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 It is rare to find Roman pens of any material. Reed pens are only
 rarely preserved, mainly in Egypt (see e.g. Swift 2017), and one was
 found in a cremation grave in Intercisa-Dunapentele (Hungary,
 Bilkei 1980, 81 no. 110 with pl. II.110). Metal pens seem to have
 been rare in general, and they are often preserved as small tubes,
 so they are easily overlooked. Moreover, tube-shaped metal cases
 for pens and styli are known and can be virtually indistinguishable
 from pens (Fünfschilling 2012, 185). Copper-alloy pens have been
 found in urban and military sites and in funerary contexts, mainly
 from Italy, Switzerland, Germany and Britain (Božič 2001b, 28).  Fig. 22: A Vindolanda-type pen with spiral nib from
                      Vindolanda, 97–105 CE. © Vindolanda Trust.
 Pens could be carried in leather cases together with inkwells and
 sometimes with styli (theca calamaria).


           Further reading and images:
           Božič 2001b; Božič and Feugère 2004, 34–35, 37; Eckardt 2018, 27–29; Jilek
           2000; Swift 2017

           Also see: fig. 2 (Pompeii still lifes); fig. 12 (S. Egidio); fig. 15 (Codex Amiatinus).



           Selected ancient literary evidence:

           Cicero (Q. fr. 2.14 [15b].1) promises his brother that he will use a good
           pen, well-mixed ink and fine paper (charta) this time because Quintus
           complained that he could hardly read his last letter. Persius (Sat. 3.10–20)
           has a hungover student lament a bad-quality pen that creates a mess on
           the parchment. Quintilian (Inst. or. 10.3.31) says that having to dip the pen
           into the ink interrupts the flow of the thoughts. Martial (14.38) praises
           the quality of Egyptian reed for pens. Symphosius wrote a riddle about the
           ink pen (Aenigmata 2).
 Fig. 21: A selection of metal inkpens from Germany and Italy
 (1: Butzbach, 2: Mainz, 3: Mainz-Weisenau, 4: Bingen, 5:
 Aosta). From Fünfschilling 2012, 178 fig. 16 (1: Römisch-
 Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz, inv. O.6846, photo by
 René Müller; 2–4: after Lindenschmit 1911, pl. 53,985–987;
 5: after Božič 2001b, 28), courtesy of Augusta Raurica.
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