The cohort was based at Greatchesters fort on Hadrian's Wall intermittently from the second to the fourth century AD.[4] Inscriptions found at Rough Castle Fort on the Antonine Wall in Scotland state that 480 men of the Cohors VI Nerviorum served there between 156–162 AD.[5] One of its commanders was a centurion named Flavius Betto.[6]
The cohort also rebuilt part of the Virosidum fort in present North Yorkshire around 205-208AD.[7] In AD 205, whilst stationed at Virosium, the Prefect of the Cohort was Lucius Vinicius Pius.[8]
^"RIB 722. Inscription". The Roman Inscriptions of Britain. Retrieved 12 April 2015. For the Emperor Caesar Lucius Septimius Severus Pius Pertinax Augustus and for the Emperor Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Pius Felix Augustus and for Publius Septimius Geta, most noble Caesar, the Sixth Cohort of Nervians built this [rampart] of uncoursed masonry with annexe-wall under the charge of Lucius Alfenus Senecio, senator of consular rank; Lucius Vinicius Pius, prefect of the same cohort …, had direction of the work.