238 NOTES ON LATIN INSCRIPTIONS FOUND IN BRITAIN. 
c[urante] Junia. In support of this it may be added that the Junia 
gens was common amongst the Spaniards, whence we may assume that 
IVNIA was an ordinary female name amongst them.—Reinesius 
Syntag, p. 137. 
42. In p. 15, the stone is figured on which is the inscription given 
by Horsley, Brit. Rom., Lincolnshire, n. 1 :— 
DIS MNIBVS 
NOMINI SACRI 
BRVSCI-FNI CIVIS 
SENONI:H CARSS 
NAE CONIVGIS 
see ae RG ee se oe 
“ The memorial has been thus read :— 
DIS MANIBVS 
NOMINA (or NOMINIT) SACRI 
BRVSCI FILI CIVIS 
SENONII ET CARISS 
IMAE CONIVGIS 
EIVS ET QVINTI F. 
“The slab is broken off just below the last line [marked by asterisks], and the 
inscription may be imperfect.” 
Mr. Ward read the four middle lines: Nominii Sacri Brusecifili 
civis Senonii et charissime Vanie conjugis. 
Horsley gives the expansion: “ Dis Manibus Nominii Sacri Brusci- 
fili civis Senonii et carissimee Vaniee conjugis ejus et Quintiz.” 
Gough (Camden’s Britannia, i. p. 374) offers the astonishing note 
—that the first word in the fourth line “ ay well be read 
LINCOLNI as SENONI.” 
I am inclined to suggest the reading: Diis Manibus Nominit Sacri 
Brusci filii, civis Senonii, et carissime conjugis, Lucii Quinti filie. 
This is favoured by the appearance of the remaining portions of the 
letters as given in the woodcut, but it may be LVCIE [scil. E for 
AE] QVINTI F[ILIAE], a reading which is recommended by having 
the name of the conjuz. 
43. In p. 17, the inscription on the grave=stone presented by Mr. 
Arthur Trollope to the British Museum, in 1853, is noticed :— 
