One of the best Roman finds ever made in Britain, the
Corbridge Lanx, was discovered on the banks of the Tyne by a nine-year-old girl
nearly three centuries ago. Corbridge was a major Roman garrison town, of
course, and there is an English Heritage archaeological site and museum there
today. The item was, and still is, in remarkably good condition, and, despite
the passage of time, still cannot be properly explained…
The extraordinary silver artefact was found in February 1735
by Isabel Cutter, the daughter of a local cobbler, who stumbled upon it whilst
playing on the banks of the Tyne near the town. Eager to cash in, her father
sold it on to a Newcastle silversmith – but the lord of the manor of Corbridge,
the Duke of Somerset, recovered it soon afterwards as treasure trove. It then
found its way to the Duke of Northumberland, and eventually, in 1993, into the
care of the British Museum, where it remains today. It measures 50cm by 38cm and comes in at a
weighty 4.6kg. ‘Lanx’ is Latin for ‘dish’ or ‘tray’, so what we have here is a
Roman serving platter.
Other than that, though, we know little else. For one thing,
no one has been able to definitively explain its adornments. It is probably 4th
century and is likely to have been imported from the Mediterranean … or Asia
Minor … or North Africa. The figures upon it are mythological, showing the god
Apollo (naked) at the entrance to a shrine. Artemis (Diana), his sister, is
entering from the left, and she is being greeted by Athena (Minerva). The other
two figures have not been properly identified, but could be Leto (sitting) and
Ephesos. Or even Juno. Or perhaps Vesta.
There used to be (and I assume there still is) a replica of
the lanx at Corbridge Roman Town Museum.
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