The Chronicle

Our first named sailor NORTHUMBER­LAND EVENTS:

INCREDIBLE FIND CHARTS CAREER OF NORTH EAST SEAFARER

- By TONY HENDERSON tony.henderson@ncjmedia.com @hendrover

Environmen­t editor THE North East has a proud tradition of seafaring and naval service – and a metal detectoris­t’s stunning find has just back dated that by almost 2,000 years.

A Roman fleet diploma, detailing the 26-year naval career of its holder, was found on land near Lanchester Roman fort in County Durham by Mark Houston.

The individual who was presented with the copper alloy diploma on his honourable retirement is Britain’s first named sailor.

And the find is the first complete fleet diploma to be discovered in this country.

On July 20 the diploma will be unveiled in Durham City as part of the National Festival of Archaeolog­y.

It will go on show at Durham University’s Museum of Archaeolog­y in Palace Green library.

It records how the holder, named Tigernos, served in the Classis Germanica – the Roman fleet in Germany.

How a young man, from what is now County Durham, came to spent a large chunk of his life on Roman ships in Germany, is one of the intriguing questions raised by the discovery – as is the sort of reception he received on returning 26 years later.

When issued around AD150 by the Emperor Antonius Pius, the diploma would have consisted of two rectangula­r bronze plates which were attached together with metal wires.

Inside would be details such as the career record of the holder, who he served under and what he did, while on the outside was a summary with a list of witnesses. This diploma lists seven witnesses.

Similar diplomas were issued to Roman soldiers after 25 years of army service. JULY 15-16: St Cuthbert’s Land, a living history group based in the North East, are at Bamburgh Castle with a living encampment and demonstrat­ions including cooking and warfare. July 15: Archaeolog­ist Paul Frodsham will lead a walk up the “sacred mountain” of Simonside above Rothbury from Lordenshaw­s car park. To book, email: altogether­archaeolog­y@gmail.com

They granted the holder and his children Roman citizenshi­p and the legal right of marriage.

Pieces would be broken off and given to the children to prove their rights, which is why finding July 26: 7.30pm-9pm. Cresswell village hall, archaeolog­ist Barry Mead will give an illustrate­d talk on the recent community archaeolog­y project linked to the village’s 15th Century pele tower. July 30: 11am-4pm. Explore the Rothbury training trenches constructe­d by the 18th Battalion Northumber­land Fusiliers in 1915. Shuttle bus will run from Haugh Car Park, Whitton Bank Road, Rothbury. complete examples is so rare.

The diploma granted to Tigernos was found stacked in eight pieces. It has been undergoing conservati­on treatment and research by Dr Roger Tomlin from Oxford University.

The name Tigernos means “king” or “master” and his father is referred to as Magiotiger­nus, which means “great master”.

This raises the possibilit­y, says Museum of Archaeolog­y curator Gemma Lewis, that father and son were high status individual­s in Roman Lanchester.

As such, Tigernos would have been ideal material to be ‘Romanised’ and given a military posting to serve the empire.

“Fleet diplomas are exceptiona­lly rare in the Roman empire. They would have been very valuable to their holders, and this one is fascinatin­g,” said Gemma.

The National Festival of Archaeolog­y, coordinate­d by the Council for British Archaeolog­y, runs from July 15-30.

On July 20 at the Durham museum, there will be a series of short public talks on the diploma and its history. Other festival events include on July 15 from 11am-2pm a finds session in which people can bring objects along for identifica­tion and on July 29 from 11am-3pm the Roma Antiqua re-enactment group will demonstrat­e the lives and skills of Roman soldiers.

 ??  ?? Images of the Roman fleet diploma before conservati­on treatment
Images of the Roman fleet diploma before conservati­on treatment
 ??  ?? A graphic which will feature in the Museum of Archaeolog­y display of the Roman fleet
A graphic which will feature in the Museum of Archaeolog­y display of the Roman fleet
 ??  ?? Images of the Roman fleet diploma before conservati­on treatment
Images of the Roman fleet diploma before conservati­on treatment

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom