Concangis

The discovery by Raymond Selkirk of an abutment on the Cong Burn suggests that a bridge had been built there and had connected this fort with the one at Vindomora (Ebchester) to the west.

Finds included pottery, fine table wares, coins, animal bones, a cheese press and curiously even a tile with a dog's footprint on it.

The large (3 out of 8) number of altars dedicated to patron deities concerned with the wellbeing of veteran soldiers would seem to suggest the inhabitants of Concangis included a high proportion of ex-military men.

[6] A construction inscription attests the Legio II Augusta as having built/rebuilt the fort, but as is usual this gives no evidence of who occupied it since Legionaries built only the fortifications and it was the Auxilia who garrisoned it.

An incomplete inscription mentions an Alae Antoninae (Antonine Wing), possibly on routine patrols and on restoration work on an aqueduct and latrines.