St Germanus met a vir tribuniciae potestatis in Britain, 429; suggestive of continued Roman-style social structure?https://twitter.com/PeritiaEditors/status/891921404505059328 …
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See also Maglos the Magistrate on an E6thC Penmachno stone? https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AK_yn7Q3_x0C&lpg=PA178&pg=PA178#v=onepage&q&f=false … (pic=http://voffway.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/voff-way-llan-ffestiniog-to-blaenau.html?m=1 …)pic.twitter.com/xDENwgZEkp
Similarly, another Penmachno stone has consular dating prob referring to Justin II, 567–79... http://www.caitlingreen.org/2016/04/heptarchy-harun-ibn-yahya.html?m=1 …pic.twitter.com/Dfz6I2NknA
Also a potential case for degree of admin continuity in the east of 5thC Britain too, fwiw: http://www.caitlingreen.org/2014/10/post-roman-provinces-landscape.html …pic.twitter.com/mz8gmILzgN
See further the following on a British polity based at the former Roman provincial capital of Lincoln into the 6thC:https://twitter.com/caitlinrgreen/status/759698675996037120 …
See also this on Romano-British pottery in the 5th–6thC Lincoln region and the post-Roman church in Lincoln's forum: http://www.caitlingreen.org/2016/06/romano-british-pottery-fifth-century-lincoln.html …pic.twitter.com/Bx2tGEtAEl
Fwiw, see further my Britons & Anglo-Saxons (2012) on the evidence from the 'post-Roman' Lincoln region :)https://www.academia.edu/9111908/Britons_and_Anglo-Saxons_Lincolnshire_AD_400-650_Studies_in_the_History_of_Lincolnshire_3_2012 …
Are you working on a book or documentary about this? I would love to have it all in one piece.
Thanks! :) It's one of the things in the works, along w/ a few other bits too! My PhD was on this area, so it's one of my major interests :)
Sub-Roman inscribed stones always make my day
They're fab! :)
I try to see them whenever I can but most are so damn remote!
So Roman titles were still being used over a century after the Legions left? Roman iconography remained an enduring symbol of power it seems
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