A newly discovered Roman plaque from London measuring 12 x 16 inches (c.30 x cm) contains a complete Latin inscription dedicated to the god Martius Camulos, dated on stylistic grounds to between AD50-150 (for a picture of the slab see News from CNN). According to the excavators the dedicant was a 'Northern Gaulish merchant' but I cannot reconcile this conclusion. Their translation (as quoted in Orange-Today) reads: "To the spirits of the emperors (and) the God Mars Camulos, Tiberinius Celerianus, ranking moritex of the (traders) of London, (set this up)" (emphasis is my own). This, I feel, does not adequately account for the words C BELL or the trailing phrase MVS. My own interpretation of this stone would be:
DEO MARTI CA MVLO TIBERINI VS CELERIANVS C BELL MORITIX LONDINIENSI VM MVS |
"For the Spirits of the Emperors and for the god Martius Camulos, Tiberinius Celerianus, Custodian of the Warriors,¹ Moritex² of the people of Londinium, [offers] this memorial in fulfillment of a vow.³" |
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Francis Grew, curator of archaeology at the Museum of London is reported as saying "the plaque probably dates from between 50 and 150 AD and would have been placed prominently either on a building or in a shrine." This comment is fair enough, but the only connection of this particular stone with traders seems to me to be the fact that it was uncovered in the so-called 'merchant sector' of old Londinium town. There is nothing on the stone to convince me that it was dedicated by a "London-based merchant", as they claim.