
The Uley Tablets
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Content
- Cover
- The Uley TabletsRoman Curse Tablets from the Temple ofMercury at Uley (Gloucestershire)
- Copyright
- Preface
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1. Curse Tablets from Uley and elsewherein Roman Britain
- 2. The Uley Tablets: Format and Layout
- Blank and illiterate tablets
- Literate tablets: their outline
- Literate tablets: their format
- 'Paragraphing' and 'heading'
- Punctuation
- Abbreviation
- Corrections
- 'Encipherment' and reversal
- Nailed tablets
- 3. A Prayer to the God1
- The term defixio
- The verb defigo
- Addressing the god: a 'petition'
- Asking' the god for something
- or 'complaining'
- Prayers for justice
- 'Giving' to the god: stolen property
- 'Giving' the thief
- The god's duty
- Donation
- 4. Other Formulas Tabulated1
- ante dies nouem ('before nine days'), Tab. Sulis 62.3
- carta ('page', referring to the tablet)
- *concordiam ('concord' with the petitioner or the god)
- *conscius ('privy' to the theft, an 'accessory')
- domine, domina ('Lord' or 'Lady', vocative), Tab. Sulis 98.6
- donec ('until' the stolen property is returned), Tab. Sulis 10.15
- dono ('I give' to the god, especially the thief or the stolen property)
- exigas ('you are to exact' the stolen property), Tab. Sulis 38.4, 41.3
- compare ex{s}igi, 47.2
- exactura, 8.3
- perexi[g]e, 98.6
- fraudem fecit ('has done wrong')
- *genius (divine attribute, compare maiestas, numen)
- de hospitiolo meo ('from my house' or 'home'), restored in Tab. Sulis 12(i).3
- and in 99.2, de hos{i}pitio suo
- id est ('that is'), Tab. Sulis 34.3
- inueniat ('let (the god) discover' thief or stolen property), Tab. Sulis 36.5, 44.12, 99.4
- inuolare ('steal')
- maiestas ('majesty': divine attribute, compare genius, numen)
- maximo leto adigere ('inflict with the greatest death')
- nec . . . nec ('neither . . . nor')
- nisi ('unless')
- non permittas ('you are not to permit')
- (i) 'health' (sanitatem)
- (ii) 'sleep' often paired with 'health' but contrasted with 'wakefulness'in 4, 75, and Wanborough
- (iii) 'movement' (walking, lying, sitting)
- (iv) 'drinking and eating'
- (v) 'urination and defecation' (which understandably follow 'drinking' and 'eating')
- (vi) 'children'
- (vii) 'eyesight'
- (viii) 'speech'
- (ix) 'sun and moon'
- nomen ('name')
- numen ('divinity': divine attribute, compare genius, maiestas)8
- *pareat ('be evident')
- perdidi / perdidit ('I have lost' / '(he) has lost')
- queror, conqueror ('I complain')
- redemat sanguine suo ('redeem with his own blood')9
- *repraesentare ('pay in full')
- rogo ('I ask')
- sanguine suo ('with his own blood')
- si . . . si ('whether . . . or')
- (i) si seruus si liber ('whether slave or free') and its variants
- (ii) si paganus si miles ('whether soldier or civilian')17
- (iii) si uir si femina ('whether man or woman') and its variants
- (iv) si puer si puella ('whether boy or girl')
- *s(upra)s(criptus) (etc.) ('above-written','aforesaid')
- templum or fanum ('the temple')
- uindices ('may you take vengeance')
- 5. Stolen Goods
- Tablets not prompted by theft
- Tablets prompted by theft
- 6. Personal Names
- (i) Tablets which name the author
- (ii) Anonymous tablets
- (iii) Intended victims
- (iv) Other names listed
- Men and women
- Rank and status
- 'Roman' names
- 'Celtic' names
- Uley and Bath
- 7 Handwriting
- Drawing the tablets
- The scripts: capital and cursive, ORC and NRC
- ORC letter-formsat Uley
- ORC letter-formsat Uley, briefly described
- Capital letter-formsat Uley
- Docilinus and Docilianus
- Tabulation of letter-formsat Uley
- 8. The Name of the God
- 9. Language and Spelling
- Vowels
- Consonants
- Morphology (etc.)
- 10. Copying and Other Errors
- I. Formulas bungled in various ways
- 1. Words in formulas mis-speltor garbled
- 2. Inconsistency in syntax
- 3. Other errors
- II. Errors in non-formulaictext
- 1. Letter(s) omitted
- 2. Letter(s) repeated in error
- 3. Intrusive letter(s) inserted
- 4. Other errors
- 5. Errors corrected
- 11. Authorship
- From draft to fair copy
- A professional hand?
