From the Station (I think this find is in Luxembourg):

Following previous archaelogical discoveries at the Dalheim dig (see http://www.station.lu/newsDetails.cfm?id=21601, another artefact has been discovered.

The site of the former Gallo-Roman baths has now produced what is described as an "exceptional archaeological discovery". The National Museum of History and Art (MNHA), led by the young German archaeologist Heike Posch and overseen by the curator John Krier, has uncovered fragments of a large 1.3m high limestone altar. The discovery dates from the 3rd century AD and has a Latin inscription showing that the altar was dedicated to the goddess Fortuna.

The text over 10 lines mentions not only the people of Ricciacum vicus, but it also describes the return of the portico of the building baths, destroyed 'by violent barbarians', probably during an incursion by Germans. The curator of the work undertaken at that time was a soldier of the 8th Augusta legion stationed in Strasbourg.

The fragments have been transferred to the MNHA workshop in Bertrange where they will be restored.

Other major surprises are not excluded in further excavation work at the site.


... the link referenced in the article takes you to some more (brief) info about the Dalheim dig, which links to yet another (about a pedestal find). As for the inscription mention above, a photo (copyright MNHA) is included: