[2503]. Ibid. 1222 (in B.M.); others from Brecon and Abergavenny.
[2504]. C.I.L. vii. 1225.
[2505]. The inscribed tiles found in Rome have been collected and published by Dressel in vol. xv. (part 1, Nos. 1-2155) of the Corpus Inscr. Lat. Others are published in the other volumes under the heading “Instrumentum Domesticum.” In the succeeding pages Dressel’s account has been mainly followed.
[2506]. See Hübner, Exempla Script. Epigr. Lat. p. lxviii.
[2507]. C.I.L. xv. 19-29; 209, 1145; 709; 1212; 398.
[2508]. Cat. of Terracottas, E 148-49.
[2509]. Opus doliare is the invariable word for bricks or tiles in Roman inscriptions, figlinum being confined to pottery of the finer kind (cf. p. [330]).
[2510]. Cassiodorus, Variar. i. 25: cf. ii. 23.
[2511]. C.I.L. xv. 1668-70.
[2512]. Cf. C.I.L. xv. p. 204, Nos. 1616, 1627, etc.