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Mars the Avenger

par Alan Scribner

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"Mars the Avenger is an historical mystery set in the year 158 CE, during the reign of Antoninus Pius, a period often called the height of the Roman Empire. It is also a daily life in ancient Rome at that time a sojourn into the world of Roman life and courts, police and criminal law. In the novel, Marcus Flavius Severus, a judge of the Court of the Urban Prefect investigates the disappearance of the wife of a Roman senator. At the same time, a sensational crime is perpetrated in the City when a body of a murdered man is discovered on the steps of the Temple of Mars the Avenger. As the investigation unfolds, the two cases become connected to a love affair seventeen years before in the Roman orient. Judge Severus, with the assistance of his court and police aids, tracks down clues and witnesses, leading them through the City and society of ancient Rome. Scenes are set, among other places, in a slave market, in the majestic public baths of Trajan, in wealthy villas and tenement apartment houses in which most Romans lived, in a tavern in the notorious Subura district and at the chariot races in the Circus Maximus. There are also scenes in a Roman Court and the book is accurate as to the criminal laws of the time, including the use of judicial torture. All laws, rescripts and legal procedures are from Roman law sources. The novel also introduces a perspicacious new detective in the person of Roman judge Marcus Flavius Severus."--Back cover.… (plus d'informations)
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Interesting novel with this "detective", a judge in the Roman court system, aided by his support staff and two officers of the court, a centurion and a tesserarius. The wife of a senator disappears and a man's dead body is discovered on the steps of the temple to Mars the Avenger. The judge, Marcus Flavius Severus, is tasked with solving the mystery by the Urban Prefect. As the novel progresses it grows more and more complicated, stretching from the senator's villa to the slums of the Subura. An amulet with a strange etching of a queen and a fisherman and a wax tablet with the same drawing tie the senator's wife and the dead man together. Judge Severus sends his staff on legwork, and we learn a lot about Roman law of that period--that of Antoninus Pius in the 2nd century A.D.. Severus does face a moral dilemma when it comes to naming the culprit or culprits and is torn between two possible solutions. In several places in the novel he sets down his reflections: "To Himself", anticipating Marcus Aurelius' MEDITATIONS by a few years. :) We also see his domestic life and family.

This was a promising beginning to a new series [to me, at least]. I learned a lot about the law and court system; the author is a former Assistant District Attorney in NY County and criminal lawyer with a keen interest in ancient Rome. So I imagine that is pretty accurate. In the last few pages though, Severus mentions he got an award from the emperor: "The Privileges of the Father of Three Children"; there was no mention of a third child or even a pregnancy and childbirth; in this book he and his wife only had a son and a daughter. ( )
  janerawoof | Jun 6, 2019 |
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"Mars the Avenger is an historical mystery set in the year 158 CE, during the reign of Antoninus Pius, a period often called the height of the Roman Empire. It is also a daily life in ancient Rome at that time a sojourn into the world of Roman life and courts, police and criminal law. In the novel, Marcus Flavius Severus, a judge of the Court of the Urban Prefect investigates the disappearance of the wife of a Roman senator. At the same time, a sensational crime is perpetrated in the City when a body of a murdered man is discovered on the steps of the Temple of Mars the Avenger. As the investigation unfolds, the two cases become connected to a love affair seventeen years before in the Roman orient. Judge Severus, with the assistance of his court and police aids, tracks down clues and witnesses, leading them through the City and society of ancient Rome. Scenes are set, among other places, in a slave market, in the majestic public baths of Trajan, in wealthy villas and tenement apartment houses in which most Romans lived, in a tavern in the notorious Subura district and at the chariot races in the Circus Maximus. There are also scenes in a Roman Court and the book is accurate as to the criminal laws of the time, including the use of judicial torture. All laws, rescripts and legal procedures are from Roman law sources. The novel also introduces a perspicacious new detective in the person of Roman judge Marcus Flavius Severus."--Back cover.

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