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44| MANUAL OF ROMAN EVERYDAY WRITING  VOLUME 2:  WRITING EQUIMENT | 45

 Brushholders or brushes are mainly identified through the context
 in which they were found. For example two brushes were found
 in the so-called painter’s grave in St-Médard-des-Prés (France)
 with various vessels containing what was interpreted as paint,   5.2 Main materials for writing on
 tools and other objects thought to have belonged to a painter when   and document types
 excavated in the 19th century. In this case, the bristles seem to have
 been attached to the metal shaft with a copper wire (Fünfschilling
 2012, 180).  Ink tablet/leaf tablet (tilia)
           Roman ink tablets were made of wood using various techniques.
           The best-known kind are wooden leaf tablets made of thin shavings
 Further reading:  of wood (Bowman and Thomas 1983). Most are less than 3 mm
           thick and roughly comparable in size to a modern postcard, but
 Fünfschilling 2012, 180–181; Humphreys 2021, 208-10; Raux and Widehen 2015
           some are quite a bit larger and can, for example, measure 25 cm in
           length. Texts are sometimes written across, sometimes along, the
           grain. They were often folded down the centre to form a diptych.
 Selected ancient literary evidence:
 The use of the brush is not mentioned in the context of writing in Latin
 literature. Pliny the Elder (NH 9.148) mentions sponges used as brushes
 and (NH 28.235) a remedy for burns made from the bristles of plasterers’
 brushes; Cicero (Q. fr. 2.13.2) uses painting with a brush as a metaphor for
 literary description.








             Fig. 25: Example of a leaf tablet used for a letter. From Bowman and
            Thomas 1983, 38 fig. 6. © Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.

           Leaf tablets were the papyrus of the northwestern provinces. They
           were used for ephemeral texts such as notes, drafts and private
           administration but also for personal letters. In the case of letters,
           the tablet was usually oriented horizontally and the text was written
           along the grain in two columns. The tablet was folded and the address
           of the recipient was written on the outside. Leaf tablets could also
           be tied together to be read in a concertina format; some preserve
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