driving a
chariot. Two other helmets were discovered in the same pit (Pit XXII) as the iron helmet with a face mask described above, and a bronze visor-mask was found in a pit in the bath buildings: • An ornately decorated bronze helmet, with a design embossed in relief on one side showing a naked winged figure of
Cupid driving a chariot pulled by a pair of leopards, while on the other side another winged figure, probably personifying
Victory, holds what may be a
palm branch in one hand and the leopards' harness in the other hand. It is probable that it would have originally been fitted with a face visor, but this is missing. On the rim at the back of the helmet is a punctured inscription of eight letters punched into the metal. The first four letters of the inscription are uncertain, but the last four letters read "TGES", which may stand for
T[urmae] ("of the troop") followed by the name the commander of the troop, which is a formula found elsewhere. • A plain iron legionary helmet with two hinged cheek pieces. • A bronze visor-mask showing a youthful, beardless face with curly locks of hair. There is a hole beneath each ear, which may have been used to attach the mask to a helmet. ==References==