Listed below is an excerpt from the Parisian copy of the document (page 153), labelling the stations under the command of the Dux Britanniorum (limitanei commander in Britain). The stations are listed as follows:
Sextae, Presidium,
Dano, Morbio, Arbeia, Dictim,
Concangios, Lauatres, Verteris, Braboniaco,
Magloue, Magis, Longouicio, Deruentione.
Each of these corresponds to one of the fourteen prefects reporting to the dux that are not stationed on Hadrian’s Wall. If we follow this line of reasoning, the prefect’s command is stationed at Sextae rather than his regiment being the Sixth Legion. The presence of Sextae on the map alongside the other prefect stations lends a lot of strength to this theory, suggesting the unit’s number (if it ever possessed one as many units, even limitanei, do not) was omitted.
The second option is that the officer’s posting is absent, and the text is referring to the Sixth Legion rather than the legion from Sextae, and the use of Sextae rather than Eboracum is simply a clerical error on behalf of the original author. As stated above, we should expect the VI legion (Legio VI Victrix pia fidelis Britannica) to be stationed at Eboracum. This however relies on the assumption that Roman high command has not redistributed the regiment around the country or even returned them to Europe sometime during the 3rd or 4th Centuries. Indeed, detachments from all legions are known to have been distributed around provinces such as Britain and Germany, and often seconded to other forces, best evidenced in the case of the Sixth by an inscription on a dedication to Apollo: “…Gordian’s Own Unit of Sarmatian cavalry of Bremetennacum Aelius Antoninus, centurion of the Sixth Legion Victrix, from Melitene, acting-commander and prefect” (RIB 583). Elements of the Sixth were also sent North to aid in construction of Hadrian’s Wall (RIB 1, 1427) and the Antonine Wall, as well as stationed at Corbridge (RIB 1, 1137). In later service, the Sixth were transferred variously to lower Britain (Britannia Inferior) by Septimius Severus, then again to Carpow alongside II Augusta, before returning to Eboracum. Evidence is extant of a detachment from the Sixth at Hadrian’s Wall serving at Piercebridge under a centurion from the II Augusta (AE 1967, 259).
This may go some way to explaining how the reformed late Roman army originally created the smaller regiments we see listed in the N.D., in that constituent parts of the old VI Legion from Eboracum were split from the legion and distributed around the province to take up new permanent postings. The nomenclature is also unhelpful, as whilst the word legio may initially imply the unit is a legion in the old-style, a later legion is noted to have been a significantly smaller number of total soldiers (larger estimates placing a 4th Century legio at 2,000 men, and more realistic estimates at 1,000 – likely five times smaller than the early imperial legions of 5,000 or more). This allows a lot of room for the constituent parts of the regiment to be split off and sent elsewhere, possibly suggesting the legionis sextae is the “original” part of the legion scaled down, although this is entirely supposition.
It is worth noting that the occupation of the VI Legion at York can be confirmed up to the middle of the 3rd Century, after which their posting is unknown. It is possible the legion ceased to exist after this point (at least in nomenclature), that the legion was redistributed elsewhere either in constituent parts or wholesale, or that our records are simply incomplete as is often the case in late antiquity. Some suggest that the legion were those who proclaimed Constantine the Great emperor in the early 4th Century, however I have failed to find any evidence stating the designation of the unit. As Constantine was campaigning in Britain at this time, and indeed was operating after the reforms of Diocletian, it seems entirely plausible that his forces (originally those of his father Constantius) were either composed of legionaries from Gaul or were new-style post-Diocletian regiments and the Sixth were no longer extant. Again, this is unfortunately supposition.
There is evidence of other legions from Britain “disappearing” over time. Of the two other legions known to have been present in the province during the 3rd century, only one remains extant in records. Elements of Legio II Augusta are found throughout the N.D., as part of the Comes Britanniarum’s roster (the Secundani iuniores). Of the second legion, the XX Valeria Victrix, nothing further is depicted. It is possible this was a consequence of Carausius’ rebellion at the end of the 3rd Century and the unit’s nomenclature changed accordingly, although this is only one possibility. It is worth noting as well that also under the Comes Britanniarum’s roster is a unit listed as the primani iuniores – mysteriously, no “I Legio” is known to have operated in Britain. It can therefore be concluded that the numerical designation of units is a somewhat untenable means to use in identifying a regiment with a service history lasting into the later period. The following is taken from Luke Ueda-Sarson’s excellent study of the Notitia Dignitatum:
“Looking to Egypt, under the Dux Thebaidos, we find listed a Legio prima Valentiniana (56/7.15) and a Legio secunda Valentiniana (56/7.18). These may have been created by Valentinian I (reigned 364-375). They are less likely to have been old units renamed by Valentinian I, as the only usurper during his reign, Procopius, does not appear to have raised any new units, and the units he is recorded by Ammianus as bringing over to his cause are all attested with their names in the Notitia. Creation under the young Valentinian II is a possibility (375-392), but unlikely given he was in the west, and until 383 was very much a minor influence under Gratian (and there are already seemingly too few units named after Gratian), while from 379 the Eastern Augustus was the more vigorous Theodosius. Valentinian II did however suffer from a major usurper, the 5-year rebellion of Magnus Maximus who came from Britain. It is possible that these two units are ex-units of Magnus': as he controlled not only Britain, but at one point Spain, Africa and Gaul, and almost all of Italy as well, they need not be British units. However, the stationing of the ala quarta Britonum (56/7.24) under the Dux Thebaidos suggests that they could be. Speculatively, I would suggest the Secundani iuniores could be part of the second legionary unit that Magnus 'created', and that the first part, the seniores part, is the Legio II Valentiniana of the Dux Thebaidos, renamed because they had received a title such as Legio II Magnecensium under Magnus Maximus which had then to be expunged. The Primani iuniores would by this hypothesis then be the rump of the old Legio VI formerly stationed at York, the seniores part of which would have been Magnus' first legion, and consequently renamed Legio I Valentiniana when Maximus' rebellion against Valentinian II was finally crushed by Theodosius. Magnus' core British troops would under this hypothesis have been sent to far off Egypt to keep them out of trouble, in the same manner that Constantius II had sent Gallic legions of Magnentius and Decentius' off to Syria in the 350s. However, this is all very speculative!” (Useda-Sarson, 2015)