Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
48 See the Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus, H. Russell Robinson, op. cit. (note 42), pl. 463–4, and the actual shield from Kasr el Harit, Kimmig, Germania (1940), 106. This shield is almost certainly Roman and not Celtic.
49 Buckland, op. cit. (note 37), 247.
50 In the opinion of Dr Hugh Chapman.
51 Merrifield, R., Antiq. Journ. xlii (1962), 38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
52 In the opinion of Mrs Merrilee Parrott, conservator.
53 R. E. M. and T. V. Wheeler, Verulamium (1936), 219 and pl. lxiva, 5.
54 M. W. C. Hassall, ‘Roman Soldiers in Roman London’, in Archaeological Theory and Practice, essays presented to Prof. W. F. Grimes, ed. D. Strong (1973).
55 Baradez, Jean, Vue-Aerienne de I'organisation romaine dans le sud Algerien, Fossatum Africae (Paris, 1949)Google Scholar; cf. now Fentress, E. W. B., ‘Numidia and the Roman Army’, ap. B.A.R. Supp. Series, 53 (1979)Google Scholar, with up-to-date bibliography. Prof. P. Trousset is currently working on further publication of Baradez's findings.
56 Jean Baradez, ibid., 100–6, 130–49. Also ‘Complements inedits au Fossatum Africae’ in Studien zu den Militargrenzen Roms (Vorträge des 6. internationalen Limes/congresses in Süddeutschland) (1967), 200–10.
57 Berchem, D. van, L'Armée de Diocletian et la Réforme Constantienne (Paris, 1952), 42–9Google Scholar. cf. Trousset, P., Recherches sur la limes Tripolitanus du Chott Djerid à la frontière tuniso-libyenne (Paris, 1974)CrossRefGoogle Scholar and, withdrawing his previous advocacy of a fourth-century date, ‘Les bornes de Bled Segui; Nouveaux apercus sur la centuriation romaine du Sud Tunisie’ in Antiquite's Africaines xii (1978), 168–75.Google Scholar
58 Not. Dign. Oc. xxxi, 1–31; Baradez, op. cit. (note 55), 146–9.
59 Cod. Theod. vii. 15. 1. Emperors Theodosius and Honorius to the vicar of Africa, April A.D. 409.
60 Baradez, op. cit. (note 55), 9, 10, 12 and 244–7. Fentress, op. cit. (note 55), 90.
61 Baradez, op. cit. (note 56), 205–9.