These two inscriptions probably date from the period when Julius Caesar was proconsul of Illyricum. Cyriac of Ancona recorded a similar inscription when he visited Lissus in 1436; see A.E. Cooley, "The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy", p. 364 ( Google Books ).
[765] L. Gaviarius L.f. T.n., augur, and C. Julius Meges, freedman of Caesar, duumviri quinquennales, took care of restoring the gate and the tower at public expense, in accordance with the decree of the decurions, and they acceptably completed it, at a cost of 3,500 sesterces.
[766] L. Gaviarius L.f. T.n., augur, and C. Julius Meges, freedman of Caesar, duumviri quinquennales, took care of restoring the walls, in accordance with the decree of the decurions, and they acceptably completed it, at a cost of 4,200 sesterces.
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