A tabula ansata or tabella ansata (Latin for "tablet with handles", plural tabulae ansatae or tabellae ansatae) is a tablet with dovetailhandles.[1] It was a favorite form for votive tablets in Imperial Rome.[2]
Overview
Tabulae ansatae identifying soldiers' units have been found on the tegimenta (leather covers) of shields, for example in Vindonissa (Windisch, Switzerland).[3] Sculptural evidence, for example on the metopes from the Tropaeum Traiani (Adamclisi, Romania), shows that they were also used for the
same purpose on the shields.[4]
^
Tansey, Patrick (June 2008). "M. Titius, Menas and the insignia scutorum". Klio. Vol. 90, no. 1. Berlin: Akademie Verlag. pp. 68–70. doi:10.1524/klio.2008.0004.
^ abc
Barnard, Toby Christopher; Clark, Jane (1995). Lord Burlington: architecture, art and life. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 118–120. ISBN1-85285-094-9.
^Picirillo, Michele[in French] (2007). "Les mosaïques de la bande de Gaza". In Haldimann, Marc-André (ed.). Gaza à la croisée des civilisations: Contexte archéologique et historique. Chaman Edition. p. picture N°119. ISBN978-2-9700435-5-3.