Showing posts with label Ancient Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ancient Rome. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2026

The Wedding Shroud (A Tale of Ancient Rome) by Elizabeth Storrs; This Woman's Roads Lead From Rome to Etruria

 

The Wedding Shroud (A Tale of Ancient Rome) by Elizabeth Storrs; This Woman's Roads Lead From Rome to Etruria 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: I admit that as much as I am fascinated by Greco-Roman Mythology and am a huge History and Historical Fiction fan, I actually don't know a lot about Etruscans. I knew that they originated in Etruria and were the early settlers of what would become Rome. They were led by a city-state system. 

They obtained wealth and power through mineral resources, agriculture, and maritime trade with Greece and Carthage. They influenced much of Roman culture. They went into decline after the Etruscan kings were overthrown, conquered by Rome, and the Etruscans absorbed into the Roman Republic/Empire with their culture and language merging with Rome’s. 

Most of the time history treats the Etruscans as a footnote between the fall of Ancient Greece and the rise of Rome. However they were a people with a distinct history and culture. The Etruscans left their own mark in history and The Historical Fiction novel, The Wedding Shroud (A Tale of Ancient Rome) by Elizabeth Storrs shows that.

In 406, Caecilia, a young Roman patrician/plebian woman, is arranged to marry Val Mastarna, an Etruscan nobleman as part of a treaty. At first she is unhappy and determined to remain true to her Roman ideals but slowly adjusts and feels accepted in this new world. 

She even comes to care about Masterna, his adopted son, Tarchon, her handmaid/friend Cytheris, and another friend, courtesan Erene. She is caught between the world that she came from and the one in which she loves.

This book is strong in setting and character. The Etruscan setting including time and place is awash with details. It uses the Historical Fiction trope of a newcomer from one society seeing another for the first time and contrasting the societies. It's predictable but in this case works very well.

Caecillia was born and raised in a Roman society where everyone knew their place and position. Caecillia comes from a plebian, lower class, father and patrician, ruling aristocratic mother which Roman society considers her half-caste. While moving from one status to another is possible, there are limitations to what a plebian or their children can be permitted to achieve.

Because of this outsider status, Caecillia’s father raised her beyond the expectations of a proper Roman girl. Instead of just learning basic reading, managing the household, and domestic home care, he raised her to discuss politics, philosophy, leadership, and to read dense literature. What a boy of her status would learn. She becomes quite an intelligent young woman but has nowhere to use it.

After her father dies, Caecillia loses the only encouragement that she has. In the home of her aunt and uncle is where she truly learns that her status as a Roman woman is nonexistent. She is told to wear pale colored linens and to practice homecare. She learns that her authority and status only ends within the household. 

She is to remain housebound while any future Roman husband would fight in battles, head city-states, and manage multiple lands. They can participate in ritualistic games and gatherings while she cannot even look upon them. Her upbringing from her aunt and uncle is rigid, conservative, and uncompromising. After a long time, she is conditioned to accept it.

The education that Caecillia’s father gave her disappears because of her lack of use for it, though it does give her a questioning personality and a strong will. After many years, Caecilia is conditioned to know and accept her place. The potential that she might have had disappears within the required Roman gender roles.

Caecilia is isolated by her stern parental figures only to have her cousin, Marcus, and a family friend, Drusius to confide in. If not for a strange change in circumstances, Caecilia might have remained an upper class desperate Roman housewife. Instead, she is arranged to marry Masterna without her consent. 

It is worth mentioning that this book is set long before Rome would become the Empire which spread throughout the western world. It was still several small unstructured and disorganized city-states that were constantly battling each other. Caecilia’s family lives on the outside of the central government closer to the Etruscans in nearby Veii than they do to other Roman city-states. They are constantly fighting so any form of peace is imperative. 

That is what is the center of Caecilia and Masterna’s arranged marriage. For the Roman and Etruscan city-states to form an alliance with and strengthen their bonds to maintain peace and potentially defend themselves from other larger city-states and enemies.

When Caecilia enters Veii, it’s like she is in a completely different world. Where she dressed in drab plain outfits, the Etruscans wear bright colors and elaborate jewelry. Where she was raised to suppress her emotions and desires as a stoic Roman wife, the Etruscans, even the women, openly discuss their frank sexuality and have very fluid relationships. 

The most impressive discovery that Caecilia learns is that Etruscan women have authority. Caecilia seeks advice from Masterna’s mother who is very politically influential. Even Erene, a courtesan, has advice to give on how to use her sexuality as a power move. Through these women, Caecilia gains self-actualization in her life and marriage which had been lacking in her Roman upbringing.

Because of this influence, Caecilia is able to gain power and prestige in her marriage. She learns that Masterna had a wife that had died, she allows him to grieve up to a point. When the time is right, she informs him that she is in front of him and while his late wife may still have a place in Masterna’s heart, in his home and in his bed Caecilia comes first. 

Caecillia also delays the conception of a child until she is certain that her place is secure in Veii and that she is accepted among the Etruscans. She is also concerned about Masterna’s past difficulties in producing children. She knows that the presence of a child, especially a son, might alter things in her husband’s favor. 

She takes medicine as contraceptives to delay parenthood as long as needed. Only when Caecilia is secure in her marriage and status,and Masterna’s virility, does the possibility of having a family come into play. 

Caecilia also brokers relationships inside Veii. She treats Erene and Cytheris like women with their own agenciesvand gains empathy with their struggles. She has an older sister-kid brother relationship with Tarchon to the point that she advises him to get out of a very unhealthy toxic relationship with Masterna’s priest brother.

Then there’s Masterna. Their relationship begins very antagonistically as she objects to being forced into marriage like a bargaining chip. He tries to dominate her with his masculinity and authority. She chips into his demeanor to discover the more vulnerable open side of him that grieves for the wife that he had while beginning to care for the wife that he is currently married to. His and Caecilia’s marriage evolves into an equal partnership and potentially a love match.

Caecilia changes in her marriage and becomes a stronger, more confident, more self-aware woman, potential leader, and proud Etruscan.




Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Weekly Reader: The Everlasting Spring Beyond Olympus: Volume 1: Benjamin and Boudicca by Francis Audrain; Queen Boudicca is the Highlight of Verbose Inspirational Historical Fiction

 



Weekly Reader: The Everlasting Spring Beyond Olympus: Volume 1: Benjamin and Boudicca by Francis Audrain; Queen Boudicca is the Highlight of Verbose Inspirational Historical Fiction 

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Queen Boudicca (?-CE 60 or 61) was a memorable figure in British history and that is an understatement. She was the queen of the Iceni tribe during the Roman occupation. Upon her husband, Prasutagus's death, the kingdom was supposed to be jointly left to his daughters and to Emperor Nero. However, the Romans reneged on that request and seized the kingdom for themselves. The property was taken, Boudicca was flogged, and her daughters were raped. Boudicca led the Iceni and other troops in revolt against the Romans. They destroyed Camulodunum, a colony for discharged Roman soldiers. They then defeated factions and burnt both Londinium and Verulamium. Even though they outnumbered the Romans, the Britons were defeated in the West Midlands. Defeated, Boudicca either committed suicide or died from illness.

The story of Boudicca is one that is familiar to many Brits. Her story was first told over 100 years after her death and achieved fame particularly during the Elizabethan and Victorian Era. Paintings and sculptures have been made of her, including one that resides on the western end of Westminster Bridge. She has been the subject of countless books, movies, plays, and TV shows. She is shown as a symbol of Britain's fighting spirit and strength, the way that the Founding Fathers are held up as symbols of America's fight for freedom and independence. Suffragists and feminists have also taken to her image seeing her as a strong independent woman who fought against Rome's patriarchy.


She is also the subject of Francis Audrain's Inspirational Historical Fiction, The Everlasting Spring Beyond Olympus Volume 1 Benjamin and Boudicca. The book tells two parallel stories: one of Boudicca and Benjamin, a Jewish man who converts to Christianity but then is sent to Roman occupied Briton after his family is murdered and he is held captive. He makes his way to Boudicca's encampment and takes part in the rebellion against the Romans.


There are actually two parts to this book, two separate stories which could be critiqued individually: Benjamin's and Boudicca's. Boudicca's portion is the highlight of the book by being active with a character showing tremendous leadership Benjamin's portion is lacking by being overly verbal and repetitive.


Boudicca is a character who commands every moment that she is in. Even in the beginning of the book, Boudicca's pain over her flogging and her daughters's rape is very present but so is her rage and fury. She is a strong leader willing to unite the various tribes over the common cause of fighting Rome. Many of the chapters explore the known battle sites and the action that took place there as the British were led by a very uncommon and very badass woman.


Boudicca often makes strategic plans but is also an unstoppable fighting force. She is a protective mother aware of the hurt that her daughters went through and looks after them with the devotion of a mother bear especially when she grows concerned when one daughter, Fiona, becomes enamored with Benjamin. Boudicca sees the future and wants to fight her and her people's right to be a part of it.


While Boudicca heralds a commanding presence in the book, Benjamin is not near as memorable. The beginning of the book is interesting as he struggles with the grief of losing his family and reconciles his desire for revenge with his newly found Christianity. He also has some interesting conversations with Boudicca about their different faiths.


However, the book runs far too long especially during Benjamin's many efforts to convert Boudicca and her family. It's not a case of "Live and let live" or "To each their own spiritual path." Benjamin hammers down Christianity to the point of overkill insisting that they must be saved or else. Inspirational Fiction is better when characters let their actions do the talking and show Christian love rather than talking about the path to Salvation and trying to win souls with constant repetition.


It also is inaccurate to try to force a conversion out of Boudicca and her daughters when historically Christianity didn't arrive in the British Isles until approximately 597 CE, hundreds of years after Boudicca died. It may have been better to show an actual historical figure that converted like Constantine or even a fictional character rather than create a religious paradox around someone who historically would not have known about let alone never asked to become a disciple of Jesus Christ. 


With more action, showing God's love rather than talking about, and historical accuracy in characters, Everlasting Spring could be a great inspirational historical fiction. But for right now, this is one spring that needs more than a trickle to become a river.