Vindolanda Tablets Online Tablets Exhibition Reference Help

Writing tablets - forms and technology

Vindolanda and its setting

History

Forts and military life

People

Documents

Writing tablets - forms and technology

Writing instruments and equipment

The use and formats of writing tablets

Other documents at Vindolanda

Clerks, Latin and education

Reading the tablets

about this exhibition

Stylus tablet 836 with the wax preserved, showing the letters incised in the wax

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Image details:

Stylus tablet 836 with the wax preserved, showing the letters incised in the wax

Image ownership:

© CSAD

Stylus tablet 836 with the wax removed after conservation, with traces of letters incised in the wood

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Image details:

Stylus tablet 836 with the wax removed after conservation, with traces of letters incised in the wood

Image ownership:

© CSAD

One of the most important aspects of the Vindolanda writing tablets is their contribution to our knowledge of writing and writing materials in the Roman world. Before the discoveries at Vindolanda stylus tablets (which also survive at the fort) were considered to be the main type of wooden writing tablet. These are wooden rectangular panels, the size of large postcards. The panels are recessed to carry a layer of wax a few millimetres deep. On this wax layer writing was incised with the point of a stylus (also spelt stilus). The wax could be smoothed to correct mistakes or to erase the whole text, allowing re-use of the tablet. Wax rarely survives, but traces of the writing were often left in the wood beneath by the stylus point. Stylus tablets were often made of tree species not native to Britain at this time, including silver fir and occasionally cedar. Books of writing tablets were probably imported as goods in their own right.

Ink tablets

A near complete diptych, a letter inviting its recipient Lepidina, to a birthday party.

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Image details:

A near complete diptych, a letter inviting its recipient Lepidina, to a birthday party.

Image ownership:

© CSAD

Most of the Vindolanda tablets are however quite different. They are thin leaves of wood, normally less than 1mm thick and about 20cm wide by 9 cm long, the size of a large postcard. The tablets were cut from the sapwood of young trees with a very sharp knife, a technique perhaps related to making wooden veneers for furniture. Their smooth surface may have been prepared to take writing in ink. Texts were written with a pen, using ink made from carbon, gum arabic and water. Tablets were usually folded once the text was written, so that the writing on the inner faces was protected. Sometimes the wet ink produced offsets on the facing surfaces (343). Despite their absence from the archaeological record before the Vindolanda discoveries, there is evidence that such tablets were well known in the Roman world. The third century historian Herodian, describing the death of the emperor Commodus (AD 180-192) noted that the assassination was caused by the discovery that the emperor had made a list of proscribed persons, 'taking a writing-tablet of the kind that were made from lime-wood, cut into thin sheets and folded face-to-face by being bent.' Discoveries since Vindolanda, for example at Carlisle, show that these tablets were in wide use. The Vindolanda tablets were not made from lime wood but from birch, alder and oak. They could therefore be cheaply and easily produced from local growing trees.

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