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CIL 6.13 – Two separate dedications on three sides of an altar: on the front, a dedication to the health of emperor Severus Alexander and his mother, Julia Mamaea by Aurelius Silvanus, a (military?) tribune; on the left, a dedication to Asclepius by Q. Ennius Sabianus (the younger); on the right, a list of names, including Q. Ennius Sabianus (the elder), who dedicated the altar (?)
Squeeze, photographs, and notes by A.E. Gordo
CIL 6.180b – Dedication on an altar to Fortuna Augusta for the safety and return of Emperor Severus, his wife Julia Domna and his children Caracalla and Geta by Antonius, a freedman. The names of Geta and Plautilla (Caracalla’s wife) are erased (damnatio memoriae) presumably after Geta’s murder and Plautilla’s execution for her involvement in plots against Caracalla
Photograp
CIL 6.385 – Dedication on a statue base to Jupiter Optimus Maximus by Tiberius, in his second consulship, before he was emperor
Photograp
CIL 6.492 – Altar dedicated to the Mother of the Gods and to the ship Salvia (the name is repeated in the next line, probably erroneously) by Synthyche (sic), priestess of the ‘gens Claudia,’ with sculptural relief depicting the introduction of the statue of Cybele into Rome on a boat towed by Claudia Quinta (see Ovid, Fasti, IV.291 ff.)
Photograph
CIL 10.2629 – Epitaph for Junia Theodota, set up by her husband, P. Rufinius Serenus
Photograp
CIL 10.3086a – Epitaph for M. Verrius Flaccus, set up by his brother, Celsus
Photograph taken by Alfred Fairbank at Trinity College Library, Cambridge in 1959, notes by Arthur Gordon on back of photo, and letter to Joyce Gordon from Alfred Fairban