The curse tablets are a group of over 130 pieces of lead, many of which are inscribed with prayers to the goddess Sulis Minerva The curse tablets were found during excavations of the Sacred Spring - now known as the King’s Bath - in 1979-80. They are an extremely significant part of The Roman Baths’ collection and were added to the UNESCO Memory of the World register in 2014 due to the unique perspective they give into the lives of ordinary people in Roman Britain.
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A view over the Sacred Spring where the tablets were found. |
Who wrote the curse tablets?
Britannia was a province rather than a formal part of the Roman Empire; it had been conquered but did not follow all of the same administrative and legal procedures as the rest of the empire. This also meant that the people living there were not considered to be Roman citizens in the eyes of the law. The majority of people in the provinces held the status of peregrinus, which meant that they were free people (i.e. not enslaved) but did not have the same legal rights as citizens.
Magistrates were busy and would only consider complaints
brought by citizens, and would often favour those involving land ownership or
business contracts. There was no equivalent of a police force to solve small
crimes like theft.
Some peregrini in Britannia may not have been able to
write or speak Latin fluently, further excluding them from legal processes as
trials, contracts and paperwork were all in Latin. People may have known enough
Latin to get by and conduct business, but the majority would not have received
a full formal education like a wealthy Roman citizen.
But what are the clues in the tablets that show us that they
were written by people of lower social status?
Stolen Possessions
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In this tablet, a man called Docilianus says that his cloak has been stolen and asks the goddess to punish the thief with death and insomnia. |
This pattern of low value personal items and harsh
punishments speaks to the anger of the people writing the tablets, suggesting
that they may not have had the money to easily replace the stolen items.
Language and handwriting
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The writing on this tablet uses the Latin alphabet but makes no sense, there are no recognisable Latin words. This has led researchers to believe it may be written in a local British language. |
The inscribed tablets are mostly written in Latin but some
of them include unusual spelling or grammar. On many tablets, the writing is
uneven, and the letters are not uniform in shape or size. These features
indicate that the writers may not have been formally educated in Latin and did
not write very often.
Two of the tablets (one is shown above) are thought to have
been written in the writer’s native local British language but using the Latin
alphabet. They have not been translated as local British languages were not
usually written down at this time.
Illiteracy
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The many scratches
on this tablet may have been made by someone who was illiterate but still
wanted to express their anger. The process of making the marks may have been
cathartic. |
Not all of the tablets are inscribed, some are completely
blank while others (like the one above) have only repetitive scratches. These
tablets have been interpreted as prayers offered to the goddess by people who
were illiterate. They may have spoken their prayer aloud or thought it
privately before throwing their tablet in the spring as part of a symbolic
ritual. This could suggest that the intention behind depositing the tablet was
more important that the actual act of writing the prayer.
Why did people write curse tablets?
As mentioned, the majority of people in Aquae Sulis at the
time the tablets were written would have been peregrini, and did not
have any way of requesting help from legal powers like magistrates. Instead, they
turned to Sulis Minerva as a source of justice.
It is not clear how deeply people believed in the powers of
the goddess to return their stolen possessions or punish thieves, but this was
one of the only ways they had to seek justice. The presence of so many tablets demonstrate
the frustration of lower status people in Roman Aquae Sulis and gives us an
idea of how difficult it was to be excluded from the Roman legal system.
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