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96| MANUAL OF ROMAN EVERYDAY WRITING                                                                      VOLUME 2:  WRITING EQUIMENT | 97

                                                                                          Archaeological evidence for separators is rare and it is assumed that
                                                                                          they were in most cases detachable and consequently lost but one
                                                                                          of the wax tablets excavated at the Bloomberg site in London has a
                                                                                          small rectangular separator in the centre which was fashioned from
                                                                                          the original surface and not separately (Tomlin 2016, 252–255).
                                                                                          Archaeological evidence for separators is known for both wax
                                                                                          tablets and ink tablets. Other examples for wax tablets were found
                                                                                          at Vindonissa (Switzerland), where the wooden separator measures
                                                                                          5.5 x 7 mm (Speidel 1996, 90–93 and 24); or in Herculaneum
                                                                                          (Italy), in this case a codex with eight pages (Marichal 1992b, 173
                                                                                          and fig. 2). An example for the use of separators with ink tablets
                                                                                          is a wooden book with three orations by Isocrates found in Kellis
                                                                                          (Dakhleh-Oasis, Egypt) and dating to the 4th century CE. In this
                                                                                          case, three separators made of leather were added after the tablets
                                                                                          were inscribed and distributed along the longer edges of each tablet
                                                                                          (Sharpe III 1992, e.g. fig. 14–21; Whitehorne 1996).






                Fig. 70: Stylus tablet WT87 from the Bloomberg site, London
                 (UK), with a separator retained from the original surface,
                65/70–90/95 CE. From Tomlin 2016, 255 fig. 135. © MOLA.


           Separators were used to keep the pages of writing tablets from
           damaging one another. These are small, roughly rectangular objects
           that were presumably mostly made of wood or leather, possibly
           also of bone (Božič and Feugère 2004, 24). They were added to the
           tablets of codices to protect the inscribed surfaces by keeping them
           apart. They were positioned in the centre of the tablet(s) or along                    Fig. 71: Label still in place on a 2nd-century papyrus,
           the edge (Fünfschilling 2012, 167).
                                                                                                showing the title of Bacchylides’ Dithyramboi. P.Oxy. VIII
           Such separators are depicted in frescos and mosaics (see e.g. Capasso                   1091. © The British Library, Papyrus 2056, f.001v.
           1992, fig. 3 and 4) and a 4th-century papyrus mentions tablets
           with a ξύλον μικρόν (small piece of wood) for this purpose in a list
           of objects the author of the letter asks his brother to purchase for
           him in Alexandria (P.Fouad. 74, see Marichal 1992b, 173).
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