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 Lead and other metal tablets

 Thin sheets of soft metal were inscribed with styli and used for
 a variety of texts, mostly of a non-official nature, when a more
 durable support was needed. The sheets could easily be cut to any
 desired size and shape, folded or rolled for transport, storage or
 deposition and pierced for display or attaching.

 Lead is the metal most commonly used for handwriting (Božič and
 Feugère 2004, 25–29). Most notably it was used for curse tablets
 (defixiones), not only in Roman times but already in classical Greece.
 Such tablets were used, for example, to demand justice following
 a theft or to curse professional opponents or rivals in love. Curse
 tablets are usually rectangular or square and of varying size, with
 lengths mostly around 10 cm but ranging anywhere from 3–4 cm
 up to nearly 30 cm. The texts often invoke deities of the underworld
 and can contain spells and magical phrases now incomprehensible.





              Fig. 39: Roman lead tag from Kempten (Germany) reading Scitos
              Biraci / sag(um) (denarios) VII (‘Kept for(?) Scitos, son of Biracus,
               soldier’s cloak, 7 Denarii’). Archäologische Sammlung der Stadt
               Kempten, inv. 1953, 98. © Archäologischer Park Cambodunum.

           The tablets are usually found in places suitable for a message to
           the relevant deities such as sanctuaries, graves or bodies of water.
           Dozens of such tablets were found in the temple of Sulis Minerva in
           Bath and the sanctuary of Mercury in Uley in the UK (Tomlin 1988,
           1993), another important find spot for Roman curse tablets is the Isis
           and Magna Mater temple in Mainz (Germany, see Blänsdorf 2012).

           A more mundane use of metal as a support for handwriting are tags
           that were used to label a variety of objects as personal property
           or to record amounts and contents (Frei–Stolba 2011). Lead tags
 Fig. 38: Roman curse tablet from Bath (UK). RIB 154, The   are usually small and of rectangular shape (c. 1–2 x 2–4 cm) and
 Roman Baths, Bath, accession no. batrm 1983.14.b.1. ©   have a hole on one end for attachment. They are often inscribed on
 Roman Baths, Bath & North East Somerset Council.  both sides and were sometimes reused, resulting in superimposed
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