, Ἀ]φροδ(ε)ισίου, on a tile at Corinth, or the maker’s name,

, Fαστουκρίτ[ου, on one from Thisbe in Boeotia.[[356]] Those found by M. Paris at Elateia have either the word

or

with the name of the magistrate; though all are fragmentary, it is possible to restore the full formula as πλίνθος δημοσία ἐπὶ Ἀπελλέα, “government bricks, in the year of Apelleas’ office.”[[357]] A remarkable tile or stele, found near Capua and now in the British Museum, has an inscription in Oscan, and two stamps of a boar and a head of Athena, resembling types on Italian coins of the early part of the third century.[[358]]

From Benndorf.