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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
* I am most grateful to Paul Halstead, Mark Hassall and Joyce Reynolds for their comments on the first draft of this note.
10 RIB 905, 928, 1202, 1235, 1278, 1705 (securely dated to 213), RIB 1018 (dated 212–217). RIB 976 also belongs to this group, as do possibly 1551 and 1741. For further comment and references see Birley, A. R., Epigraphische Studien 4, p. 87, no. 45Google Scholar: C. Julius Marcus.
11 The name of the dedicator does not survive in every case. However, RIB 905, 976, 1202, 1235 and 1705 are all erected by auxiliary units and the uniformity of the stones (along with their provenances) makes it virtually certain that the remainder should be seen in a military context.
12 See Jarrett, Michael G., ‘The case of the redundant official’, Britannia ix (1978), 289–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar