The first remains of the Roman city of Ipolcobulcula in the municipality of Carcabuey, Córdoba (Andalusia) are found.

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In spite of the debates, the toponym Ipolcobulcula is the most accepted to denominate the site -the gentilicio of Carcabuey is carcabulense-, since this would prove it so diverse epigraphic findings. The most outstanding is a funerary inscription found some time ago during a work in Carcabuey dedicated to a certain Fortunatus, a public slave belonging, precisely, to Ipolcobulcula. As different authors explain, rarely a person with this status would be far from the city he served, so the toponym that appears in the inscription must refer to the place where he was. The tombstone, in addition, showed the legal status of municipium of the settlement, it is believed that from the Flavian period as with many other Hispanic nuclei.


After its abandonment, the enclosure was filled by an "interesting" statigraphic package from which ceramic fragments corresponding to plates and skylights have been recovered, which experts date to the first century AD, during the reign of Claudius.

Once the deposit was amortized, its southern wall served to delimit a subway or semi-subterranean space, historians explain in light of the remains found during the small tastings.Among the remains, there are numerous ceramic remains corresponding to different types of vessels, although what most attracted attention was the finding of five loom weights together with two disk-shaped ceramic fragments that could be linked to textile work.

To these elements should be added a piece that archaeologists consider "of great interest": an adult deer antler or candlestick with six points. Reduced to numerous fragments, it would be preserved complete. As a hypothesis, the archaeologists consider the finding "an element of discarded or interrupted work, linked to the elaboration of hinge cylinders, frequently used in furniture".