Roger Bland, OBE. Services to Heritage

Roger, Michael and Bill Wyman

Last weekend, it was announced in the Queen’s Birthday honours, that the Head of the Portable Antiquities Scheme and Treasure (Roger Bland) has been awarded an OBE for services to Heritage. Roger has set up and maintained the Scheme, been instrumental in the reform of the Treasure Act (1996) and spent time on secondment at the DCMS. If you didn’t know, he is a numismatist with an interest in Roman coins and has been widely published in his time working at the British Museum.

BBC article

Queen’s Birthday Honours list in full.

UCL announcement

KCL announcement

Under the Plough: archaeology of the topsoil

I’ve been asked to publicise the conference outlined below, so here we go!

CBA South East Annual Conference 2007 (in association with the Department of Classical and Archaeological Studies, the University of Kent)

Saturday 10 November 2007
Tickets:
CBA SE Members £15.00
Non-Members £17.50

Cheques should be made payable to:
CBA South East
University of Kent at Medway
Chatham Maritime
Chatham
Kent
ME4 4AG

Tickets Available From:

Steve & Eva Corbett
4 Ditchling Close
Eastbourne
East Sussex
BN23 8LS

PROGRAMME

09.30 Registration

Refreshments available in the Pilkington Suite

10.00 Introduction
John Mills, Chairman, CBA SE

10.05 The South East Research Framework: Project Update
Jake Weekes, Heritage Conservation Group Kent CC

10.20 Interpreting Lithic Scatters
Chris Butler (tbc), Mid-Sussex Field Archaeology Team

11.00 Coffee/Tea
Pilkington Suite

11.20 Field survey on the Lincolnshire Wolds: characterizing Roman settlement in a downland setting
Steve Willis, University of Kent

12.00 Fieldwalking: Theory, Method and Practice
Jeremy Taylor (tbc), University of Leicester

12.40 Questions

12.45 Lunch

Coffee/Tea – Pilkington Suite

1.25 CBA SE AGM All welcome to attend

1.50 The Portable Antiquities Scheme: More Than Just Small Finds
Liz Andrews-Wilson, Finds Liaison Officer, Sussex

2.20 Digging Hoards and Scatters: Some Case Studies
David Williams, Finds Liaison Officer, Surrey

2.40 Hands Across The Divide: Detectorists and Archaeologists working together
Derek Page, Brighton and Hove Metal Detecting Club

3.00 Coffee/Tea
Pilkington Suite

3.15 Interpreting Anglo-Saxon Metalwork Scatters
Laura McLean

3.55 The Archaeology of Ploughsoil: Theoretical Overview
Christopher Evans, Cambridge University

4.35 Questions

5.00 Close

Cursing the emperor

Early this year, a metal detectorist called Tom Redmayne was searching in a muddy field in the parish of Fulstow in Lincolnshire. He had already found Roman pottery (Samian ware from Gaul), some late Roman coins and several lead weights. Then he found several pieces pieces of lead, two of which were folded over.When he carefully unfolded them, he saw that they had holes drilled in them. Furthermore, in the centre of each was an impression. He took them to Adam Daubney, the Portable Antiquities Scheme Finds Liaison Officer for Lincolnshire, who realised that they were coin impressions.The curse tablet

Adam brought the pieces down to the British Museum where he and I established that the impressions were caused by bronze coins of the Emperor Valens that had been hammered into the lead. The pieces were then folded over and the edges of the sheets pierced. This was probably so they could be hung up. So how do we interpret this?

In the reigns of the joint-emperors Valentinian I (364–75 AD) and Valens (364–78 AD), the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus tells us that a certain Valentinus:

who was a native of Valeria in Pannonia [Hungary], a proud man, had been exiled to Britain for a serious offence. Like some dangerous animal he could not stay quiet; he pushed ahead with his destructive, revolutionary plans nourishing an especial loathing for Theodosius [a general of Valentian and Valens sent to Britain].

The same scholar reports that this troublemaker Valentinus started a rebellion which was quashed. He then describes the catastrophic events in Britain, commonly called the ‘Great Barbarian Conspiracy’, when Saxons, Picts and Scots (from Ireland) all ravaged the Roman province. Britannia was saved only by the swift actions of General Theodosius.

Modern historians have tended to overlook the revolt of Valentinus. But it has been suggested that this was the catalyst for subsequent invasions, as the
barbarians sensed that Britain was in turmoil and therefore particularly vulnerable to attack. It might be that during the revolt of Valentinus, one of his
followers decided to curse the emperors. It was traditional to write curse messages on tablets which were rolled up or nailed to a temple wall (you can see Roman curse tablets from Uley in the Roman Britain Gallery; Room 49).

In the case of the find, it seems that instead of writing the emperors’ names, a coin with a picture of the emperor was used instead. Then the lead was folded over and the pieces possibly nailed to, or hung from, a wall.At a later date, the two pieces might have been ritually deposited, possibly in the ground. This is only my personal interpretation – we will never know for certain why they were made, but perhaps they were created by a follower of the rebellious Valentinus. Whatever the truth, we have not found other objects like these in Britain.

The curse tablet is recorded as database record: LIN-57B091

New PhD announcement

UCL logoCollaborative PhD in Roman coin finds in Britain: The Institute of Archaeology, University College London and the Portable Antiquities Scheme, The British Museum

British Museum logoThis AHRC funded PhD will support a student in researching the 45,000 or more Roman coins that have been recorded by the Portable Antiquities Scheme (www.finds.org.uk) since 1997. The Project will start at the end of September 2007 for three years. The successful candidate will develop and apply a range of research methods to the data and present a coherent analysis of the PAS finds against existing published material. The student will be based at the Institute of Archaeology and the British Museum where the Portable Antiquities Scheme is administered. Knowledge of and interest in Roman archaeology is important and candidates must be prepared to learn and apply statistical techniques. Applicants must be either UK residents (full studentship) or EU nationals (fees only).

They should normally have, or expect soon to be awarded, a Masters degree.

For further information, contact the project supervisors:

Kris Lockyear (k.lockyear@ucl.ac.uk) or Sam Moorhead (smoorhead@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk)

Information on Research Degrees at the Institute of Archaeology is available at: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/resstud/index.htm

Downloadable application forms are available from: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/prospective-students/graduate-study/application-admission

Applications are due by May 18th. Short-listed applicants will need to be available for interview on June 6th. Completed applications including proposed research design should be sent to:
Lisa Daniel,
Graduate Programme Administrator AHRC IOA/PAS PhD
Institute of Archaeology
University College London
31–34 Gordon Square
London WC1H 0PY
United Kingdom