 264, no. 298. The Cicero passage comes from Philippics 13.46; the inscription of Tiberius is CIL XI, 4170=ILS 157, Interamna in Umbria.

83 For a recent discussion see Maligorne Reference Maligorne2008, who is concerned to show its use as a dedicatory formula other than on milestones. Some of his remarks on the British examples, 296–7, require correction, e.g. ‘Old Perinth’ should be ‘Old Penrith’. It is spelt accurately on his map, p. 294, although there placed south of Wroxeter –– and Lanercost is placed almost on the North Sea Coast. Further, he argues that RIB I, 2314 should not be classed as a milestone, as the text is framed in a tabula ansata, which ‘incite plutôt à identifier une formule isolée, et non le vestige d'une titulature impériale complète’. But the Ingliston milestone has a text framed in a tabula ansata: Maxwell Reference Maxwell1983, 379 and fig. 1.

84 E. Sauer, pers. comm.

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Figure 0

FIG. 1. Drawing from John Horsley, Britannia Romana or the Roman Antiquities of Britain (London, 1732), Vol. II, Northumberland LIX.