( 
fcript fent up by Dr. Hunter ^ and accordingly in pag, 
Sx6. the Fault is amended. And as the Name of 
cus (lands in the fame Place in the fecond as that of 
LucHianus does in the firft, and with the fame Ad- 
junds both before and after, we may fairly conclude 
he was either his I’redecedbr or Succeflbr, but which, 
it is impodible to determin. 
And here, perhaps, it may not be amUs to re- 
mark 5 w’e never meet with a Legatus Auguflalis in any 
Infcription in this llland, without the joint Title of 
Prepr^tor'-i and ’ Tacitus himfdf either makes them the 
fame Odice, or at lead unites them in the fame Perfon, 
when he tells us. In Britannia P. Ofiotium Propraio- 
rem turhida res excepere ; and having prefently after 
related the manner of the Fight with the keni, fliles 
him Legatiis, £lua pugna flius Legati^ P4. Oflorius, f:r- 
vati civis dtcus meruit ^ ; and a little after he gives both 
the fame Titles to A. Didius the SuccefTor of Oftorius. 
We are indebted therefore to thefe two Monuments, 
not only for the Account they have preferved of the 
Roman Arms and Magnificence at Longovicus, but for 
the indifputable Records of the Names of tw^'o Legates 
and Proprafors of Britain, that would otherwife have 
been buried in Oblivion, viz. Cneius LucHianus and Ma» 
cilius fufeus: For from Firius Lupus (who was Propra- 
tor and Legate here about the Year io8, under Seve~ 
rus, and juft before that Emperor’s coming into this 
Iftand repaired a Bath burnt down at Lavatroe, or 
Bovees ^ in Torkjhire) we have no where extant the 
Name of one of thofe Officers, till we come to Non-' 
nius Philippus, whom I take to have fucceeded the la ft 
of thefe ; the Stone which was found at Old Carlijte 
in 
’ Tac.Lih. Ann. XII. c. 32. * Ibid. c. 39. I Camd. p 762* 
Edit. < C*md. An'Mw.'p. 830^ 
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