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Archaeologists in France have discovered dozens of Roman-era graves of men who were buried with "curse tablets," at least one of which was written in an extinct language.爱上海同城对对碰
Excavations underneath an 18th-century hospital in the town of Orléans, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) southwest of Paris, have revealed more than 60 burials arranged in a single row along a wall上海后花园论坛. The cemetery, which dates from the end of the first century to the beginning of the third century, was atypical for this time because the burials were dug in a row, there were no women or children, there were traces of painted wooden coffins, and there were no cremations. This could mean that the dead were from a particular group, such as members of the same profession, according to the Orléans Archaeology Service, which excavated the site.
Even more unusual was the discovery of 21 curse tablets, which are small, rolled-up lead plates with inscriptions on them.
Also known by the Latin term "defixiones," curse tablets have been found throughout the ancient Mediterranean world. These thin sheets of lead were used to talk to the gods. Someone would write down a curse or wish, pierce the tablet with a nail, and place it in the ground via a grave or well.
So far, experts have been able to study one of the tablets in detail, and they discovered that it contained an inscription in Gaulish, an extinct Celtic language.
Related: 1,800-year-old silver amulet could rewrite history of Christianity in the early Roman Empire
The man in grave F2199 was buried with a curse tablet between his legs, next to a crushed vase and several coins. After the tablet was recovered from the grave, an expert in restoration techniques chemically treated the thin lead plate to protect it from corrosion爱上海后花园. Then, photographs were taken using reflectance transformation imaging, which produced a clear image of the unrolled tablet上海新茶网. Additional experts then set to work deciphering the Latin cursive inscription and translating the Gaulish words.上海花千坊
Pierre-Yves Lambert, a Celtic linguistics expert with the French National Center for Scientific Research, has proposed that the F2199 curse tablet is dedicated to "Mars Rigisamu," which is Gaulish for "Mars the Royal," or the Roman god of war. The inscription names several people — in both Latin and Gaulish — to be targeted by the curse for their unjust actions.
While Gaulish continued to be used for several centuries after the Roman conquest of the area, it was seldom written down — so the curse tablets are already yielding important new examples of this vanished language.上海新茶资源
A second curse tablet has been subjected to X-ray tomography in an attempt to view the inside without unrolling it上海各区新茶工作室. The folded interior has been scanned, but the tablet has not been virtually unrolled yet.阿拉爱上海
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