NEW ORLEANS
By JACK BROOKAssociated Press/Report for America
A family cleaning their backyard in New Orleans discovered an unusual marble tablet with some characters in Latin. Daniella Santoro turned to an archaeologist friend for help. ย It turns out to be a grave marker for a 42-year-old Roman sailor named Sextus Congenius Verus, who died 1,900 years ago. The tablet had been held at a museum in the seaside town of Civitavecchia that was destroyed during World War II. That’s where the grandfather of the home’s previous owner was stationed, and fell in love. The couple apparently brought the tablet from Italy after the war. Now the FBI is in talks with Italian authorities to repatriate the tablet.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) โ A New Orleans family cleaning up their overgrown backyard made an extremely unusual find: Under the weeds was a mysterious marble tablet with Latin characters that included the phrase โspirits of the dead."
โThe fact that it was in Latin that really just gave us pause, right?โ said Daniella Santoro, a Tulane University anthropologist. โI mean, you see something like that and you say, โOkay, this is not an ordinary thing.โโ
Intrigued and slightly alarmed, Santoro reached out to her classical archaeologist colleague Susann Lusnia, who quickly realized that the slab was the 1,900-year-old grave marker of a Roman sailor named Sextus Congenius Verus.
โWhen I first saw the image that Daniella sent me, it really did send a shiver up my spine because I was just floored,โ Lusnia said.
Further sleuthing by Lusnia revealed the tablet had been missing from an Italian museum for decades.
Sextus Congenius Verus had died at age 42, of unknown causes, after serving for more than two decades in the imperial navy on a ship named for the Roman god of medicine, Asclepius. The gravestone calls the sailor โwell deserving" and was commissioned by two people described as his โheirs," who were likely shipmates since Roman military could not be married at the time, Lusnia said.
The tablet had been in an ancient cemetery of around 20 graves of military personnel, found in the 1860s in Civitavecchia, a seaside in northwest Italy about 30 miles (48 kilometers) from Rome. Its text had been recorded in 1910 and included in a catalog of Latin inscriptions, which noted the tabletโs whereabouts were unknown.
The tablet was later documented at the National Archeological Museum in Civitavecchia prior to World War II. But the museum had been โpretty much destroyedโ during Allied bombing and took several decades to rebuild, Lusnia said. Museum staff confirmed to Lusnia the tablet had been missing for decades. Its recorded measurements โ 1 square foot (0.09 square meters) and 1 inch (2.5 centimeters) thick โ matched the size of the tablet found in Santoroโs backyard.
โYou canโt have better DNA than that,โ Lusnia said.
She said the FBI is in talks with Italian authorities to repatriate the tablet. An FBI spokesperson said the agency could not respond to requests for comment during the government shutdown.
A final twist to the story suggests how the tablet made its way to New Orleans.
As media reports of the find began circulating this week, Erin Scott OโBrien says her ex-husband called her and told her to watch the news. She immediately recognized the hunk of marble, which she had always seen as a โcool-ass piece of art.โ They had used as a garden decoration and then forgot about it before selling the home to Santoro in 2018.
โNone of us knew what it was,โ OโBrien said. โWe were watching the video, just like in shock.โ
OโBrien said she received the tablet from her grandparents โ an Italian woman and a New Orleans native who was stationed in the country during World War II.
Perhaps no one would be more thrilled by the tabletโs rediscovery than Sextus himself. Grave markers were important in Roman culture to uphold legacies, even of everyday citizens, Lusnia said.
โNow Sextus Congenius Verus is being talked about so much,โ Lusnia said. โIf thereโs an afterlife and heโs in it and he knows, heโs very happy because this is what a Roman wants โ to be remembered forever.โ
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Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.