- The evidence of formulas
- Possible handbooks
- Oral transmission
- 12. Epigraphic Conventions used in the Texts
- Numbering and reference
- Cross-reference
- Side' and 'face'
- Line-numbering
- u (vowel) and v (consonant)
- Punctuation
- Transcript and restored text
- Conventions used in transcription
- TEXTS
- Uley Tablets 1-87
- 1 Theft of a beast of burden
- 2 Memorandum from Saturnina
- 3 Theft of a gold ring
- 4 Biccus curses a thief
- 5 Theft of a bridle
- 6 The first fragment ever found
- 7 Un-Latintext in 'rustic capitals'
- 8 Curse against theft in ORC but with NRC heading
- 9 Theft of a sheep
- 10 Undeciphered
- 11 Undeciphered
- 12 Illegible text pierced by a nail
- 13 Undeciphered
- 14 ORC fragment, large but ill-preserved
- 15 '. . . as soon as possible . . .'
- 16 A line of letters, perhaps a reversed text
- 17 Plea for vengeance
- 18 '. . . unless with his own blood . . .'
- 19 'Ma . . . Mercury . . .'
- 20 List of stolen property including clothes
- 21 35,000 denarii but only one caduceus
- 22 Fragmentary text prompted by theft
- 23 . . . ? of barley
- 24 Theft of a beehive
- 25 Undeciphered
- 26 Disorderly capitals and cursive, damaged
- 27 Illegible fragment
- 28 Undeciphered text to Mercury Aruerius
- 29 Undeciphered fragments
- 30 Fragment of a text in capitals
- 31 One letter
- 32 Illegible fragment
- 33 Two persons named with their parents
- 34 Theft of a ring
- 35 Un-Latintext in cursive
- 36 Crossing-out
- 37 NRC fragment enclosing something
- 38 Undeciphered
- 39 Long cursive text but unresolved
- 40 Mercury Arueriacus . . . and his woodlanders?
- 41 Theft of another sheep
- 42 Undeciphered
- 43 Docilinus curses Varianus, Peregrina, and Sabinianus for doing harm to his farm animal
- 44 Five fragments
- 45 List of names (?)
- 46 Undeciphered
- 47 Complaint to Aruerius of losing silver coins
- 48 Scraps of formula
- 49 List of names
- 50 Theft of one plaque and four rings
- 51 ?Capitals and cursive
- 52 Latin formulas against theft in Greek letters
- 53 '. . . whether man or woman'
- 54 '. . . has stolen'
- 55 Theft of the material of a cloak
- 56 Undeciphered
- 57 '. . . unless he make good with his own blood'
- 58 Theft of wool and a jug
- 59 Spiral text, undeciphered
- 60 '. . . is given'
- 61 '. . . I have given'
- 62 Theft of a cloak, scarf, and cap
- 63 'I ask . . .'
- 65 Undeciphered fragment of NRC
- 66 Irregular capitals
- 67 Two pseudo-inscriptions
- 68 Primanus is cursed for theft
- 69 Undeciphered
- 70 Tablet re-used
- 71 To the god Mercury, against a thief
- 72 Theft of two wheels and four cows (etc.)
- 73 Small fragment
- 74 To the god Mercury . . .
- 75 On the Hill of Aruerius
- 76 Malice towards beasts of burden
- 77 quos . . .
- 78 Reclaiming 100,000 denarii
- 79 Serenus to the god Mercury
- 80 Theft of gloves
- 81 Formulas against theft
- 82 A 'gift' and a plea for vengeance
- 83 Theft of wethers
- 84 Theft of two pewter plates
- 85 Text in capitals
- 86 Petronius
- 87 Undeciphered
- Tarlton Tablets
- Tarlton Tablets 1-7
- Tarlton (1) Theft of three coins
- Tarlton (2) Theft of a cloak and hood
- Tarlton (3) descriptum
- Tarlton (4) descriptum
- Tarlton (5) descriptum
- Tarlton (6) descriptum
- Tarlton (7) descriptum
- APPENDIX: Curse Tablets from Roman Britain
- A Brief Bibliography
- Tablets by location
- Index I: Personal Names
- Index II: Gods
- Index III: Latin Words
- Index IV: Divergent Spellings and Forms
- Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- General Index
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