RT Article T1 The Latin Curses from Uley and Other Sanctuaries in Britain JF Religion in the Roman empire VO 7 IS 1 SP 19 OP 30 A1 Tomlin, Roger S. O. 1943- LA English PB Mohr Siebeck YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1767286651 AB Almost three hundred Roman curse tablets have been found in Britain, two-thirds of them from just two temple-sites, that of Sulis Minerva at Bath and of Mercury at Uley. With a few exceptions, they are Latin texts inscribed on lead, and the great majority are 'prayers for justice', petitions addressed to a god by the victims of wrongdoing, usually theft. The writer typically asks that the thief be punished and the stolen property returned: that is clothing, money and other valuables, which at Uley included farm animals such as cows and bees. Only 18 of the 86 tablets found at Uley have been fully published, but a complete corpus is in preparation, and to illustrate the editing process this paper concludes with the first page of an unpublished tablet prompted by the theft of a sheep. K1 Bath K1 Roman Britain K1 Roman curse tablets K1 Uley K1 gods petitioned in Latin K1 Theft DO 10.1628/rre-2021-0004