Milecastle 38
Milecastle 38 was a milecastle on Hadrian's Wall in the vicinity of Hotbank Farm,. It is notable for the joint inscription bearing the names of the emperor Hadrian and Aulus Platorius Nepos, the governor of Britannia at the time the Wall was built.
Description
The site of Milecastle 38 is in the vicinity of Hotbank Farm, Little remains of the milecastle except rubble walls outlined by robber trenches.Excavations
The milecastle was excavated in 1935 and found to be east–west by north–south. It was found to have a short axis, with a Type I gateway. Pottery finds indicated an occupation of the 4th century. There was a rectangular building in the south-west corner and a causeway, wide, to the east. A tombstone was found, inscribed "...us.. xit annis... mensibus du...ebus quinque", re-used as a pivot stone in the south gateway.Inscription
Milecastle 38 is notable for the joint inscription bearing the names of the emperor Hadrian and Aulus Platorius Nepos, the governor of Britannia at the time the Wall was built. The left-hand part was found c. 1715 and the right-hand part was found in 1829.The stone reads:
The first two lines identifies the emperor Hadrian, the third the Legion - Legio secunda Augusta which erected the plaque, and the fourth the governor Aulus Platorius Nepos.