| Vespasianus Aug. | reverse, Judæa. A prisoner under a trophy |
| ———————— | pon. max. tr. p. cos. v. A caduceus. |
| Vesp. Aug. imp. Cæsar | pontif. maxim. A caduceus. |
| Imp. Cæs. Vesp. Aug. Cen. | pontif. max sedens cum hasta in dex. flore in læva |
| Vespasianus Cæsar | a sow and three pigs. imp. iii. |
| Imp. Cæs. Ner. Trajan optm. Aug. Ger. &c. | rev. p. m. tr. p. cos. S. p. q. r. A genius of plenty |
| Imp. Cæs. Nerva Trajan Aug. Germ. | pont. max. tr. pot. cos. ii. Genius sedens |
| Imp. Cæs. Nerva Trajan Aug. Germ. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iiii. p. f. A genius of plenty |
| Imp. Cæs. Trajan | p. m. tr. p. cos. ii. justitia. Genius sedens |
| Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. | S. p. q. r. opt. principi. Genius of plenty. |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. | cos. v. p. p. s. p. q. r. opt. princ. Genius cum pavone |
| Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. cos. ii. p. p. | S. p. q. r. optimo principi. Mars gradivus |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. cos. v. p. p. | S. p. q. r. optimo principi. Genius sacrificans |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. cos. vi. p. p. | S. p. q. r. optimo principi. Columna Trajana |
| ANTXAICNETPAIANOCCEBTEPM | 4 ΔΗΜΕΣ iiiii 0 0 |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. cos. v. p. p. | S. p. q. r. optimo principi. Genius cum bilance |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. cos. vi. p. p. | S. p. q. r. optimo principi. Genius cum puero |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger Dac. p. m. tr. p. | cos. vi. p. p. s. p. q. r. opt pr. Vesta sed. cum victoriola |
| Imp. Trajano Aug. Ger. Dac. p. m. tr. p. | cos. v. p. p. s. p. q. r. opt. pr. Genius stans cum prora |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. Genius cum caduceo |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. A female in the posture of imploring |
| Hadrianus Aug. cos. m. p. p. | salus Aug. Hygeia |
| Hadrianus Augustus | cos. iii. Genius armatus sedens |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. a genius with two bustos in her hands |
| Hadrianus Aug. cos. iii. p. p. | Africa Genia Nili procumbens |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. Genius sedens sacrificans |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. Fortuna sedens cum prora |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. Genius nudus sacrificans |
| Hadrianus Augustus | cos. iii. Hercules sedens cum victoriola |
| ————————— | ————Victoria sedens |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. Fortuna stans |
| Hadrianus Aug. cos. iii. p. p. | moneta Aug. Genius cum bilance |
| Imp. Cæsar Trajan Hadrianus Aug. | p. m. tr. p. cos. iii. salus. Hygeia sedens |
| ———————————————————— | —————Genius nudus sacrificans |
| Antoninus Augustus p. p. | reverse, cos. pulvinar cum fulmine |
| ælius Cæsar | tr. pot. cos. ii. Concord. victoria sedens |
| Faustina | Vesta pulvinar |
| Sabina Augusta | Concordia Aug. genia stans cum patera |
These being all of the higher empire, and many excellently well cut, indicate that they were hid early, and perhaps about this time, that the Watling-street was made: they were found in a hole in the fields between Loughborow and the Watling-street, with about a dozen more than here described.
Wickliff lived at Lutterworth, his picture in the parsonage. Mr. Button of Kimcote, near here, a curious man. Wickliff’s pulpit still left. A petrifying spring at Lutterworth.
[102] Magus rather signifies originally a field, or plain, and where probably the old Britons had their religious ceremonies, sports, and races, &c. the barrows too hereabout indicate here has been an ancient British temple, and I suppose the name of Long Meg and her daughters, at the British temple in Cumberland, only the remains of the original name Magus.
[103] In Speed’s History of England, p. 261. Maiden Bower by the sea-coast in Norfolk, where Hunstanton was built. This was undoubtedly a Roman camp there.
[104] At the same time and place, the king, and Bertuald archbishop of Canterbury, held a council and enacted canons.
K. Henry I. kept his court here, 1122. as Hen. Hunt says, p. 218. b.
[105] A brass Roman lar dug up about Grosvenor square (in possession of Mr. Beaupre Bell) near where the Roman road ran, the Watling-street.
[106] May place, west of Crayford, seems Noviomagus. Oct. 1722, many Roman coins found in an urn near Croydon.
[107] Rochester was a very strong place, and the water went quite round it.