Brittunculus
@brittunculus.bsky.social
430 followers 120 following 280 posts
History/classics MA "The climate is wretched” - Tacitus #RomanBritain
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brittunculus.bsky.social
A fragment of a military intelligence report from the Roman fort at Vindolanda, on the northern frontier of #RomanBritain. The thin, postcard-sized wooden tablet describes the fighting style of the native Britons, disparagingly referred to as BRITTUNCULI or 'Little Brits.'
#EpigraphyTuesday
brittunculus.bsky.social
For #MosaicMonday, a rather lovely peacock made using blue and green glass tesserae to simulate iridescent plumage. Found in Fenchurch Street, London in 1858 and now in the British Museum.
#RomanBritain #AncientBluesky
brittunculus.bsky.social
Where's this good boy from? He looks like he's from the same litter as the Lydney Dog.
brittunculus.bsky.social
Not my insight; but this panel gives the narrative a nice circularity. Leaving and arriving in one!
brittunculus.bsky.social
Yes, the source of the river Exe also appears to have been ‘esk’ so it wasn’t just lack of imagination on the part of Legio II!
Reposted by Brittunculus
brittunculus.bsky.social
#FrescoFriday
Reconstructed ceiling painting found under Trier Cathedral, Germany. One of 15 figured panels, it may depict a personification of Wealth or a lady of the imperial family. When seen in person, the skill & patience of the restorers is staggering!
Early C.4, now in the Museum am Dom.
1/4
The female figure is shown taking a string of pearls from a jewellery box, with her pinkie raised, as if showing it to the viewer. She wears a small golden crown, a laurel wreath, a chunky bejewelled necklace and a halo (nimbus) appears behind her head. The blue background was painted with expensive 'Egyptian blue' pigment, and the image is framed by bold red and green borders. It is made up of 100s of fragments of plaster.
(c) R. Scheider from the Museum am Dom website. 
[Photography is forbidden in the museum.]
brittunculus.bsky.social
Before the move to Isca, the legion’s base was, er, a place called Isca (Exeter). Well, at least they could keep the stationery…
lindsaypowell.bsky.social
Reconstruction and plan of Isca (Caerleon), home to Legio II Augusta. The remains of barracks, baths and the amphitheatre can still be viewed. The excellent Roman Legion Museum is well worth visiting. #RomanFortThursday
brittunculus.bsky.social
Someone you know is already there (and he recommends the museum cafe)
Bust of Hadrian in the Marcus Aurelius exhibition.
brittunculus.bsky.social
Maybe not the safest place for a sheep with a nice neck to hide? 🔪 🏛️ 🫣
brittunculus.bsky.social
Archaeologists were forced to work in tunnels just 2 ft high under the Cathedral floor 😮 to extract the 30,000 fragments, which were then pieced together as a huge jigsaw over 10 years of work. Imprints left by the reed backing provided an essential guide.
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Image (c) R Schneider, Museum am Dom.
brittunculus.bsky.social
The ceiling originally decorated a large room in the imperial palace and each panel either depicts a richly-attired woman, an austere philosopher or pairs of squabbling chubby erotes (cupids).
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Visualisation from www.strassen-der-roemer.eu
Computer generated mock-up of the ceiling in situ.
brittunculus.bsky.social
#FrescoFriday
Reconstructed ceiling painting found under Trier Cathedral, Germany. One of 15 figured panels, it may depict a personification of Wealth or a lady of the imperial family. When seen in person, the skill & patience of the restorers is staggering!
Early C.4, now in the Museum am Dom.
1/4
The female figure is shown taking a string of pearls from a jewellery box, with her pinkie raised, as if showing it to the viewer. She wears a small golden crown, a laurel wreath, a chunky bejewelled necklace and a halo (nimbus) appears behind her head. The blue background was painted with expensive 'Egyptian blue' pigment, and the image is framed by bold red and green borders. It is made up of 100s of fragments of plaster.
(c) R. Scheider from the Museum am Dom website. 
[Photography is forbidden in the museum.]
brittunculus.bsky.social
It’s a slightly magical sort of place. A real sense of specialness and peace. Roman remains too of course!
brittunculus.bsky.social
#hillfortswednesday
Entering the hillfort at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire, through the north gateway. The 5 acre fort occupies a promontory on the edge of the Forest of Dean, high above the Severn estuary.
📸 May 2025
Reposted by Brittunculus
doccrom.bsky.social
#EpigraphyTuesday – A pretty damn fabulous copper alloy 'tabula ansata' with an inscription for Mars Medocius, discovered in Camulodunum (Roman Colcehester): ca. AD 222-235. #Latin 🧵🏺

Image: British Museum (1892,0421.1). Link – britishmuseum.org/collection/o...
Reposted by Brittunculus
Reposted by Brittunculus
romanroads.bsky.social
I suppose I'd better do something slightly more constructive that just nosy around.

So then, tomorrow evening 25 Sept, we have the return of our guest lectures.

For our first talk, Paddy Lambert, of Oxford Archaeology, talk is entitled Populus: the real people of Roman Britain.
Populus: The Real People of Roman Britain; by Paddy Lambert
Paddy will explore what archaeology reveals about the practicalities of living, working and dying in the province of Britannia
www.eventbrite.co.uk
brittunculus.bsky.social
I’ve just caught up with video. Very comprehensive and well shot, with several sites I wasn’t aware of. They’re now on my list!
brittunculus.bsky.social
The guy at bottom left has a rather more provincial cousin at Wroxeter 😀
Reposted by Brittunculus
bwallower.bsky.social
#EpigraphyTuesday 🏺
First known mention of #Roman Londoners - Londiniensium - on late 2nd/early 3rd C AD Turkish marble tablet of Tiberinius Celeranius a trader from Beauvais.
From important Tabard Square site in #Southwark excavated by @pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
In new London Museum expected 2026
Turkish marble tablet with Latin text, translated as: 
To the spirits of the Emperors and to the god Mars Camulus, Tiberinius Celeranius, Citizen of the Bellovaci, Mortix of the people of London, first...[set up this monument]. 
Mars was an important god of place in Rheims, near Beauvais (Bellovaci). A mortix was a position related to trading or shipping.
brittunculus.bsky.social
On #TombTuesday a coloured reconstruction of Sextus Valerius Genialis' tombstone. He was a tribesman of the Frisii and joined the cavalry regiment of the Thracians. He died aged 40 in Britannia at Corinium ( #Roman Cirencester, Gloucs.)
#RomanBritain
@coriniummuseum.bsky.social
A Roman gravestone showing a cavalryman spearing a naked barbarian. The soldier wears a white tunic with red leggings. His brown horse is fitted out with a vivid green and red sadlecloth. A Latin inscription below the scene is picked out with red lettering and a red border. The effect is produced by projecting coloured light onto the bare stone.
brittunculus.bsky.social
I'm very much enjoying this series! Bearly able to contain my chuckling.