RECENT ARCH-EOLOGICAL DISCO VEEIES IN CORNWALL. 261 



We have treated of the following : — 

 Eoman Camp, No. 1 (Tregaer) its relics and probable supports, 



in Central-East Cornwall. 

 Eoman Camp, No. 2 (Bossens) its relics and probable supports, 



in Central- West Cornwall. 



Also some other Forts, probably Eoman. 



The Eoman Station (by Padstow) its relics, &c. 



Next : — The Imperial Eoman Inscribed Stones must be examined 

 in detail. 

 Whether they were miliary or were merely proclamatory we 

 shall have to consider ; also, whether the first discovered, which 

 now stands at St. Hilary, is inscribed to Constantino I or II, and 

 what really is its correct reading. 



I have specially visited it, with this object in view, and have 

 succeeded* in obtaining some important elucidations of letters 

 hitherto regarded as doubtful. 



There is nothing uncertain about the lettering of the one I 

 have found at Tintagel, but in some respects the stone and its 

 associations are so remarkable that special space must be devoted 

 to a consideration of them. 



The present paper has already exceeded ordinary limits, 

 therefore I will defer, for a subsequent issue, my description of 

 the :— 



Eoman, 



Eomano-British, 



Anglo-Saxon, ^ Inscriptions, &c, 



Norman and other 

 Medieval 

 which I hoped to have been able to include here. 



Before closing, however, I will just quote the lettering which 

 I have succeeded in deciphering on : — 



(A) The Tintagel Eoman Stone. 



(B) The Pendarves Anglo-Saxon Altar-Slab. 



* By means of rubbings, casts, nocturnal lamp-light variously applied, and 

 other means ; — the Vicar of St. Hilary, Rev. S. Kingsford, and the members of 

 his family kindly co-operating with me. Mr. Arthur J. Langdon had previously 

 placed in my hands a very successful rubbing, which he, with more than ordinary 

 skill, took of the lettering ; this also I have found very helpful. 



