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Roman Altar, Keswick  
Museum 
   
Feb. 10. 
  
Mr. URBAN, 
  
BEING at Keswick in the course of last autumn, I went to  
inspect the natural and artificial curiosities which have  
been collected by Crosthwaite and Hutton, (Guides to the  
Lakes,) and which form their separate museums. - At the  
house of the latter I observed a Roman altar, which, he  
informed me, he had recently purchased. It is about a year  
since it was observed in Cumberland, at Plimpton wall, upon  
the remains of the fort Petriana, now called Castle Steeds. 
  
In an abstract which Hutton shewed me from West's Guide to  
the Lakes, this spot is thus described, p.149: 
  
"The Castrum is 168 paces from South to North, but 110  
within the Foss, which was also surrounded by a stone wall:  
the stones have been removed to the fence wall, and the  
fence side, being in Plimpton, is called Plimpton wall. The  
station is a vast heap of ruins of stone buildings, the  
walls of great thickness, and cemented. The town has  
surrounded the station, except on the side of the Pitteral." 
  
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