At Tabard Square, Roman Londoners left their mark in more ways than one:
A marble inscription names the people of London for the first time.
A small pot of face cream still holds the fingerprint of the person who last used it.
And part of a bronze statue, just a foot, hints at a much larger figure that once stood within the temple complex.
Awarded the London Archaeological Prize ten years ago, Temples and Suburbs: Excavations at Tabard Square, Southwark presents the excavation of a remarkable site in Roman Southwark, reconstructing a ritual landscape on the edge of Londinium.
Published as a PCA monograph.
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