1Company with limited liability "Euronics Latvia", Reg. No. 40003829397, address: Ieriķu iela 5B, Rīga, Latvija, LV-1084; e-mail address:
klientu...@euronics.lv; website address: (hereinafter - Euronics) undertakes to ensure the security of the of the Company's website (hereinafter - the Website) and the personal information of its visitors and the protection of their rights when visiting the Euronics's website and getting acquainted with its content.
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ReVolt A8 multi-functional wireless docking station is designed specifically for charging up to three devices simultaneously. This station is compatible with all iPhone models, including iPhone 12. It has a built-in Apple Watch wireless charger, as well as a fast-charging module for AirPods.
The discovery, a collection of more than 400 Roman waxed writing tablets, was announced Wednesday by the Museum of London Archaeology. The tablets were unearthed in London's financial district during excavation work for a new building.
" 'They give us a glimpse into a carpet-bagging community in the new wild west frontier of the Roman empire,' said Roger Tomlin, the expert on early Roman writing who spent a year poring over the faint scratches on slivers of fir wood recycled from old barrels.
The Bloomberg tablets, as the museum is calling them, date back to as early as A.D. 43. The tablets survived nearly two millennia because the wet mud blocked oxygen from reaching the wood and protected them from decay, the Museum of London Archaeology writes.
A Roman waxed writing tablet dated A.D. 62 contains an insight into the Roman response to the Boudican revolt that devastated much of London. A trove of Roman writing tablets has been unearthed in the heart of London, archaeologists announced on Wednesday. Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
This Roman waxed writing tablet, dated A.D. 80-90/5, reads "You will give [this] to Junius the cooper, opposite [the house of] Catullus." Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
One tablet was written by a judge to two people (not Roman citizens) who had a legal dispute, according to a video from Bloomberg. The video also shows how the cursive Latin was decoded, and it demonstrates how a wax tablet would originally have looked and been used.
About 100 names are legible on the 80-odd tablets interpreted so far, according to the museum. In addition to the judge and Tertius the brewer, there's a cooper (a barrel-maker) and numerous slaves, soldiers and freedmen.
The best known 'character' at Vindolanda is Flavius Cerialis, prefect of the ninth cohort of Batavians, who lived with his family in the praetorium at Vindolanda in the years around AD 100. His correpsondence accounts for over 80 letters of the published and unpublished tablets. We learn little directly of Cerialis himself, but some things can be guessed of his likely background. The name Flavius suggests that he came from a family that gained the citizenship under Vespasian, perhaps through loyalty to Rome during the Batavian revolt.
The commanders of auxiliary units were required to be of 'equestrian' rank. This was a high social status that depended on meeting a property qualification of 400,000 sesterces, as well as free birth. For some the rank of prefect of an auxiliary unit might perhaps be the culmination of a military career, for others greater things beckoned. Brocchus for example, one of Cerialis' correspondents, probably later commanded a cavalry unit in Pannonia (Hungary). Other equestrians became senior officers (tribunes) in a legion.
The governor of Britain is occasionally glimpsed in the tablets. One letter (248) implies that Cerialis is soon to meet the governor, in another (225) Cerialis uses an intermediary to gain access to him. Perhaps a close personal connection explains the service of troops from Vindolanda in the governor's bodyguard. The governorship of Britain was a senior and trusted post because of the size of the garrison, three legions as well as auxiliary units, a total army of roughly 50,000 men. The governor had to be of senatorial status, an experienced soldier and trusted not to use his army to challenge the emperor, a trust sometimes misplaced.
The fort prefect was accompanied in his posting by his family, including his wife and children and the broader familia of household slaves. The correspondents of Cerialis' wife, Lepidina, included Claudia Severa, wife of another garrison commander, Aelius Brocchus, as well as other women (Paterna, Valatta). The reference to Severa's son in the birthday invitation (291) reminds us that children lived in the fort as well. Other evidence for children includes their shoes amongst the leatherwork, and perhaps the writing exercise (118). A letter to Cerialis (260) includes a greeting to the pueri, perhaps Cerialis' slaves. There are however more certain references to slaves in other officers' households (301, 347).
Inscriptions from other northern frontier sites reveal the presence of family members of the garrison commander. The one year old Aurelius Concordius, infant son of the tribune at Birdoswald, was commemorated by his father, Aurelius Iulianus. On a long epitaph, Julia Lucilla commemorated her husband Rufinus, prefect of the garrison at High Rochester (of the first two lines only isolated letters survive, but his name is known from another inscription), listing his offices and honours (RIB 1288).
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