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 some cases, writing on the rim of tablets (Speidel 1996, 17) suggests   Wax tablets were used all over the empire but, as is the case with
 that they were stored together with others, for example on a pile,   leaf tablets, they are only preserved under specific circumstances
 with the label making it easier to find the document needed.  (Hartmann 2015). They are sturdier than leaf tablets and preserved
           more widely but may in fact have been used less commonly. Important
 When the tablets contained an important document, for example a   find spots represent the conditions required for preservation. In
 contract, they could be sealed (Speidel 1996, 22–23). To this end,   Vindonissa (Switzerland), more than 600 tablets dating to 30–101
 a strip was carved out down the middle of the back of one of the   CE were found in a rubbish dump outside the legionary camp,
 tablets to receive the seals. The names of the witnesses were written   which also yielded numerous styli (Speidel 1996). To date this
 in ink on either side of the seals. The seals protected the original   is the largest number of stylus tablets found at one site. In the
 text (scriptura interior) but a copy was written on another part   moist soil of London, more than 400 tablets were preserved and
 of the diptych/triptych which could be read at any time (scriptura   now called the Bloomberg tablets after the excavation site. These
 exterior). It is unclear to what extent seal boxes were used to seal   letters, legal documents, accounts etc. date roughly to the period
 wax tablets, if at all.
           between 50–80 CE but include examples from the very beginning
           of Roman rule in Britain (Tomlin 2016). Other large finds include
           tablets from the Vesuvian sites, in particular the dossier of the
           banker L. Caecilius Iucundus (153 tablets) and the documents of
           the Sulpicii, around 350 tablets relating to the affairs of a bank in
           Puteoli that were found in a villa near Murécine in a wicker basket
           (Camodeca 1999). About 25 tablets containing mainly purchasing
           contracts from the mid-2nd century CE survive from a group of
           50 found in the 18th and 19th century in the ancient goldmines of
           Alburnus Maior (Romania, CIL III p. 913–958; Pólay 1982). There
           are also hundreds of examples from Vindolanda, dozens of which
           have traces of writing which are currently being investigated.

           Unlike leaf tablets, wax tablets found in the northwestern provinces
           were usually imported from the circum-Alpine area as the analysis
           of the wood they were made of shows (often silver fir, see Häussler
           and Pearce 2007, 225). For the Bloomberg tablets it has however
           been suggested that they were also made by recycling barrels and
           casks (Tomlin 2016). One funerary inscription from Rome is thought
           to be that of the only known producer of wax tablets, M. Caecilius
 Fig. 31: Schematic reconstructions of a diptychon used as a   Hilarus, a pugillariarius (CIL VI 9841).
 letter (left) and of a sealed triptychon, e.g. a contract (right).
 From Tomlin 2016, 22 fig. 14; 24 fig. 17 right. © MOLA.  There seem to have been special leather-cases for tablets and
           depictions show them being carried with a sort of sling.
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